and he had said to, you know, what was in beacon south africa, we a, one time it was 35000000. there was a very huge meeting that he had been one of the biggest squares. and he said, we will die for the intervention of independence or south africa and, and that, that, that, that happened. he, of course, died in an airplane accident in mysterious circumstances. i would rather say i'm, i'm, it wasn't, it wasn't always serious and it wasn't an accident. it was a crush. you keep coming back to 2 issues, 2 sides of your father's legacy education and his plan, a frequentist vision. this stuck in education for us. he had associated philosophy of change. he wanted people to change in the minds of the hops and build up a new understanding of their position and society. he wanted equality, vanity, and he wanted the economic resources of the country to be distribution equity. your father was a socialist, absolutely is. that's too relevant to today's the attitude in africa. i think it is absolutely relevant to perhaps not in the context that it was at that time. but we need to find a formu