 About two and a half years ago, before this place was open, the gang got me. It was me, huh? Like, it was just out of control. There was rebel fighting and gangs and stuff like that. And it was all, obviously, because of the sectarian divide. The police were up and they were doing, like, a spot check on a house or a raid or something like that. And our generation got stuck in it, turned into basically a small raid, where there was eight land, you know, like, armour landovers up and there was a few petra bombs. Glingormay was really, really bad. Like, it was really bad for sectarianism and stuff. Like, from across the road down. Like, I wouldn't have went down there, because I'm a Protestant. I wouldn't have went down that direction. And it was the same, the opposite way around for the Catholics. And literally every Friday and Saturday night, it was a war pass. Basically, because it's a community, it has a distrust of place. What we find is that there are elements within it who will turn to armed groupings and look for them to resolve an issue under the threat of violence or whatever. So we're aware that those threats are quite, quite severe and very real. The kids themselves would say, why, what was it all about? But they were going by what other people was telling them. You don't get on with them. And then there was paramilitary involvement to, you know, didn't allow the kids to associate with other kids. So we decided then, well, it's time. We'll try to do something. If they had been left to their own devices the way they were going, I think a lot of them would have been either imprisoned and young offenders or they would have received a punishment attack or they would have been come involved in the groups themselves. For more point of view, we're saying that that's one, one, one. They're not getting arrested. They're not going to jail. They're getting some social activities. The community is seeing the arguments. You know, like, there's no boundaries, no cares getting wrecked. You know, there's no anti-social behaviour. People are getting on with lives, you know. The province and kids can now walk through this town centre and go to McDonald's. It's a very, very small issue, but it was a really, really big issue. And the kids, they're all together. They go out together. They're dating together. They, you know, they go out for social nights together. The relation between them is very, very, it's good. And I hope it continues for the rest of the young people of Gengormy town. It never goes back to the way it was.