 Now, I have to be honest that I am still recovering from this experience. It's difficult to go back to the Western context here in Canada and to the context of the continuing colonization of Indigenous America. But what I've come to realize in the six months of reflection, and of course with thinking about the Palestinian reality of the already annexed territories there in Palestine, is that their participation in liberal democracy requires an understanding of systems and structures of privilege and the dignity of personhood. From my own experience here in Canada, I know that to participate, which is a basic right, by the way, is to understand that personhood must be recognized. This is not a political question, at least not a political question when speaking from a liberal democratic reality, which we sit in now. It's about humanity, it's about rights, and it's about dignities. The Palestinian people, as we travel through the rolling hills of that beautiful and ancient country, what we found, though, is infrastructural weaknesses, water, sanitation, health care. The Palestinian people struggle against normalizing these weaknesses. They have bodily controlled daily of where they go and where they don't go, who can come with them to medical appointments. This is systematic and administrative occupation, these walls, checkpoints, food insecurity, being kept from digging wells, farming and grazing, to a replacement of incarceration and terror. Personhood, peace, and security is difficult under these conditions, without the organizational capacities of William, without their partners. These organizations come together to teach, to educate, to create spaces in which Palestinian communities, Palestinian communities that are marginalized, women, children, but also communities that work with Palestinian communities, Israeli communities, coming together to create this space of peace and justice. Women, youth, and men come together to assert their right of personhood. It's not even about participating in the political structure of the Israeli state, but to just to demonstrate their own dignity, their own right to speak, their own right to farm, their right to create economies, their right to live. And they do this under this auspice of occupation, occupation that threatens their humanity. Palestinians, Israelis deserve the opportunity to live together. And this is what these organizations, these partnerships create, those opportunities. This is the great hope. This is the great hope that is being demonstrated for the world. So I encourage you to advocate with a good mind, peace and justice to the personhood of the people of Palestine. Thank you.