[Member speaks in Cree]
I know a little Cree from my work on the James Bay coast. Our communities are dependent, absolutely dependent, on Wawatay Radio. They connect the Cree communities over a 1,000-kilometre radius in my riding, and they allow them to speak to each other; they allow them to participate as a larger community, particularly with the families who have moved to our biggest centre, which is Timmins. I'm very interested in the role that aboriginal radio plays in the protection of language with the development of community.
You speak of the need to restore language. I know Wawatay focuses mostly on Cree in northeastern Ontario and Oji-Cree in northwestern Quebec. I have worked in aboriginal communities in Quebec where some of the language has been lost, and the language on the radio station would tend to be English, but it still played the role of bringing people together and allowing them to hear and talk....
Are you going to be exclusively focused on language, or is this also a way of allowing all the communities within your territory to participate with each other, whether they speak English or...?