 Okay, I am going to try to get through what I wanted to say without crying. First of all, thank you so much for coming out today in the cold and in the rain, on a Friday afternoon when there are a million other things I know I'll be doing. I wanted to give you a little bit of my family history and background to tie into what I wanted to say today. My father came to America in 1965 after it was the New Yorker that signed the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965. He was recruited for work and he came to get his masters at the same time at Columbia University. And he's number three of ten children. And my grandmother assumed that once he was done with his masters, he would be heading back home. He eventually got married to a woman who had five siblings. And my grandmother hoped if no other reason he'll eventually come back because my mother would convince him that she wants to go back to Pakistan to be with her siblings and her parents. Eventually, my father sponsored eight members of his family, eight out of ten, who are now scattered over Texas, Florida and New York. My mother's five siblings all ended up coming as well. And my grandmother used to say, what is it that's in the water of the United States? All my children keep leaving the country they were born in. And my father came in 1965. My grandmother died in 2006. And she consistently asked him, when are you coming home? Oh, go ahead. Even after he had four children, when I get married and raise their own children in the United States of America, she kept asking, when are you coming home? One day I asked her, I used to call her, why couldn't you ask her? This is where my mother used to be born and lives. She would think she would get a hit at some point. And she told me, because I'll never be your home. One day they'll kick you out. And your home is where the people of your religious community are. And right now things are good, but one day when you go back there, you need to have ties with your mother and then what are they going to do now? I never believed her. She died in 1990. She looked through a lot. She looked through the idea of a class about perdition. She saw a number of tragedies in her own personal life. But I just thought these were the thoughts of a woman who's got a very different life than mine. She doesn't understand what life is like in America. And I won't lie. She's passed me on to this very quickly. And I've been thinking about it for a very long time. I love what she said. Every news headlines, you know, we have no idea what's coming down the pipeline. I think it's very big. I'd love to be in terms of acting the world. But there'd be no nefarious executive order to be signed. But there'd be no hatred. What we know might be made of ups and downs. And we have no idea what's coming around tomorrow. So I'm grateful for this ring around the Islamic Center. Because I want you to know that you have to form the ring just throughout the Islamic Center. Form the ring on our hearts. And when our children are scared, the other question is about what's going to happen. Do you remember this day? Do you remind them? Do you remember all those people who came out to show their love and their support? They saw how many more like them. Followers of Jesus, followers of Moses, followers of Muhammad. For all cousins, all brothers and sisters. And love will come. Thank you. Good idea. I've never been scared. Alright, we're stretching it that way. We're stretching it this way. This way? Yeah, that way.