It's modelled in very much the same way. Anybody who's curious about it should go to the Historica-Dominion Institute, which is managing the memory project. We'll follow the same procedure, because we found that it was very successful as well.
We fly to and from Ottawa a lot—you're from western Canada—so we accumulate a lot of Aeroplan points. Over the years I've taken it upon myself, on my own self-guided trips, to go to Commonwealth grave sites in all different parts of the world. On my desk I have sand from all five D-Day beaches. Of course, Juno is prominent. And then I have rocks from the beaches of Dieppe. I have sand from the beaches of Anzio. And I have a rock from the train bed of Auschwitz as well, from a different tour I did of 16 different Holocaust camps.
It's very important to understand World Wars I and II, what they were about, why they fought, what was sacrificed, what was to be learned from those battles as well. I've had the privilege to go and visit all these different sites and learn those lessons and see those museums and talk to veterans.
One of the great things the Canadian War Museum does here in Ottawa is that when you go in there, typically the first person you'll meet is a veteran—all volunteers. I did a tour of the Diefenbunker a month ago or so. You go in there and there are veterans just waiting to volunteer to tell their stories. After a life of public service in the most noble way possible, they give back and they volunteer again at our museums to tell our kids stories. It's an impressive thing.
So anything that we can do to make it easier for them to tell their stories, not just to those like me, who have the privilege to go and visit all these museums, but to generations of kids to come, and digitize their stories and have them online at the national Canadian museum of history or at the national War Museum, so that kids can hear in the correct tone and voice and the chosen language how people describe their experiences.... It's incredibly impactful. That's what we're trying to achieve with the Second World War project and the memory project's extension for the Korean War. It's really important.