Jeremy Gilley: One day of peace

149,288 views ・ 2011-08-10

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:15
I was basically concerned about what was going on in the world.
0
15260
3000
00:18
I couldn't understand
1
18260
2000
00:20
the starvation, the destruction,
2
20260
2000
00:22
the killing of innocent people.
3
22260
2000
00:24
Making sense of those things
4
24260
2000
00:26
is a very difficult thing to do.
5
26260
3000
00:29
And when I was 12, I became an actor.
6
29260
3000
00:32
I was bottom of the class. I haven't got any qualifications.
7
32260
3000
00:35
I was told I was dyslexic.
8
35260
3000
00:38
In fact, I have got qualifications.
9
38260
2000
00:40
I got a D in pottery, which was the one thing that I did get --
10
40260
2000
00:42
which was useful, obviously.
11
42260
2000
00:44
And so concern
12
44260
2000
00:46
is where all of this comes from.
13
46260
2000
00:48
And then, being an actor, I was doing these different kinds of things,
14
48260
3000
00:51
and I felt the content of the work that I was involved in
15
51260
2000
00:53
really wasn't cutting it, that there surely had to be more.
16
53260
3000
00:56
And at that point, I read a book by Frank Barnaby,
17
56260
2000
00:58
this wonderful nuclear physicist,
18
58260
2000
01:00
and he said that media had a responsibility,
19
60260
2000
01:02
that all sectors of society had a responsibility
20
62260
3000
01:05
to try and progress things and move things forward.
21
65260
2000
01:07
And that fascinated me,
22
67260
2000
01:09
because I'd been messing around with a camera most of my life.
23
69260
3000
01:12
And then I thought, well maybe I could do something.
24
72260
2000
01:14
Maybe I could become a filmmaker.
25
74260
2000
01:16
Maybe I can use the form of film constructively
26
76260
2000
01:18
to in some way make a difference.
27
78260
2000
01:20
Maybe there's a little change I can get involved in.
28
80260
3000
01:23
So I started thinking about peace,
29
83260
2000
01:25
and I was obviously, as I said to you,
30
85260
2000
01:27
very much moved by these images,
31
87260
2000
01:29
trying to make sense of that.
32
89260
2000
01:31
Could I go and speak to older and wiser people
33
91260
2000
01:33
who would tell me how they made sense
34
93260
2000
01:35
of the things that are going on?
35
95260
2000
01:37
Because it's obviously incredibly frightening.
36
97260
2000
01:39
But I realized that,
37
99260
2000
01:41
having been messing around with structure as an actor,
38
101260
2000
01:43
that a series of sound bites in itself wasn't enough,
39
103260
3000
01:46
that there needed to be a mountain to climb,
40
106260
2000
01:48
there needed to be a journey that I had to take.
41
108260
2000
01:50
And if I took that journey,
42
110260
2000
01:52
no matter whether it failed or succeeded, it would be completely irrelevant.
43
112260
2000
01:54
The point was that I would have something
44
114260
2000
01:56
to hook the questions of -- is humankind fundamentally evil?
45
116260
3000
01:59
Is the destruction of the world inevitable? Should I have children?
46
119260
2000
02:01
Is that a responsible thing to do? Etc., etc.
47
121260
3000
02:04
So I was thinking about peace,
48
124260
2000
02:06
and then I was thinking, well where's the starting point for peace?
49
126260
2000
02:08
And that was when I had the idea.
50
128260
2000
02:10
There was no starting point for peace.
51
130260
2000
02:12
There was no day of global unity.
52
132260
2000
02:14
There was no day of intercultural cooperation.
53
134260
2000
02:16
There was no day when humanity came together,
54
136260
2000
02:18
separate in all of those things
55
138260
2000
02:20
and just shared it together --
56
140260
2000
02:22
that we're in this together,
57
142260
2000
02:24
and that if we united and we interculturally cooperated,
58
144260
3000
02:27
then that might be the key to humanity's survival.
59
147260
2000
02:29
That might shift the level of consciousness
60
149260
2000
02:31
around the fundamental issues that humanity faces --
61
151260
3000
02:34
if we did it just for a day.
62
154260
2000
02:36
So obviously we didn't have any money.
63
156260
2000
02:38
I was living at my mom's place.
64
158260
3000
02:41
And we started writing letters to everybody.
65
161260
3000
02:44
You very quickly work out what is it that you've got to do
66
164260
3000
02:47
to fathom that out.
