Thank you very much for your question.
In terms of the government support, as I mentioned, $2.5 million was invested for the Jewish community historical recognition project. There were several initiatives, including the work Canada is doing, of course, with the ITF on the issue of education and remembrance and research. Work is also being done with our NGO communities and our partners on this very important work. There's the important national monument on the Holocaust in the national capital which is under way. This was the subject of a private member's bill by my former colleague, and your colleague, Minister Tim Uppal.
In addition, speaking out on issues of both anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial is very important. There was a statement made by the Prime Minister some time back in which he said:
...to honour the victims and survivors of the Holocaust, it is not enough simply to remember. Truly remembering the Holocaust must also be an understanding and an undertaking. It is an understanding that the same threats exist today. It is an undertaking of a solemn responsibility to fight those threats. We see it in the manifestos of organizations which deny the right of Israel as a Jewish state to exist.
If you are talking about Holocaust denial, if you're talking about acts of ongoing genocidal states and state action that is incitement towards genocide, then we also have a responsibility to speak out. That was a statement the Prime Minister made in his address this year during Yom Hashoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, at the Canadian War Museum.
There is ongoing activity taking place. It is extremely important that we be vocal, that we speak out, that we work with partners in different sectors, both nationally and internationally, to fight against racism, xenophobia, anti-Semitism, and Holocaust denial.
Colin may have some additional projects to speak about.