 The Iroquois Seventh Generation Principle is an extension of Maqasid-e-Sharia. In a conceptual, you can see the parallel there, the Maqasid-e-Sharia, which are six. The preservation of religion, the preservation of life, the preservation of the intellect, the preservation of property, lineage, and honor, right? For seven generations. For seven generations. That's what we know are reminded of at this Thanksgiving, this Thanksgiving. We thank the Iroquois for infusing our considerations and our decisions with the Seventh Generation Principle, because it's there. It's not mentioned. How is it mentioned in the Sharia and the Maqasid? Through the word hifth, through the word preservation, right? And preservation does not have a shelf life of two weeks or even two years. Preservation means for all time and for all places that every single ruling of the Sharia will have the color and the hue of these Maqasid, of these objectives, and these objectives are what give this religion permanence and what allows it to adapt based on its very own principles, right? That are unchanging. The principles are unchanging, although the rulings themselves may take various forms.