67
167260
2000
02:49
How do you create a day voted by every single head of state in the world
68
169260
3000
02:52
to create the first ever Ceasefire Nonviolence Day,
69
172260
2000
02:54
the 21st of September?
70
174260
2000
02:56
And I wanted it to be the 21st of September
71
176260
2000
02:58
because it was my granddad's favorite number.
72
178260
2000
03:00
He was a prisoner of war.
73
180260
2000
03:02
He saw the bomb go off at Nagasaki.
74
182260
2000
03:04
It poisoned his blood. He died when I was 11.
75
184260
3000
03:07
So he was like my hero.
76
187260
2000
03:09
And the reason why 21 was the number is
77
189260
2000
03:11
700 men left, 23 came back,
78
191260
2000
03:13
two died on the boat and 21 hit the ground.
79
193260
2000
03:15
And that's why we wanted it to be the 21st of September as the date of peace.
80
195260
3000
03:18
So we began this journey,
81
198260
2000
03:20
and we launched it in 1999.
82
200260
2000
03:22
And we wrote to heads of state, their ambassadors,
83
202260
3000
03:25
Nobel Peace laureates, NGOs, faiths,
84
205260
2000
03:27
various organizations -- literally wrote to everybody.
85
207260
3000
03:30
And very quickly, some letters started coming back.
86
210260
3000
03:33
And we started to build this case.
87
213260
3000
03:36
And I remember the first letter.
88
216260
2000
03:38
One of the first letters was from the Dalai Lama.
89
218260
2000
03:40
And of course we didn't have the money; we were playing guitars
90
220260
2000
03:42
and getting the money for the stamps that we were sending out all of [this mail].
91
222260
3000
03:45
A letter came through from the Dalai Lama saying,
92
225260
2000
03:47
"This is an amazing thing. Come and see me.
93
227260
2000
03:49
I'd love to talk to you about the first ever day of peace."
94
229260
2000
03:51
And we didn't have money for the flight.
95
231260
2000
03:53
And I rang Sir Bob Ayling, who was CEO of BA at the time,
96
233260
3000
03:56
and said, "Mate, we've got this invitation.
97
236260
2000
03:58
Could you give me a flight? Because we're going to go see him."
98
238260
3000
04:01
And of course, we went and saw him and it was amazing.
99
241260
2000
04:03
And then Dr. Oscar Arias came forward.
100
243260
2000
04:05
And actually, let me go back to that slide,
101
245260
2000
04:07
because when we launched it in 1999 --
102
247260
2000
04:09
this idea to create the first ever day of ceasefire and non-violence --
103
249260
3000
04:12
we invited thousands of people.
104
252260
2000
04:14
Well not thousands -- hundreds of people, lots of people --
105
254260
3000
04:17
all the press, because we were going to try and create
106
257260
2000
04:19
the first ever World Peace Day, a peace day.
107
259260
2000
04:21
And we invited everybody,
108
261260
2000
04:23
and no press showed up.
109
263260
2000
04:25
There were 114 people there -- they were mostly my friends and family.
110
265260
3000
04:28
And that was kind of like the launch of this thing.
111
268260
2000
04:30
But it didn't matter because we were documenting, and that was the thing.
112
270260
3000
04:33
For me, it was really about the process.
113
273260
2000
04:35
It wasn't about the end result.
114
275260
2000
04:37
And that's the beautiful thing about the camera.
115
277260
2000
04:39
They used to say the pen is mightier than the sword. I think the camera is.
116
279260
3000
04:42
And just staying in the moment with it was a beautiful thing
117
282260
2000
04:44
and really empowering actually.
118
284260
2000
04:46
So anyway, we began the journey.
119
286260
2000
04:48
And here you see people like Mary Robinson, I went to see in Geneva.
120
288260
3000
04:51
I'm cutting my hair, it's getting short and long,
121
291260
2000
04:53
because every time I saw Kofi Annan,
122
293260
2000
04:55
I was so worried that he thought I was a hippie that I cut it,
123
295260
3000
04:58
and that was kind of what was going on.
124
298260
2000
05:00
(Laughter)
125
300260
3000
05:03
Yeah, I'm not worried about it now.
126
303260
2000
05:05
So Mary Robinson,
127
305260
2000
05:07
she said to me, "Listen, this is an idea whose time has come. This must be created."
