Okay.
Colonel, thanks to you and your team for this session. It really is hugely important to our study.
You have a unique take on the recovery process of the ill and the injured. I'm going to give you a double- or a triple-barrelled question here, but you mentioned that the woundedness of those who are injured is partly spiritual. Tell us about the spiritual side of healing in your experience. This would be subjective, I'm sure. Is it a leading indicator, a lagging indicator? Is it something that goes alongside physical recovery? Give us a bit of perspective on that.
Second, our Canadian Forces go into operations, deployments, with excellent morale rooted in their values, rooted in their faith in many cases. How do they come back with those values and that faith when they are ill and injured?
I've certainly heard stories, which tend to be the ones that come to the fore, where the spiritual side of the person who is a victim of an attack has been deepened, but you have a much broader experience. I'd love to hear your perspective.
Finally, you mentioned the commitment to diversity. We all celebrate it in your service and your branch. I come from a very diverse riding. Many of us around the table do. Do we have Orthodox priests? Are we looking at Hindu pandits, Buddhist monks? Do we have diversity among the Muslim representatives of the chaplaincy at the moment, Shia, Sunni etc.?
I know that wasn't one question, Chair, but I think we might have a little more time.