Yes, we know where the communities are, because many of the communities have done what the community in Saskatoon has done. A few people came in early eighties—and maybe, in one or two cases, in the late seventies—and they've sponsored and sponsored and sponsored people to build a community.
I can't tell you how large all of them are, but we have communities in Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Saskatoon, the Windsor-London area of Ontario, Toronto, and there's a community in Montreal. Those would be the largest population bases of Iraqi Christians. Because of how the Iraqi Christians have sponsored or done family reunification and brought people here, those communities would probably be Christian.
I know that in Saskatoon we have a few Kurdish families, and we maybe have two or three families that would be Arab.
One of the other phenomena is that most Iraqis have not come as government-assisted refugees, and so they have not been designated to various cities across the country. They've come as privately sponsored refugees, sponsored by their own communities, and they tend to have concentrated in certain areas.