128
307260
3000
05:10
Kofi Annan said, "This will be beneficial to my troops on the ground."
129
310260
3000
05:13
The OAU at the time, led by Salim Ahmed Salim,
130
313260
2000
05:15
said, "I must get the African countries involved."
131
315260
2000
05:17
Dr. Oscar Arias, Nobel Peace laureate,
132
317260
2000
05:19
president now of Costa Rica,
133
319260
2000
05:21
said, "I'll do everything that I can."
134
321260
2000
05:23
So I went and saw Amr Moussa at the League of Arab States.
135
323260
3000
05:26
I met Mandela at the Arusha peace talks,
136
326260
2000
05:28
and so on and so on and so on --
137
328260
2000
05:30
while I was building the case
138
330260
2000
05:32
to prove whether this idea
139
332260
2000
05:34
would make sense.
140
334260
2000
05:36
And then we were listening to the people. We were documenting everywhere.
141
336260
3000
05:39
76 countries in the last 12 years, I've visited.
142
339260
3000
05:42
And I've always spoken to women and children wherever I've gone.
143
342260
2000
05:44
I've recorded 44,000 young people.
144
344260
2000
05:46
I've recorded about 900 hours of their thoughts.
145
346260
2000
05:48
I'm really clear about how young people feel
146
348260
3000
05:51
when you talk to them about this idea
147
351260
2000
05:53
of having a starting point for their actions for a more peaceful world
148
353260
3000
05:56
through their poetry, their art, their literature,
149
356260
2000
05:58
their music, their sport, whatever it might be.
150
358260
2000
06:00
And we were listening to everybody.
151
360260
2000
06:02
And it was an incredibly thing, working with the U.N.
152
362260
2000
06:04
and working with NGOs and building this case.
153
364260
2000
06:06
I felt that I was presenting a case
154
366260
2000
06:08
on behalf of the global community
155
368260
2000
06:10
to try and create this day.
156
370260
2000
06:12
And the stronger the case and the more detailed it was,
157
372260
2000
06:14
the better chance we had of creating this day.
158
374260
3000
06:17
And it was this stuff, this,
159
377260
3000
06:20
where I actually was in the beginning
160
380260
2000
06:22
kind of thinking no matter what happened, it didn't actually matter.
161
382260
2000
06:24
It didn't matter if it didn't create a day of peace.
162
384260
2000
06:26
The fact is that, if I tried and it didn't work,
163
386260
3000
06:29
then I could make a statement
164
389260
2000
06:31
about how unwilling the global community is to unite --
165
391260
2000
06:33
until, it was in Somalia, picking up that young girl.
166
393260
3000
06:36
And this young child
167
396260
2000
06:38
who'd taken about an inch and a half out of her leg with no antiseptic,
168
398260
3000
06:41
and that young boy who was a child soldier,
169
401260
2000
06:43
who told me he'd killed people -- he was about 12 --
170
403260
3000
06:46
these things made me realize
171
406260
3000
06:49
that this was not a film that I could just stop.
172
409260
3000
06:52
And that actually, at that moment something happened to me,
173
412260
3000
06:55
which obviously made me go, "I'm going to document.
174
415260
2000
06:57
If this is the only film that I ever make,
175
417260
2000
06:59
I'm going to document until this becomes a reality."
176
419260
3000
07:02
Because we've got to stop, we've got to do something
177
422260
3000
07:05
where we unite --
178
425260
2000
07:07
separate from all the politics and religion
179
427260
2000
07:09
that, as a young person, is confusing me.
180
429260
2000
07:11
I don't know how to get involved in that process.
181
431260
2000
07:13
And then on the seventh of September, I was invited to New York.
182
433260
3000
07:16
The Costa Rican government and the British government
183
436260
2000
07:18
had put forward to the United Nations General Assembly,
184
438260
2000
07:20
with 54 co-sponsors,
185
440260
2000
07:22
the idea of the first ever Ceasefire Nonviolence Day,
186
442260
3000
07:25
the 21st of September, as a fixed calendar date,
187
445260
3000
07:28
and it was unanimously adopted by every head of state in the world.
188
448260
3000
07:31
(Applause)
189
451260
7000
07:38
Yeah, but there were hundreds of individuals, obviously, who made that a reality.
190
458260
4000
07:42
And thank you to all of them.
191
462260
2000
07:44
That was an incredible moment.
