 I think the Lost Boys was crafted, I think, somewhere in Russia, if I recall it well, in history. And we had the same similarities. We were almost more than 90% of the population that went to were all boys, and they had one thing in common, running away from the danger. As the war began in 1983, and that war reaches almost the community in all South Sudan, and in 1987 I became one of the Lost Boys that was displaced by the war. When it reached, we were about a thousand Lost Boys that left from the Harrier. We had a track until we reached Ethiopia in 1987. It was actually one of the first painful experiences that I had, because as a young boy, it could be between 9 and 12 years old, because not knowing my exact age, we had a lot of problems on the way, and one of the problems was starvation, as you can imagine. Water was a big, you know, and wild animals on the way. We left again in 1992 until we reached a place called Nairus, which is very near to Kapoeita. We stayed for a few months. The UNHCR took us to Kakuma, and that's where I was registered as a refugee in Kakuma in 1992. There was a refugee settlement that was meant only for Lost Boys, and that started in 1998, and I had my toughest decision that I had to make, because at that time it was about 10 years, or 11 years, not knowing where my relatives are, and I was thinking, do I have to take a decision to go to America, where I don't know how our people maybe are they all dead, or what had happened. So I decided to go to America, and in 2001, on April 10th, April 8th, I left Kakuma, then I reached in Atlanta, Georgia, April 10th, 2001. And that decision was really a best decision that I haven't made, because I've been writing a lot of RCM, the Red Cross messages, to my relatives, and there's no reply. From, I think, I started in 1994 until 2001. I couldn't get any reply at all, and I was thinking maybe there's nobody that survived, and therefore I decided, okay, I have to go to America. The life is different, food is different, and I remember when I was with my American friends, you know, they have different foods, and also it was tough even for us to get it all into universities and colleges. When I earn a dollar, I have to find out my parents, and I happened to talk with my brother for the first time in 2004. I was relieved, I was totally relieved, and I could know who is dead, I could know who is alive, I could know, you know, and I wasn't relieved then. So after independence of South Sudan in 2011, I decided, I thought, you know, we have a country that we can all build together, and then I came here. Even when the war, the crisis started in December 15, 2013, I had to be even quitted, and I remember they were telling me to go to Nairobi, I said no, I'm not going to Nairobi, I will go to Kenya. I think I was unemployed for about seven months, eight months, and then I finally got a job with ICRC in June of last year. We are doing a medical evacuation today, leaving Ganyel to Ganyel, which is north of here, about 25 minutes or 30 minutes flight. So unfortunately, some cattle raiders came and attacked a village and took about 110 cattle, head of cattle according to the local source. They have killed two people and wounded four. Now we are going to evacuate a woman and a three-year-old girl from Ganyel because there is no good medical facility in Ganyel, so we are evacuating them to Ganyel for better treatment, operations, and we will also bring a caretaker together with that child. It's not me alone that decided to come back home. We had a lot of us that came back home that are even walking either with the government or with the NGOs or that are doing their private work as well. Unfortunately, we were all hoping to come home and be able to come together. But some of us, most of us that did came, went back to America. And I'm one of the few that decided to stay because our thinking is not the right time for me to live because when your people are in danger, why would you have to go back? I'm always hopeful and an optimistic that thing will be better because this is the country that we all loved. This is our land and we lost boys that have seen it all. And we want to have a better future. We have our country have a better future and this is the hope that we are always praying for so that this country can be better for all of us.