 Watch me, don't watch the cameras, okay? That's what you mean. I'm Samo Lofusuapia crying from Ghana. I was born in Accra. Accra is very busy, a lot of traffic. So Siena happened to be a perfect environment. A small city, easy to integrate. I was born and raised in Italy. My name is Marco Giammario Sarai. I'm an Italian. I don't understand anything. All your courses were in English? Were in English, exactly. And that made it easier for me to complete school on time. I used to live right at the centre in a university residence, which takes basically 15 minutes from my residence to the university. I'm the guy who loves much of nightlife. Yeah, so sometimes when I have to study, I equally like to study at night. So I was always late for early morning lessons. I happened to be in a position of an organiser of Ghanaian students some time back. I remember there was one time we went to an outskirts of Siena. If I remember correctly, it happens to be Gaioli. So we went, we saw the room and at that particular place, buses were not moving often. So we delayed a little bit and we missed the last bus. We worked for about an hour before we met the next bus. I lived a major part of my life in a smaller town where culture is equally important to the people, just like Siena. And so we have annual festivals, which is called the Ujra, where we carry the cane. We go through the city where there is a lot of drumming, dancing, where we offer prayers to the gods of the land, which is very traditional for us. Why is the value for Siena? Exactly. There is a lot in common with these two traditions, with each contrader having their own processions in the city. Is it your favorite? I think I would choose Nikio because I just don't know the name sounds good to me. My masters focused with Europe, especially Europe after the World War II and how they came together through the economic integration, political integration. There is much we can learn from Europe because Europe happens to be one of the greatest integration stories. I think the process of improvement needs more hands. So I am thinking of pursuing a PhD to improve more, to get to the heights where I am better placed to contribute very much back to Ghana. If you live in your comfort zone, you hardly move on. I always aspired to meet challenges and I wanted to experience something different from my background, my environment has helped me to improve very much, especially in most aspects of self-teaching, reflecting my days back in Ghana. Siena feels home to me now. I felt, well, I am entitled to be myself. This is after all my home.