 We started a journey in British Columbia a couple of years ago by signing an MOU with the First Nation Leadership Council in the Métis Nation to end violence in B.C. and in particular in Aboriginal communities. We took that journey forward to national roundtables and then brought it to a family gathering in February where we had over 350 family members come together to share their stories, to share their experience and their grief and their love and to remember their loved ones. And so we have taken from that many many family members contributed towards a quilt to put together to remember those that have been lost, that are missing or murdered in British Columbia. We're taking this quilt as a symbol to be able to work together in partnership with Aboriginal people, with communities, with leadership to find ways to bring an end to the violence. Some people couldn't verbalize what the pain that they were feeling but were able to share it through their art, through the pieces, the mementos of the families. So may this quilt act as a reminder to all of us, not just of the pain and the tragedy and the sorrow that the families have experienced but all of the love as well that went into it. The significance of the quilt is a couple of different things. One is to raise awareness to the missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls in this province to bring their voice and their spirits forward to be acknowledged so that we can really address this issue and be able to move forward and beyond the issue that we have missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls in this province and in this nation. I think the significance to the family members is to really honor the spirits of their lost one, to ensure that we haven't forgotten them and that they are remembered.