 It had been talked about for years and a lot of people fought against it. And finally, you know, enough people came in by little by little until the rest of history is all torn down and blown away. So the name of this MBS project is loosely the Elkhart Black History Project. And it is a way of documenting what occurred to the African-American community here in Elkhart when their neighborhood was systematically removed and people had to find a life after that. The absolute difference between yesterday and today is hardly put into words. Some of the things that people need to understand, they did not only tear down a building, they tore down creams. Some of the things that we had, because in the village we had grocery stores, we had, you know, a tavern, we had restaurants, all of those type of things. Even today, you look at the community in Elkhart. You know, these stories are passing as the generations pass. And if these stories are allowed to pass, then something will really be lost for Elkhart. I think it was Reverend Mays who said it very clearly and explicitly that somebody needs to collect and preserve these stories. Because, you know, black people have been in Elkhart since the 1800s. So it's not like Elkhart wasn't used to seeing black people. The division came as people who came into the town and bought their own biases with them. And the problems began to really develop. And more widely, we really hope that people within the city as a whole understand what happened to people here. I don't think it's a story that's really well on the south side and in that area that perhaps the story can help change the way or have some impact on the way that that happens. And so there's a feel and there's a look. And so you don't want to have one without the other in areas that you revitalize. And, you know, I think we're hoping that this project would get in schools, that the film would be widely watched, that this history would be part of how Elkhart, the truth about our history and the difficult parts about our history, we can see some transformation. We can orient our wider community towards Elkhart. And so to have people entrust that to us is a huge deal. And it will be a success if they're happy. It will be a success if they're happy.