Yes. As soon as you walk in the door, we have our land acknowledgement. It's very present. It's there as you walk in. It references the dish with one spoon wampum belt, which means to peaceably share the resources of the land. It's one spoon and one dish and how we need to share those resources.
The Cape Dorset project was a fabulous partnership that we had with the Pan Am Path and a number of other organizations that brought those young people in from Cape Dorset. I want to also speak to partnerships. That's how we operate: with partnerships. It's about connecting those youths not only to our community but to the different communities we partner with. They spent a week on the Pan Am Path creating murals. Their artwork, which is in our stairwell that goes up to the theatre, is still there, so it is not ephemeral. With our building, we have ways to keep remnants of the works up so that as people come up those stairs they look at those drawings and murals and ask, “Who is that?” There are remnants left from that project as a way for us to continue to talk about our relationship with indigenous artists.
I just want to add, too, that it's not—