 There was something very important about the delegation, important for me and in my experience I think for all of us who were part of it and that was that we were a diverse delegation, indigenous settler newcomer together. And that brought a particular kind of clarity to this particular visit. And maybe different than some of us had experienced before. And so there was a question and I'll pose it to Roz for you to as one of the co-chairs of the delegation to share a little bit about how did we make the connections? Did we make the connections? How did we do that in our experience between the situation of indigenous peoples in Canada and they brought the Americas and the situation in Palestine, Israel. So I will give you that question to respond to on all of our behalf. Oh wow. It's hard to truth tell. I'll tell you what. I think that it was, I think it was difficult for everyone to come back to their, like I said, their Western context to come back to Canada to enter back into their lives after this life changing experience. I think everybody on this delegation was struggling in their own way of their own position in their communities and of course in their livelihoods. I won't claim that that was only on myself. I think we started to really recognize the similarities and the differences on the struggle between the Palestinians in the state of Israel and the indigenous people of Canada and the government of Canada, the state of Canada. I think that there are certain broad strokes that Canada certainly coming to realize and that I think the people of Israel are starting to realize and that is the incremental genocide of our people here in Canada, our indigenous people here in Canada, and the Palestinian people there in West Asia. I think that politically our contexts are different. Tarek spoke of the one state to state or or Confederacy question. Those are our broad political questions that have that have very that are very gated answers. We consider ourselves Canada's original people. And that of course brings up a whole bunch of differences between our situations. But I think that we have to really concentrate on the fact that what is really at stake here again as I said is personhood. The ability to participate in democracy, the ability to have a voice is critical to us, the ability to establish our sovereignty within our own within ourselves within our communities can happen without these basic human dignities of clean water, these basic human dignities of being able to go with your child as a young father to go with your child to the hospital. That is that isn't that is critically important to the Palestinian communities and the Palestinian people. It's critical to us as well. So we really struggle with that together. And that is a question to non indigenous Canada, and to settler communities in Israel is, you have a place of privilege in which the government protects you. And so, and I say we as I say that in, in, in unity with my Palestinian brothers and sisters that those are those are some, those are some, some striking simulate some similarities that we have that we share. I think also when I think of like, for instance, Lucy's very groundbreaking work in Palestine, I mean she has, she has the heart of a native woman. And there are women in Canada like her who who work to create spaces for these voices to come through. I mean, as we believe that women are the life givers of a nation. And so it's really important that we support initiatives that that Lucy is so passionate about, because again, she's not only giving that space but these women are are learning again some of the some of their, their ancient arts that they have lost. And they are becoming stronger women stronger mothers stronger sisters and stronger wives. And that really really builds really builds a nation. So I think, you know, this is this is important, both in Canada and in Palestine. And the work that we am does with Tariq and, and Mr. Zubi, they're so so important to the wider cultures and certainly bringing dialogue to to the two various communities both Palestinian communities and in Israeli communities who are working together to to create a just and peace space there in the ancient in the ancient lands. So I think that our struggle our struggles are are similar. It is, it is important that privileged Canada support these initiatives, both in Canada and in Palestine and in the world. It takes all people to build peace. And it takes all of us to come together with our with our many backgrounds to create equal rights and dignities for for ourselves for each other. That recognition of personhood I think is is crucial and it is critical, both in Canada and Palestine. One of the things that that I before I before I before I and one of the things that Terry had mentioned was the recognition of the past. Two is is critical to Canada's understanding of their privilege. It is critical to the state of Israel's understanding of the incremental genocide of the Palestinian people. It's also important for us as indigenous people. And as as my brothers and sisters in Palestine is to recognize how that has affected us. I remarked several times during the delegation that we have normalized in Canada, the reserve structure. It is not normal to live in a block of land that is governed by the federal government is not normal to struggle with clean water with just with just 25 miles away there is a water that is that is that froze flows freely is not normal. And the Palestinian people, they struggle against against normalizing that way of life. But they wake up to it every day, just as we do. And I think it's important is is is as we go forward is to recognize those those little events. Again that's going going back to recognizing how this this colonizing colonization has affected us has affected our social fact has affected our bodies. And so, I, I stand in solidarity with my Palestinian brothers and sisters, and I hope that my indigenous brothers and sisters do the same as I speak to councils, and so on, here in Canada. Thank you for the question Jennifer I appreciate it.