 Yn hollu ddweud. Fyemdeg. Ymddir llyfr, y cyffreddau a'r ysgol, mae'n ymddorol i'r gwaith bod yn fawr ar-fawr i'ch gydag yng nghymru i'r gincred ei wneud yn yr ysgol yng Ngôl Ysgol i'r Ysgol i'r Ysgol yng nghymru i ffoto'r ffaith o'i ddechrau yng nghymru yn 2013. Mae'r gweithio ar hynny'r gweithio. Ysgol yng nghymru. Rwy'n credu'r gweithio ar gyfer byddai'r gweithio yn y adeiladau i brifoniadau gweld gweithio gyda ti wedi'u eu defnyddio. Efallai, mae'n ddegi'r bumbles a'r bwysig i mi wneud ydy'r bwysig, byddai'r bwysig i chi, ac mae'r bwysig i chi'ch eitharedd gyda'r gweithau, byddai'r bwysig i chi'ch ei wneud i wneud i chi mwych y gweithio, gyda'r bwysig i chi'ch eu anodd yn y chael eich iddyn nhw. Felly mae'n gwybod i chi i'r ffryd, I apologise, the hat is too big because I'm going to take it off and I hope that's okay. Save later embarrassment. It's also the vote of thanks job to thank everybody who's been part of this ceremony. Everybody who saw us who's worked incredibly hard to make today a special one. So thank you to everyone across the school who has done that. There's more to come in the graduation tent, which I'm sure you're looking forward to, but I digress. We're here because you've done it. Each and every one of you here in front of me looking absolutely beautiful in your graduation gear, hats and all. You should have absolutely great joy in knowing that you've successfully made it through one of the most unique and challenging and wonderful higher education institutions in the entire world. Each and every one of you sitting to my right and all of you behind me should be so, so proud of them. When I was sitting just for a year or last year, we heard a lot about the mysteries of soas, the Japanese roof garden, the printers that seem to have phantoms in them right when the deadlines approach, the essays that occasionally not often get lost in the ether, and the strange smell that sometimes takes over the JCR and the Barney on an evening. Others have spoken about all the really wonderful things, the samosas, the ten-minute breaks from the library that somehow turn into an hour discussion about something extremely meaningful and deep when you're just meant to get some water, and having lectures that really leave you questioning the core of yourself and really questioning that certainty that you thought you had. And obviously, meeting all of the friends and all the loved ones that will stay with you for the rest of your life for good or for bad, and Harry Krishna, which is. In my four years at Soas, I've been so lucky to protest with the Samba Band, to go to UGMs and debate some of the most important issues in higher education, and also debate whether or not to have a dance machine in the bar. You can imagine which one was more heated. And I've been so lucky to meet all of you and to represent all of you at Harrison and Keiko this year, and I absolutely know that Johann and Leah and David will do an amazing job and will carry on Soas being such an amazing institution and will continue the critical academy and inviting for what we all believe is right, and then I really pass off to you guys, you'll be amazing. And they're all sitting in the audience today, so that's very great. The thing that I've noticed in my time here is that we all come from ridiculously diverse backgrounds, from all over the world, from all different types of families and different belief systems, but somehow we're all very strangely similar. Everyone who comes to Soas comes for a reason. We come here because Soas has a reputation of being different, of challenging the status quo, of opening minds and having a real passion for that which most others overlook. We come here because each and every one of us wants to have a positive impact and be engaged in the world around us. However, the world is not sometimes that easy to live in. The critical viewpoints and constant questioning that we all hold so dear will not always be the viewpoints of those we encounter once we leave. You're about to go out into the world as it is. A world that we think we can all agree is a bit horrible sometimes, but can be completely overwhelmingly beautiful. And if I've learned anything at Soas, is it nothing is or ever will be static? The changing world did not begin in the 1960s or with the welfare forms. Everything has always been constantly changing. And I hate to sound like a horrible cliched person, but you're going to be partly responsible for the future of that continual change, whether you want to or not. If you're going to change the world, it's what happens. And to be honest, and a little bit biased, I can't think of anybody better to go out there than you guys. This is a place where you learn as much from each other, your academics and as an academic community in Soas, then you'll learn from your books and in your classes. And it's such an amazing and important thing. And I hope that you guys will be proud when you leave this place and continue to make each other proud as you move forward and continue to learn from each other because it doesn't end here, the learning doesn't end, it never does, like the continual changing. And all I can say is thank you for everything, all of you, you've been wonderful, absolutely wonderful and I know you'll be great in any way, in every way. Congratulations.