Thanks for the question.
This funding relates.... Just let me give you the perspective. We created the community historical recognition program to provide funding for projects related to the commemoration of an education about immigration restriction and wartime internment measures. A number of envelopes were set aside. One of those was as a result of an agreement that I signed with three organizations from the Ukrainian Canadian community—the Ukrainian Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko, the Ukrainian Canadian Congress, and the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association—with respect to the commemoration of the internment of some 8,000 former subjects of the Austro-Hungarian empire between 1914 and 1920, most but not all of whom were ethnic Ukrainians.
We transferred a $10 million endowment fund to the Canadian Foundation of Taras Shevchenko, and in addition we undertook to work with those organizations in creating interpretive centres and in commemoration of some of the internment sites from the First World War that are now in national parks. For example, there's Cave and Basin, I think it's called, in Banff park, where a number of Austro-Hungarians were interned—