 Inclusive, vibrant, stimulating, diverse, loud, patriotic, multicultural, creative, community, warm, diverse, challenging, different, free, serviture, and green. Multicolour as well. Multicolour, and green multicoloured. Rangicangi, Farak and Eggdampagal. Soas has really taught me how to learn to listen and embrace diversity. Soas has made me a lot more open. You analyse events and things in a very different aspect. You're just absorbing this constant cultural hybridity of Soas. The advantage that Soas students get above all other universities is their global perspective. You come to Soas and you learn not just about Western culture, you learn about culture throughout the world and how from Western culture interacts with those other cultures. The thing about Soas is that you're getting so many people coming together and so many different views, backgrounds, ideologies, men, like, in one small institution. Probably the most formative experiences was speaking to people and learning stuff that you wouldn't learn anywhere else. The range of subjects that people work on and the kinds of ethical and political commitments that they study has been extraordinary. We get a far more diverse range of students all wanting to make a difference in the world, which is what's important. I've found a lot of like-minded individuals and been able to really like, kind of find my niche here. Soas ma aunu bandagadi, ma yatri manche matre tio, kati min seshintio, tada aile ma raje nitik manche pani jas to laksamu. I think people take you seriously, like whoever you are and where have you come from, like, whatever background or like, kind of ideas you have. I think people take you seriously as a person. I didn't expect to learn so much about South Sudanese hip hop. Definitely not, and I'm glad I did because it's amazing. Soas has changed my life. I came here very skeptical and very cynical about the world around me and I think like, from the people I met, from the experience I had, now I really have more trust in the world and the thing that can be done in order to change the world. I definitely learned to look at things from a very sympathetic way after being in Soas. I see my mind becoming more receptive of new ideas. Well, it has definitely changed my view of the world in terms of not necessarily of like choosing a side but just engaging more with issues that I didn't think related to me. Like, my best memory at Soas would be maybe the closeness that I've had with all of my classmates. It's been like a family thing to me actually. It's very nice to feel like so supported. Just having this sense of belonging, sort of like a family environment where you can share your ideas and be comfortable knowing that you're with people who are like you. The good thing is in here that the majority of people is minorities. The best thing about being at Soas has been the students. Hands down, no questions asked. I am perpetually surprised and pleased by how amazing Soas students are, how incredibly committed, how incredibly intellectually curious their sense of originality and curiosity, their sense of enthusiasm about the world, their optimism about how they can transform things, their sense of ethical commitment to their colleagues, to the other people who are at Soas and teaching them has been an extraordinary privilege. It's like a celebration of different cultures. The colour, the vibrancy, the people, everything. It's just, it's unlike anywhere you've seen. Resultant. Happier now. Very tolerant. Exciting. Engaging. Colourful. Enlightening. Yes. And passion. Vivid. Scenting. Complex. That's my word for Soas. Complex. It's also a beautiful place. Soas is the greatest ever.