 During the explosion, we were scared, some girls, they lost their things for their house, the house was destroyed, the windows, some girls were injured, Kenyans, like some they were screaming, we don't know what happened, and then we had, we thought we are going to die in Lebanon, all of us. So she told me, you are going to Lebanon, you are going to work in a restaurant, or in a hotel, or you are going to work in a rest house, you are free, you are going to live with the other girls, after 6 months you can change the country. Once I arrived here, I had really seen that, it was different from what she had told me. You couldn't use the phone as you wanted, you had to work day and night, we did everything in the house, we clean, we go back, we cook, we guard the children, we walk the dogs, so we do everything, there is no work, we do everything. When I finished my work, I had the possibility to go out, so I also met other girls who jumped, so I said to myself, why not join a group to help these girls there. When we started this organization, we came from our struggle, no freedom, the abuse, what's going on exactly, so we said why we don't come together and at least address this. They don't give you food, working too much, sexual abuse, and then no day off, and you don't communicate with your family, like there are some girls that have 6 months, one year you never call your family, they don't allow you to talk, they don't give you phone, you don't have internet, not anything. And you don't have day off, they treat their animals, dogs, cats better than us. We also need to look at the accumulating factors which have rendered migrant domestic workers very vulnerable in Lebanon. And this has also been exacerbated by the blast because they are even more marginalized at the moment. So although some of them were not directly impacted by the blast, now they are more vulnerable because the situation in Lebanon is even more dire, so there needs to be more emphasis and focus in assisting these women. So always like I don't want to go back home, I'm not feeling well, I want to go back home. I explained to go back home you have to wait, your employer, she accused you, she said, you run away, you stole something from her. So you have to wait at least one month, two weeks, you know, the next day I saw her, she committed suicide, she hung herself. I never see the person who killed himself, I tell you to everybody, why? We have Lebanese people in Ethiopia, we have Lebanese people in Nigeria, we have Lebanese people in Liberia, you know, they have big company, they own their own company. Nobody look at them like you know in bad eyes, we respect people, nobody say nothing to them. They go, they work their, you know, they change their future life and they support their family here in Lebanon. The other domestic workers, we are doing the same, we are the same label. We came together, I think this group is more than four or five years ago, because we see some girls, they have group like Ethiopia, we started talking and we make a group. For Kenyans to supporting each other when we have problem, when some people they have a, they want surgery, we help each other. When you start something that you have been through, it's easy, you know, because the pain and the struggle that makes you to make a change or to do something.