I think we would appall any person who had a PhD in development, and I really have to apologize to them, but what happened the first time was that the men from the village in Arghandab made me promise to bring back food, so we simply bought a lot of bread and put it in the backs of vehicles. We bought rice, oil, we took advice from Afghan colleagues about what to take, what they could actually use, because they're cooking in a very primitive way. Now when we go we always take bread, because they can immediately eat it, because we want to talk to them. If they're hungry and we give them rice, they want to go off and cook some, so from a practical point of view we always take bread. I'm sure that's probably, as I said, appalling to anybody who knows anything about food aid and development, and I'm embarrassed to tell you that it was that basic.
We simply thought, if we found a bunch of people in Canada who were hungry and we could take them food, what would we do? So we went and bought food, nothing sophisticated.