 Well firstly may I just welcome you to King Sopuza the second Memorial Park so this is a monument that is dedicated to a Swat in his icon King Sopuza the second who led the Swat nation to independence as well as also he brought about unity within the kingdom as you know that we are surrounded by former Marxist Mozambique on the eastern side and former racist South Africa on the western side and these two countries were in turmoil and being a small country today been easily for the country to be or to be to dissipate or to kind of not being stable but through his wisdom and leadership we we were a peaceful country even today so he is the father of the current king King Swat to the his majesty King Swat in the third and also he is Swaziland's longest reigning king he ruled the country for 61 years from 1921 up until 1982 one of his achievement as achievements was as well as the is the independence which we gained from Britain on the 6th of September 1968 without any bloodshed so that's why we he is revered so much in the country so in summary simple I'll say that he is the father of the Swazi nation well I would say he is a nation builder because yes because we have had previous other previous kings who have played different roles at different times so I wouldn't say he was he is the father of the Swazi nation in the context that he is the one that brought about freedom or independence as well as also unity in fact if you look at his on top of his statue we have his famous quote which he said that I mean I see so I have no enemy which was one of his philosophies or motto that he believed that he had no enemy because who so ever considered himself as his enemy he will spare no effort in trying to have conference with him so that they can cycle bad differences peacefully without having to shed any blood and above all he also mentioned that in order for a piano to give out good music you must play both keys black and white which meant that as blacks and whites we should live together in harmony so that's in the country we are a country of what of no race but of black and white so we have black and white Swazis all living together in harmony yes amazing we had that the king the former king used to have cast in here I don't know can we find a cast in this museum yes we have in fact we have three of his cars in fact fleet of cars so we can try and we can visit them we could see them and then I think after that will be done thank you so much yes in fact the cars not all in there okay yes but we do have others in the well I saw I saw some in the museum yes in the National Museum but we are still waiting to in fact because there's no space so but has been a proposal of extending the museum to bring them in okay yes so currently that's why we have due to space we only have three okay yes but is it like so I want to know like the cast over there is it possible for us to see it's not okay yes it's not the only ones that are for public displays at this one okay yes okay yeah so here in the museum other than the pictographic exhibition that we have we also have three of King's oboos fleet of cars so we have here the first one we have the Buick which is a 1937 model it's a V8 straight-8 engine and then we also have the second one which is a a Buick as well it's a 1957 model then the third one which is almost seven meters it's a Cadillac fleet of 1968 yes I mean can we see the inside yes you may see the inside this I just wanted to know like was the color like this or you guys just because it's been long yeah it's been a norm that in the olden days the black color was reserved for people of status of people of who are in authority yes so mostly these cars are black yes because of that yes so they're black and dark blue yes so this one is actually not blue but I mean not black but dark blue yes yes so yes the inside is a kept at its original state though the outside has been repainted you know paint fades away but these ones we just they are just kept at their original state yes and then as I said the second one is a 1957 model you look at the steering wheel this side is on the right this one is on the left yes so this one also it's at its original state inside but we we still working on improving them to sort of restore them to their original state yes yes then we have the 1968 that was when the country had its independence yes I wouldn't be sure because he had other various cars so we will not we will not be I cannot be sure of that which car he used yes on that day but I suppose that all the car should be in the museum or he's just only three not they currently we only have three we are still in the process okay because as you could see the museum but we still we only have pictographic exhibition because we are still in the process of acquiring kings suppose as artifacts yes he in fact being a royal monument we we we in fact we wait for the royalty to give us some of the artifacts exactly that's so beautiful in fact we wait for them to be donated some of the artifacts instead they are brought in where the time is right yes otherwise this this is on behalf of all the 326,000 watching us right now we want to say thank you so much for taking us around and also thank you so much for educating us is there anything that you want to say or you want to show us about the man that I never asked there isn't much except that to thank you for coming with such an initiative to show Africa because sometimes they say the Bible I would like to call the Bible says you must start in Jerusalem which means before we explore other continents let's start at home let's start knowing each other let's start because there is a lot that we share in common as Africans but because of the borders that divide us they do not allow us to access or even to visit one another you know frequently basis so I will kindly maybe personally invite everybody that if you happen to visit the kingdom don't go without visiting the king's opusa memorial park amazing and I want to say thank you so much for watching I personally have a question that I wanted to ask him based on what he just said do you think that an African is a foreigner in any African country uh no I mean I wanted that I wanted to come on first one uh an African this is not a foreigner in the African continent he's not a foreigner because to my understanding is that the boundaries that we have today were not made by us though it is such a political question but it's a fact that because we used mountains and rivers to demarcate boundaries not borders which then allowed people to move freely so then as a result of that I cannot say you are a foreigner in your own land or in your own continent it's just that maybe it's what uh in in fact in other ideologies they would believe that but with us in fact uh uh king's opusa had taught us that every human being is worth being treated like you uh every other human being so we cannot then uh with us we don't have what we we don't look at color of the skin to say you are a foreigner or you're not because once you are in the country especially in swaziland we have a motto that says once you're in swaziland you are a swazi you know we don't we don't care about your background just like what the english saying that when you're in rom you do what the romans do so when you're here you are part of us that's why even in traditional ceremonies we don't encourage you to watch but we encourage you to participate because you are one of us