She's been trying all her best to intimidate me on this space. That's why she does. But I have my pace, and I have my freedom.
This is a nice piece idea, Vantisheva, and the delivery is on point. Thank you. Racings.
It's not something that is external. So, that is all I have to say for now. Thank you.
Beautiful presentation. Very insightful. Dov, since the host and the co-host, the co-host love, I don't know if the host is in love, so there is some confusion on the screen.
Well, that was a marvellous speech by Jishewa. That poem describes this statement that most of us have grown accustomed to, that says you... how was it put? Ah, I'm forgetting how that particular statement is put. Something like, we do not... the challenges did not change.
You grow stronger than the challenges. Something like that. I think another statement that explains this better is that tough times do not last.
Tough people do. In summary, that poem is just explaining how our naivety has derived out of peace at the early hours of our challenges. But the more we grow into these challenges, the more we understand, the more we digest the way, the best means to overcome these challenges, and then eventually realise even there are things that the way we handle them, there are certain events that... there are certain events in the past that the way we handle them will be very different from the way we handle them now.
Not because the situations are different or particularly distant, but the difference is the fact that we have grown, we understand things very much clearly and better now. So that's a very beautiful piece by Jishewa, narrating the coming of age. Not in the coming of age, but in a societal manner when it comes to challenges and trials, and especially the fact that she uses... what do these soldiers call it? She uses the sea.
I think the soldiers call it navy also. She uses the environment of the sea to paint this imagery.