Thank you. It gives us some encouragement because of the nature of what the Rwandans went through. We had some very graphic testimony of the painful rapes that happened. You went through some graphic detail as well. It's good to hear some positive stories of healing.
I think you said in your remarks that it was five years that you served there. You mentioned reconciliation. One of the things I'm perceiving from the testimony we've heard is that not only does there have to be reconciliation with the perpetrators, but also a kind of reconciliation in the sense of the cultural stigmatization that happens when someone who was innocent is victimized and has a product of that violent rape, their child. Did you see a progression? I can imagine cultural change happens painfully slowly, but did you see a progression in the societal norms of a change in the attitude towards these women who were victimized and have a child now? Is that changing?