 I had an Iraqi refugee who used to work for Mercy Corps in Iraq, but she's Kurdish. So she was twice displaced, one under Saddam, and a second time again during the clashes that were happening with the war that was happening after the Iraq war. She found herself in the U.S. and although she was legal, she couldn't get a job, but she had like a Fulbright scholarship now, one in a thousand get a Fulbright. You know what I mean? It's a prestigious thing to do. Like, I know if I apply right now, Holly will not get in probably. So we needed to help her. So we threw a dinner for her and she was the only refugee that within one dinner she was able to land a job at Columbia Cornell. So that was really lovely because the other other refugees like had found kitchen work or found retail work or found like handy work, but this was like a professional institution that was present at the dinner and she was able to get a job immediately. So she didn't have to live on her friend's couch and she got her own apartment and seeing her life transformed that way and how about her family also is something that I'm very proud of. It's those moments that I really care about. And to be, you know, very honest, like for Komida, like these refugee dinner series, like they don't make us any money, right? It's all about like the how much can we help out and part of the community.