[2] It displays traditional Botswana crafts and paintings and aims to celebrate the work of local artists.
[3] The museum is also involved with the preservation of Tsodilo, the country's first world heritage area,[4] among other efforts.
[5] It is the caretaker of Tsholofelo Park, the burial place of the "negro of Banyoles," known as "El Negro" in Botswana, following the body's return from the Darder Museum of Banyoles, in Spain.
[6] The museum was established in 1967 via an Act of Parliament and it officially opened to the public in 1968.
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