Well, the biggest thing is to continue to provide information in your householders, and encourage people to do that, including encouraging teachers and principals in any forum or opportunity you have to invite veterans into the schools. We support the Dominion Institute. Actually, it's now the Historica-Dominion Institute; they have merged as of September 1. We provide financial support to the Historica-Dominion Institute for their speakers bureau. They maintain lists of veterans from right across the country who go into schools to speak with students.
When you bring veterans and young people together, you don't have to script it; you just bring them together and watch the magic happen, because they make connections that are very personal to them and tell their own stories. Those are really important opportunities for young people to learn about remembrance from those who experienced the events firsthand.
There have been an increasing number of younger veterans. We've been strongly encouraging the institute to have more and more younger veterans as speakers in their speakers bureau, because it's important that students not just see this as remembering things that happened before they were born, but also pay tribute to what's happening today as part of their own experience, whether it's happening in Afghanistan now, or in the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s, or as part of the many other foreign and domestic activities of the Canadian Forces.
So it's important to encourage these events in as many ways as possible. It's a matter of talking to people through householders and using any opportunity you have.