 We are in the legislature celebrating the Holocaust Memorial Day. It's important for us to have the memory of what happened so many years ago, 71 years ago, because as human kind we've got to learn from history. Democracy and freedom tend to betray themselves. Discrimination is a gravitational force, an unfortunate certainty of human nature, a certainty unless we remind the world what has happened, unless we bear witness to the atrocities that humans can visit upon their fellows. I believe it's very important to remember those who bear victims of the Holocaust. I also feel extraordinarily upset when I hear that somebody denies Holocaust, because A, I was there, and B, because all my extended family there is there, okay? So I feel that as long as we can do it and as long as we are alive, we should try to speak about it and talk to people, talk to young people so they understand what happened. 71 years seems a long time, seems really a long time. And then after so many years, we are now seeing a resurgence of racism, hatred, anti-semitism. So it's important that as a government, together with the community, we have to do this every year. The Holocaust Memorial Day, we have to keep doing this to remind and educate the general public, to educate British Columbia, Canadians, and the whole world about what happened in the Holocaust, and we have to keep reminding our mankind so that this will never happen again.