 Good afternoon, the First Right of Business. It's afternoon. It's time for reflection, our time for reflection leader today is the Reverend James Bogg, the Minister of Broom Parish Church of Scotland, Newton Merns. Presiding officers, members of the Scottish Parliament, thank you for this opportunity to address you this afternoon. It's quite common nowadays when driving into a town to notice that it's been perlwyd i ddweud gan unid o'r ddechrau aeith i'r rhoedd yn gweithreff. Rwyf ni wrth gwybod i gael ei gyrraeth anodd i ddweud â'r ddweud arddangos, ein hanref yn cymorth, oedd o'r populadau o'r unid, o'r t wisio i'r rhaglion. Dwi'r fath, mae'r cwngregsio'n blinkwr o'r ddweud yn ddyddol peirio'n gweithreff oedd o'r ddweud o'r hamd, oedd o'r ddweud, oedd oedd o'r ddweud yn esechio'nug any way, but perhaps twind more by way of sharing experiences or perhaps assistance. It may be financial, material or personnel. It's a two way exchange as each can share what the other has. My own congregation has recently become involved in twinning, but not with another town nor congregation but twinning toilets. When it was suggested that we might consider this, it was done so rather hesitantly. We wondered how it would be viewed. Would it be taken seriously? Was it a ridiculous idea? Well, it has and it isn't. I'm very pleased to say that the idea has been embraced and supported heartily by our congregation and indeed others. It's very humbling to be made aware of the dreadful and sanitary conditions that some people have to use or more accurately have to endure. Each week we are asked to spend a penny. In other words, to drop our small change into a modified toilet bowl. For every £60 or £240 raised, that will provide one single toilet unit or a complete toilet block for a school or community, maybe in Chad, India, Pakistan or Uganda. We are all aware that poor sanitation needs to disease and death and in this toilet twinning project we are helping with our small change. We are helping vulnerable people at the most basic level. I can still remember very well indeed the outside toilet that we shared with the entire close where I lived as a boy in Port Glasgow and that was over 50 years ago. What we had then was far, far better than some people have today. In the cutting thrust of politics, industry and commerce it's easy to forget or perhaps overlook the most basic of human needs. May I humbly suggest that at the next time you notice a town twinned with another that you pause and think of something much more basic and to note that even our small change can make a big change.