 from Sydney Harbour National Park. Check out this view. Just stunning. There's a beautiful Sydney Harbour. And then as big tour buildings, that's the Central Business District, straight ahead. So about a third of Australia's Jews are from South Africa. So there are about 100,000 identifying Jews in Australia and probably another 100,000 who don't identify as Jewish. And more than 30,000 Australia's identifying Jews are from South Africa over the past 30 years. And what's the biggest cultural shock for South African emigres to Australia? It's learning to make their own bed. Because in South Africa, they all had maids. They all had black maids. Now in Australia, they have to make their own beds. South African women, South African Jewish women, like particularly teenage girls, often they don't know how to turn on a kettle, don't know how to make pasta, because they always had a maid who'd do all that. So some Australians hate South Africans. Are the South Africans a Jewish or not? They find them arrogant and to take charge, like too assertive, too aggressive. And South Africans, they find Australians kind of lazy and too laid back and not assertive enough. So the South Africans who've moved here, particularly the South African Jews have punched way above their weight. They've been quite entrepreneurial, been highly successful. They participate quite actively in Jewish life. So they're more communal and less laid back and individualistic than the Aussies. So the South African Jews have come to dominate Australian Jewry. Many of them fought against apartheid and they were back in South Africa. And then as soon as the apartheid fell, they fled the country.