 So I'm going to turn now to our first speakers from WEAM, the Palestinian Conflict Transformation Center. WEAM offers community-based programs for children and youth and women, including income generation, legal training and workshops on human rights. And WEAM works with a women's shelter. It runs weekly women's groups at the center, as well as several groups that meet in several of the marginalized villages in the West Bank, and we were able to have an opportunity to interchange with some of those women in groups while we were there. So the word is honored, and it is a deep, hand-lasting honor for us to be partners with WEAM as Cairo's. And so I will turn it over to our friends at WEAM to hear from them on the context and the particular issues facing Palestine in this moment. Thank you very much. You are humbling us. Actually, I would like to say thank you a lot for your compassion, for your empathy and sincere partnership. This is giving us hope and always renewable hope. Mahatma Gandhi says, truth never damages a cause that is just. And so our call and our talk will be about justice, and as we are involved in this issue, we are talking about restorative justice that redresses the wrongs rather than avenging them. So we are happy to be in this Zoom and to continue our discussion and to help to raise awareness here and there as well as to go in the less troubled road for justice. You know, WEAM is a grassroots organization, and it is based on community-based society, and family is the viable socioeconomic unit. And at WEAM, as a result of COVID-19, as a result of the threat of inaction, we haven't sit silent and idle at home, we work diligently with the people, whether in the office or outside the office, or at our homes, from our homes. Our homes become our offices when there is a lockdown. So what we do is we do a lot of psychosocial support for communities, for individuals by phone as well as face-to-face. We mediate a lot of conflict, you know, with this kind of prison. More conflict increased. So we try to solve conflict immeacably between people. And third, try to provide some support of food, health, hygiene to the affected families and people. And we continue to do that with the spirit of openness, with the spirit that we are here to serve the people, no matter who are the people, without discrimination about gender, sex, religion, family, political affiliation, religious affiliation. And we continue to do that despite that this big prison becomes a small prison. And the threat of inaction is at the door. And, you know, people talk about inaction as if it is a new thing. No, it is not a new thing. Since 1967, the state of Israel has, you know, continued to do inaction from inaction against Jerusalem in 1980 and considered the eternal unified capital of Israel going to the wall, you know, which took almost 19 percent of the West Bank up to this today. We are not talking about annexation as the problem. We are happy to end the occupation. When there is no occupation, there is no more annexation. And we can live together, people in the Middle East side by side with our rights guaranteed and rendered. Now, you know, with the COVID, you know, cases are increasing. So far in the Palestinian area, we have more than 5,105 cases with 25 people dead. And 171 Palestinian died in diaspora. Shows that the importance to have a home. That doesn't mean if we have a home that the death toll will be less, but at least we are much more comfortable. Nowadays, with the COVID, we feel that we are separated from the whole world, too. And with the annexation threat, another, you know, nightmare for us. Before I go on, but let me remind you with the people in small prison. Since March 5, there are more than 900 new prisoners since March 5 this year. And since 1967, 69 people died in prison as a result of medical neglect. So what we are looking for, emancipation, we want to be free from the small prison and the big prison.