192
464260
2000
07:46
I was at the top of the General Assembly just looking down into it and seeing it happen.
193
466260
2000
07:48
And as I mentioned, when it started,
194
468260
2000
07:50
we were at the Globe, and there was no press.
195
470260
2000
07:52
And now I was thinking, "Well, the press it really going to hear this story."
196
472260
3000
07:55
And suddenly, we started to institutionalize this day.
197
475260
3000
07:58
Kofi Annan invited me on the morning of September the 11th
198
478260
2000
08:00
to do a press conference.
199
480260
2000
08:02
And it was 8:00 AM when I stood there.
200
482260
2000
08:04
And I was waiting for him to come down, and I knew that he was on his way.
201
484260
3000
08:07
And obviously he never came down. The statement was never made.
202
487260
3000
08:10
The world was never told there was a day of global ceasefire and nonviolence.
203
490260
3000
08:13
And it was obviously a tragic moment
204
493260
2000
08:15
for the thousands of people who lost their lives,
205
495260
2000
08:17
there and then subsequently all over the world.
206
497260
3000
08:20
It never happened.
207
500260
2000
08:22
And I remember thinking,
208
502260
2000
08:24
"This is exactly why, actually,
209
504260
2000
08:26
we have to work even harder.
210
506260
3000
08:29
And we have to make this day work.
211
509260
2000
08:31
It's been created; nobody knows.
212
511260
2000
08:33
But we have to continue this journey,
213
513260
2000
08:35
and we have to tell people,
214
515260
2000
08:37
and we have to prove it can work."
215
517260
2000
08:39
And I left New York freaked,
216
519260
2000
08:41
but actually empowered.
217
521260
2000
08:43
And I felt inspired
218
523260
2000
08:45
by the possibilities
219
525260
2000
08:47
that if it did, then maybe we wouldn't see things like that.
220
527260
4000
08:51
I remember putting that film out and going to cynics.
221
531260
2000
08:53
I was showing the film,
222
533260
2000
08:55
and I remember being in Israel and getting it absolutely slaughtered
223
535260
2000
08:57
by some guys having watched the film --
224
537260
2000
08:59
that it's just a day of peace, it doesn't mean anything.
225
539260
3000
09:02
It's not going to work; you're not going to stop the fighting in Afghanistan;
226
542260
2000
09:04
the Taliban won't listen, etc., etc.
227
544260
3000
09:07
It's just symbolism.
228
547260
2000
09:09
And that was even worse
229
549260
2000
09:11
than actually what had just happened in many ways,
230
551260
2000
09:13
because it couldn't not work.
231
553260
5000
09:18
I'd spoken in Somalia, Burundi, Gaza, the West Bank,
232
558260
2000
09:20
India, Sri Lanka, Congo, wherever it was,
233
560260
2000
09:22
and they'd all tell me, "If you can create a window of opportunity,
234
562260
2000
09:24
we can move aid, we can vaccinate children.
235
564260
2000
09:26
Children can lead their projects.
236
566260
2000
09:28
They can unite. They can come together. If people would stop, lives will be saved."
237
568260
3000
09:31
That's what I'd heard.
238
571260
2000
09:33
And I'd heard that from the people who really understood what conflict was about.
239
573260
3000
09:36
And so I went back to the United Nations.
240
576260
2000
09:38
I decided that I'd continue filming and make another movie.
241
578260
2000
09:40
And I went back to the U.N. for another couple of years.
242
580260
3000
09:43
We started moving around the corridors of the U.N. system,
243
583260
2000
09:45
governments and NGOs,
244
585260
2000
09:47
trying desperately to find somebody
245
587260
2000
09:49
to come forward and have a go at it,
246
589260
2000
09:51
see if we could make it possible.
247
591260
2000
09:53
And after lots and lots of meetings obviously,
248
593260
2000
09:55
I'm delighted that this man, Ahmad Fawzi,
249
595260
2000
09:57
one of my heroes and mentors really,
250
597260
2000
09:59
he managed to get UNICEF involved.
251
599260
2000
10:01
And UNICEF, God bless them, they said, "Okay, we'll have a go."
252
601260
2000
10:03
And then UNAMA became involved in Afghanistan.
253
603260
2000
10:05
It was historical. Could it work in Afghanistan
254
605260
2000
10:07
with UNAMA and WHO
255
607260
2000
10:09
and civil society, etc., etc., etc.?
