 Who is who? So our practice, our performance practice is based on the concept how to archive stories that through last years either became taboos or were erased from the official narratives, the official history, we decided to use oral performance, spoken word performance, to create some sort of archive, the collection of those narratives, of the representatives of various minorities. When it comes to like archiving, it's not just like, you know, kind of like collecting things that have been put out there, it's also taking into account a lot of alternative forms of knowledges. And when it comes to the way the West considers things to be relevant, it really often looks at academia, theorization, which really often has like a latent, you know, very masculine lead tendency. And we're questioning that by like trying to, you know, come up with like subversive plots and like dialogue forms, we're really often played with diction. Our spoken word delivery is pretty much mixed, so we change the voices a lot. Yeah, and also what is very important is that in our performances, we are tracing the cultural ways of exclusion. So there were certain figures created either in folks mythologies or folks beliefs that were personifying the other one, the stranger. So we are using those figures in our performances as the main characters to tell the stories of various representatives of different minorities. Usually we're really often performing like, you know, theatrical settings. And in this space, which is like beautiful and like very imposing on a visual level, we really tried to kind of incorporate also the potentials it had when it came to like echo and reverb. We tried to like play around with the length we were, you know, delivering certain lines and really make use of that. The most important formal aspect of this transfer of very intimate private stories to this enormous big hall was the concept of bringing private or making private public. This works very well with our idea and concept of making the erased forgotten or unnoticed stories and people visible and loud.