There are a number of ways...my company is involved in a number of ways. We produced a documentary film 10 years ago that was broadcast on CBC nationally called Honour Before Glory, which was the story of the No. 2 Construction Battalion, Canada's all-black unit. It has received a number of national and international awards, and that documentary was widely distributed across Canada, in Canadian schools, universities, libraries, and even in the United States. My company has been involved in terms of telling these stories for a while.
The 60-second and 30-second promotional videos I produce for Citizenship and Immigration Canada are online. The Canadian government has to take an active role in terms of advertising and promoting projects once they've committed to producing them. Nobody will know they exist online if you don't do an active advertising promotional campaign.
My company is also involved in terms of telling these African Canadian stories on stage and bringing them into the schools. We did a play about William Hall, the first Canadian sailor and the first black person to receive the Victoria Cross in 1859. That play was produced, distributed, and performed in schools across Toronto, in Halifax, and in Ottawa. We took the play to Ireland as well.
Last year, we did a play about Mary Ann Shadd, the first black woman to publish a newspaper in North America and the first teacher to open an integrated school in Canada. That play was performed in Toronto schools. This year we're doing a play for Black History Month that will be widely presented in schools across Canada on Richard Pierpoint and the Company of Coloured Men, which was formed during the War of 1812. This project is a special commemoration project for the 200th anniversary of the War of 1812.
Those are all of the things we are doing.