Yes, that actually is also an interesting point, because many new Canadians don't have a shared history with Canada or native-born Canadians. But what's interesting is that very often it is new Canadians who are prouder of what Canada stands for and Canadian values than some of us who take those for granted.
The conversation is very often about values in remembrance: Canadians have answered the call in defence of Canadian values. When we have the conversation at the level of the Canadian values that are important to us, these are what new Canadians embrace very much. In fact, these are very often the reasons they have come to Canada.
We work with Citizenship and Immigration Canada, and as part of their orientation activities for new Canadians, we provide them with materials on remembrance to encourage the learning of Canada's history, including its military history. We've also provided some suggestions to the citizenship judges, who do the actual ceremonies, on including some remembrance messaging in their activities. This is something that we have offered, but we're also getting requests from CIC and their people for additional material.