 You don't leave your country unless you have to leave. And unfortunately war is one of the most important aspects that a lot of parents because of their kids' future and because of their own safety, they leave that country and try to seek safe haven in other places. So my family, they found a safe haven in Iran. It was a nearest country that time to travel and to be. And we were speaking kind of like the same language, so that was a place for them. I mean again, although you face back flashes, but if I weren't able to be in Iran, I wasn't able to get that good education and be that more well-spoken and outgoing person. Imagine if I was in Afghanistan during the Taliban regime or during the Soviet. There's no future in war. So that's why people leave their hometown because they want to seek a better future. And if we turn our back to them, we are actually killing hope. We are killing an opportunity. We are killing a person who can contribute to the world in a way that she or he wants. Refuges are not here to take opportunities from you. I wasn't there in Iran to take place someone else. I was just who I was and I tried to contribute as much as I can. So if we think about that, refugees can actually be the potentials of future CEOs, future doctors, engineers, anyone who can contribute to the community. So that's what I hope that people understand that we are not here to take your job, your opportunity. We are here to be part of this community and together collaborate and just work for a better world.