 This exhibition is about Auschwitz. Auschwitz, as we all know, was the worst concentration turned extermination camps in the World War II that Germans set up in Poland to exterminate Jews, Communists and such people that they did not like. I had visited Auschwitz in 2018 along with my family and I had taken these photographs of Auschwitz. The place is so depressing. Actually a friend of mine who has been to Poland many times, he had told me that I should actually visit Auschwitz in winter because then you realize how even the weather works against the people and the prisoners. I went on a day which was quite overcast and it was a bit cold, not definitely below zero but even still a bit cold. It was so desolate and it was so depressing when you see these buildings, when you see places where people were actually slaughtered like animals. It just gets to you and I've traveled to many different places, I've done many tours but I've never seen a location where nobody is smiling, nobody, everybody is looking depressed and at the end of the day you come out with a very heavy heart. For me, the photograph, the image that touched me the most and even today it haunts me is an image of children walking to the death in Auschwitz. If you take that photo out of context, it looks as if they are going out on a picnic, the reality is quite different. That has been an image that has stayed with me all along and also when you actually see the physical pile of shoes, it just conveys the enormity, the scale to you of what happened and I have never experienced anything where in humanity has been so low. So overall it was quite, in a sense, a depressing experience but I think it's an experience that everyone must have in whatever form and shape and that is also one of the reasons why we have this show because we want to share that. After I came back to India, when I was going through these photographs and that is when the Chief Citizenship Amendment Act, the CAA got passed and we felt, my curators and I, we felt that there has to be a response to such an action and we found that this exhibition with all these photographs is a fitting reminder to people that religious fanaticism, when taken beyond certain levels, can and will result in something like this. And Auschwitz did not happen in the far too distant past, it was only 80 years ago that this happened. So we should remember in India that the world that we live in now, the current situation that we live in now where such hatred is being perpetrated world over all across India too, we must remember Auschwitz and it should never be forgotten. That is why we do this exhibition. We had a commission discussion on four subjects, one particularly regarding organizing modern manufacturing sector workers, importance and challenges that commission was held. Similarly, another commission on migrant workers was held, one more commission on changing employment profile was also held. Similarly, like that challenges of communism to the unity of working class was also held. So these four commissions were held parallely on 21st during this process of the conference and all delegates were equally distributed into four commissions and almost 50 to 60 comrades who participated in the commission participated in the discussion. And the paper was presented by respective comrades who were assigned to it and one comrade who used to chair that. So in that discussion, several suggestions have come, practical experiences of them in the field have also come and all those experiences will be reported by the rapporteurs today and it will be finalized by the future office workers that will be elected today. So this commission discussion has helped enabled the comrades to have a proper understanding of the present situation that is there. Particularly we know that during COVID period, pandemic and lockdown period, we had a bitter experience of internal migration that took place and the whole of the nation and the world has seen that. So that issue was also discussed and how to organize them, how to meet the challenges that we have got regarding the internal migration. Similarly, modern manufacturing sector is there, in that we have to organize this modern manufacturing sector workers also, what is the importance of that and what are the challenges that are there and how they have, what are the experiences that they have got in organizing them and what are the challenges that they faced, what are the difficulties that they have faced, how they have been successful, all these things have been discussed in the commission. Similarly, when we see the workers are uniting and fighting, including workers and present unit is also developing in a big way. We see this challenge of communalism that is a threat to the unity of working class and how to handle it and how to face it and how to resist it and how to defeat it to see that working class is not divided. So these are discussed in that third commission and we see that due to this neoliberal era and neoliberal policies pursued by the government and the capitalists, we see that the employment profile is drastically changing and this employment profile that is drastically changing has been taken note of and how to organize all fragile form of employed people, precarious nature job employees who are there in the factories has also been addressed to it. So these are the four commissions in which we have discussed and those discussions that has taken place yesterday will be reported today in this one, delegate session. We want your support in carrying on this, in order to save our right, in order to save the rights of the people of the country, in order to save our country's agriculture, and in order to save our country's self-reliance, independence, sovereignty, the attack on country's constitution has to be combated because we want independence through a very very sacrifice and struggle. We cannot surrender that independence in the hands of those political community who have become the independence struggle, stood by the side of the British at that time and now making a flagging fraudulent drama at Adyagika Amritsar. Yes, we have to define the Adyagika Amritsar by turning the poison of Indian society. 2033 projects of the World Cards and Prison Movement is to claim the society from the poisoners' faces and with that we want to support with these two words, I conclude my submission again, Thank you. Especially our gratefulness for your whole hearted suffering to arrange this number 17 conference of CITU here. Thank you.