U.S. first lady Michelle Obama (L) watches as her mother Marian Robinson (R) feeds apples to giant pandas during their visit at Giant Panda Research Base March 26, 2014 in Chengdu, Sichuan province, China. Michelle Obama’s one-week-long visit in China will be focused on educational and cultural exchanges. (Photo by Petar Kujundzic-Pool/Getty Images)

U.S. first lady Michelle Obama (L) watches as her mother Marian Robinson (R) feeds apples to giant pandas during their visit at Giant Panda Research Base March 26, 2014 in Chengdu, Sichuan province, China. Michelle Obama’s one-week-long visit in China will be focused on educational and cultural exchanges. (Photo by Petar Kujundzic-Pool/Getty Images)

We want you to have it. You know what? Have this video from the panda base, too.

The image and video both come from First Lady Michelle Obama’s trip to China, which ends today. “During her trip to China, as on previous international trips to Africa, Asia, Europe and Latin America, the First Lady will be focusing on the power and importance of education, both in her own life and in the lives of young people in both countries,” according to the White House. And, as the New York Times reports, Obama also discussed human rights.

“Many decades ago, there were actually laws in America that allowed discrimination against black people like me, who are a minority in the United States,” Mrs. Obama said in a speech at the Number 7 School here. “But over time, ordinary citizens decided that those laws were unfair. So they held peaceful protests and marches.”

Slowly but surely, Mrs. Obama said to her rapt young Chinese audience, America changed, and “today, 50 years later, my husband and I are president and first lady of the United States.”