I really appreciate the question.
Of course, I'm a huge proponent of providing folks with the tools they might need to do their jobs in the best way possible. In this case, I think it's very clear that it also includes training on the language to use to ensure that folks are not unintentionally causing harm.
I would also add that, in response to the first part of your question on education, my mom was also an educator. When we talk about education, we have to remember—and I want to bring this into the community—to look at the diversity of witnesses who have been called to provide testimony. We didn't all just fall from the sky; we all come from our own individual communities.
I want to present this committee with the fact that there is a tremendous opportunity for us to share the lessons learned that we've already had to learn in our individual communities—religious, racial, ethnic and otherwise—which have built bridges. That's why, when we talk about education, and when I talk about it, I'm such a huge proponent of the fact that people can change their minds, that people can see things in a different way, because I know I've done it, and I know that all of my colleagues who are here today have done it in their own communities. Allow us to bring those lessons learned to those in the House of Commons as well.