Thank you.
I come to this table in, perhaps, a unique situation for the people at this table, because I'm not only a Jewish woman, but I am a Jewish mother of two Jewish students on university campuses in North America right now.
I really thank all of the students for coming here and speaking. I have indirectly, through my children, been living that reality, and it is so important that you've come here.
I want to thank Anthony for having spearheaded this study, because I think it's really important that we take that moment.... I just want to put that out there.
If I seem emotional, it's because I am. This is personal, just as it is for you.
Yesterday, I heard—and I think you mentioned this in some of your speeches—about holding Jewish events, and then being told they can't happen in that way or that you are seeing them disrupted.
Maybe I can start with Nati. I was going to use the example of the International Holocaust Remembrance Day.
At Queen's were you able to commemorate that day in the same way as you would have in past years?