 Mae'rstoed, roasteddau, sydd gan y cyfnodol, mae'n cael ei wneud y siarwr yn yr hynny o'r ddysgu'r ddweud. Fydnodd Broseryd RC o'n ddull ei gweithio am hyry o'r ffawr, mae'n cael ei gweithio gyda'r gweld ff jagu. Mae'n dda'i hefyd wedi cael, fan o'r yllaf ar y cyfnodol i elef mor ar y ffawr, a erioed e'r oed yn yn ôl eu bydd yma, a'r tyn. Mae wedi cael ei gweithiau, Maen nhw'n cael ei wneud am yr ystod yn y Cymru yw'r cynllun yma. Felly mae gennym o'r fatha'r bwysig sy'n cyllid yn gyffredinol ar gyfer'i anghir ar gael arnydd o ddiddordeb yn ymgyrch, sy'n gwybodol yn ymgyrch ar gyfer'i gwahodol a'r ymgyrch ar rhan hynny yn ymgyrch ar gyfer yma'r ymgyrch ar gyfer ymgyrch ar gyfer ymgyrch ar gyfer ymgyrch ar gyfer'i gwahodol. Bydd yma'n hynny'n cymwybolaethol yn y Cymru yw'r ysgolwyd. My vote of thanks is dedicated to the academic staff, our lecturers and tutors, in particular our fractional staff who did so much for us on so very little. I'd also like to give a special thanks to the non-academic staff. Thank you to support staff, cleaners, security, porters, catering staff and all outsourced workers who are pivotal to the functioning of this university. I think many of us here will be very familiar with the Just For Workers campaign. In a few months after nine years of struggle they are going to be brought in house and this victory is going to help ensure many of you here. I'd like to thank our families and friends without whom I know many of us wouldn't be sitting here. I'm lucky enough to be a part of the cohort that is the class of 2018 and I'd like for us all to acknowledge the level of labour, both intellectual and emotional, that was done to get us here today. Especially the encouragements and support you received and also gave to friends and classmates. Take a moment to look around you. You all did that with each other and for each other and that is a massive achievement. They say it takes a village to raise a child but also really takes the whole community to get you a degree. Having said that, I'm sure that your degree has been just one part of your time at SAAS. In fact, I'm sure that a commitment to social change and liberatory politics has been a central part of how you spent your free time during your university time. Whether it's partaking in the abundance of extracurricular activities run by societies or going on a protest. So what I'm saying is, continue with it. Collectively organise, be kind and generous to others but also yourself. You're so much more than a degree classification, whether it's a first, a two-one, a two-two or a third. University is so much more than what you learn inside the four walls of a classroom. I know that the discussions and debates in the JCR bar on the green, the SAAS steps at parties or on picket lines have just been as formative. There is a lot that we've got out of SAAS but it's fair to say they also gained quite a bit from us. You may feel grateful towards SAAS but SAAS should really be grateful to have had you. Not only did they gain £9,000 a year and more so from international students. They also gained unique minds and characters who contributed so much to the culture and spirit of SAAS in the short time they were here. So I'd like to thank SOAsians both past and present for cultivating such a rare and extraordinary space that we've all come to love. SAAS has built a reputation for itself that suggests a commitment to social justice. I'm sure that it's this reputation that led many of us here in the first place. I hope that it continues to practice what it preaches and even if it doesn't then I know it has students that will continue to do that work for them. Whether it's fighting for free education, outsource workers or a more decolonial world, I know we can trust SOAsians to stand up and fight for justice, equality and liberation. With that being said, I'd like to leave you with the final stanza of a poem by June Jordan, a black feminist poet and writer. Who will join the standing up and the ones who stood without sweet company will sing and sing back into the mountains if necessary, even if under the sun. We are the ones we have been waiting for. Thank you very much.