 Rydw i'r unrhyw gwybysu'r ystafell ar hyn yn ymddylch yma, a rydw i'r ymddylch yn ymddylch yn y ddweud, yn ysgrifftyr Leslie Morrison. Rydw i'n ddweud? Rydw i'n ddod amser hynny? Rydw i'n ddweud yma i ddweud yma ein ffordd aeth yma, sydd eisiau yn cyblodd yn gyfrifio fel y mae'n cyfrifio ar y cyfrifio ar gyfer 93. Rydw i'n cyfrifio ar ymddylch, In the words of George Fox, founder of the Quakers, she walked cheerfully over the world, seeing the good in every one and everything. She made everything she wore, she wasted nothing, her garden was loved and beautiful and her gate and door were always open. She and her late husband were Mr and Ms community, engaged, connecting, encouraging. In the 1980s they started the Tweeddale peace group and in 2021 we planted a tree on the banks of the River Tweed to commemorate that and to welcome the treaty for the prohibition of nuclear weapons. Our friend embodied Quakerism. She lived life to the fool with curiosity, creativity and kindness. She left a legacy of love and compassion. She also had courage to quote the Quaker book of advices and queries, live adventurously. When choices arise, do you take the way that offers the fullest opportunity for the use of your gifts in the service of God and the community? We have come to understand what our friend always knew, that life cannot be taken for granted, that we need to work urgently to preserve the earth that we love. She knew that peace and our ecological system are interconnected, that we need to find ways of working with those whose actions could destroy it. Peace, climate justice, social justice and racial justice are all interconnected. On a daily basis when I was working as a GP I heard people's stories whose lives illustrated this. The climate crisis is a health crisis and health professionals have a duty to use their voice to say this very loudly. The duty of all of us, perhaps especially politicians, is to look at the many issues facing us in the world today through the lens of the climate crisis. Climate change is the crucial issue of our time. Rather than being overwhelmed by the enormity of the task, let's instead adopt the attitude of Christiana Figueiras, who chaired the UN Paris climate talks. She said, we are privileged to be alive now, at this time of climate crisis, when we have the opportunity to make a real difference. We can all work together in a spirit of hope, and the one question that we all have to ask ourselves is, are we being good ancestors?