so did you do that, then, with wirathu, the monk in myanmar? well, he is very clever. very clever. he has done many interviews and when we were interviewing him he had his own crew filming us. that was a very strange situation. an example here, of the kind of thing he said to you in your documentary, when he is talking about the rohingya muslims, "the main features of the african catfish are that they grow very fast, breathe very fast, and they are violent. they eat their own species and destroy the natural resources. the muslims are exactly like that fish." yes, this was so outrageous that i decided to have it as an opening statement from him. so the audience would understand what we are dealing with. i mean, when you say it's part of the culture, that he uses this kind of language, you also showed in your documentary that there were some very outspoken buddhist monks, who said, no, this is not what we understand buddhism to be about, we preach tolerance and we don't use this kind of rhetoric. of course, wherever you have that kind of prejudice, you have certain peopl