 The Honour of Ife Obadiye Oguosi, the second, is concerned about laying the foundation for retrieving all Yereba artifacts and antiquities that were taken away by the Europeans. Oba Oguosi, who was on site exhibition and the opening of the ancient Oluko heritage in Ileife, mentioned that the location where the prominent Oluko bronze head was discovered and excavated in 1910, and taken to the British Museum remains till date. On the call for the repatriation of artifacts and antiquities of Yereba origin, the Honi admonished that such call must be genuine and be backed by the ability to secure the historical items. We are working on things we have within our confines locally first, for them to know the traceability of our technology, of our science started in the old world. We are way above the science that they are teaching now, it's very evident. But for all our artifacts and antiquities to come back, we need to create a very good base. It's another thing to celebrate returning it back. It's another thing to plug it appropriately for the common use of all of us. Among all the materials that we as human beings have created in our lifetime, stone tools, iron tools, wood, everything, glass is the youngest about 4000 years old, but it's the most sophisticated that you don't really see the technology of glass in so many places around the world. But what we have seen here at this site, where we are all standing, is that the people of ancient Ife were also making their own glass, you know, sourcing the raw material from within this vicinity. We are not telling the whole world that in Africa, in the lay fair, these beads were made. The raw materials were made from it, were sold from Ife, made from Ife. So we made it. Our ancestors made it. And we can prove to the whole world that our ancestors, they are chemists.