Excellent park, convenient location, there is a skate park, there is a market of antiques and all rarities nearby and not only, a real find for collectors, there is also an art gallery, the park itself is not big but cozy, there are drinking fountains, there are a lot of them all over Tbilisi, you don't have to buy water
Quite a unique sculpture, the park itself is also not bad.
There is a skate area and drinking water.
There is also a cafe.
There is a public toilet nearby, on the footpath, under the bridge (free of charge)
The history of the monument is best to read on the wiki.
We can say that this park is a great location for children, from the little ones with whom parents still walk to teenagers who are interested in their companies. I observed both on weekends and on weekdays its fullness and interest in this place
"Dada Ena" - "Native language": a monument to the Georgian language. It was put in memory of the events of April 14, 1978, when the Supreme Council of the Georgian SSR was preparing to adopt an amendment to the Constitution, after which the Russian language acquired the status of the second state language (besides, in fact, Georgian). The townspeople held a protest rally of thousands, because their language, completely unlike the language of the Country of the Soviets, protected by its own complex alphabet, remained one of the last opportunities to feel national unity. Especially in the absence of any economic and political independence of the republic. As a result, the amendment was never adopted. In Moscow, such disobedience was treated surprisingly mildly, no reaction followed, and no more attempts were made to give the Russian language the status of the state language