Sure. Just wave or something, when my time is done.
Thank you for joining us and for your presentation, Mr. Rwirangira.
Your last comment really speaks to the objective of our study. We are trying to target the aftermath. We also hope to learn something from the experience of those children who are the fruit of hate.
There's probably an equivalent French saying to a well-known saying that comes from Spain, “Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it”. We are endeavouring to learn from the horrible experience of Rwanda. These types of actions are continuing. We see them in the DRC. We see them happening in Syria. As a country that has built its reputation on providing resources and help in crisis situations, I hope we can learn from your experience in helping that forgotten segment of your community, those 20,000 children born of hate.
You have touched on the consequences of their experience: the denial of their parents, the denial of themselves. I would like to put the burden on you right now to share your counsel on what can be done in the early stages to help bridge that gap, to help change that tide of continuing that hate. My feeling is that if the community succumbs to the hatred of those children, then what was intended succeeds. That community ceases to exist.
What counsel can you give us in terms of what we can do in the future, and possibly continue to do, to help those Rwandans to understand and support these children who were born of these atrocious acts?