256
609260
2000
10:11
And I was getting it all on film and I was recording it,
257
611260
3000
10:14
and I was thinking, "This is it. This is the possibility of it maybe working.
258
614260
3000
10:17
But even if it doesn't, at least the door is open
259
617260
3000
10:20
and there's a chance."
260
620260
2000
10:22
And so I went back to London,
261
622260
2000
10:24
and I went and saw this chap, Jude Law.
262
624260
2000
10:26
And I saw him because he was an actor, I was an actor,
263
626260
2000
10:28
I had a connection to him,
264
628260
2000
10:30
because we needed to get to the press, we needed this attraction,
265
630260
2000
10:32
we needed the media to be involved.
266
632260
2000
10:34
Because if we start pumping it up a bit maybe more people would listen
267
634260
3000
10:37
and there'd be more --
268
637260
2000
10:39
when we got into certain areas,
269
639260
2000
10:41
maybe there would be more people interested.
270
641260
2000
10:43
And maybe we'd be helped financially a little bit more,
271
643260
2000
10:45
which had been desperately difficult.
272
645260
2000
10:47
I won't go into that.
273
647260
2000
10:49
So Jude said, "Okay, I'll do some statements for you."
274
649260
2000
10:51
While I was filming these statements, he said to me, "Where are you going next?"
275
651260
2000
10:53
I said, "I'm going to go to Afghanistan." He said, "Really?"
276
653260
2000
10:55
And I could sort of see a little look in his eye of interest.
277
655260
3000
10:58
So I said to him, "Do you want to come with me?
278
658260
2000
11:00
It'd be really interesting if you came.
279
660260
2000
11:02
It would help and bring attention.
280
662260
2000
11:04
And that attention
281
664260
2000
11:06
would help leverage the situation,
282
666260
2000
11:08
as well as all of the other sides of it."
283
668260
2000
11:10
I think there's a number of pillars to success.
284
670260
2000
11:12
One is you've got to have a great idea.
285
672260
2000
11:14
The other is you've got to have a constituency, you've got to have finance,
286
674260
3000
11:17
and you've got to be able to raise awareness.
287
677260
2000
11:19
And actually I could never raise awareness by myself, no matter what I'd achieved.
288
679260
3000
11:22
So these guys were absolutely crucial.
289
682260
3000
11:25
So he said yes,
290
685260
2000
11:27
and we found ourselves in Afghanistan.
291
687260
2000
11:29
It was a really incredible thing that when we landed there,
292
689260
3000
11:32
I was talking to various people, and they were saying to me,
293
692260
3000
11:35
"You've got to get everybody involved here.
294
695260
2000
11:37
You can't just expect it to work. You have to get out and work."
295
697260
3000
11:40
And we did, and we traveled around,
296
700260
3000
11:43
and we spoke to elders, we spoke to doctors, we spoke to nurses,
297
703260
3000
11:46
we held press conferences, we went out with soldiers,
298
706260
3000
11:49
we sat down with ISAF, we sat down with NATO,
299
709260
2000
11:51
we sat down with the U.K. government.
300
711260
2000
11:53
I mean, we basically sat down with everybody --
301
713260
3000
11:56
in and out of schools with ministers of education,
302
716260
2000
11:58
holding these press conferences,
303
718260
2000
12:00
which of course, now were loaded with press, everybody was there.
304
720260
3000
12:03
There was an interest in what was going on.
305
723260
2000
12:05
This amazing woman, Fatima Gailani, was absolutely instrumental in what went on
306
725260
4000
12:09
as she was the spokesperson for the resistance against the Russians.
307
729260
3000
12:12
And her Afghan network
308
732260
2000
12:14
was just absolutely everywhere.
309
734260
2000
12:16
And she was really crucial in getting the message in.
310
736260
2000
12:18
And then we went home. We'd sort of done it.
311
738260
2000
12:20
We had to wait now and see what happened.
312
740260
2000
12:22
And I got home,
313
742260
2000
12:24
and I remember one of the team bringing in a letter to me
314
744260
3000
12:27
from the Taliban.
315
747260
2000
12:29
And that letter basically said, "We'll observe this day.
316
749260
3000
12:32
We will observe this day.
317
752260
2000
12:34
We see it as a window of opportunity.
318
754260
2000
12:36
And we will not engage. We're not going to engage."
319
756260
3000
12:39
And that meant that humanitarian workers
320
759260
3000
12:42
wouldn't be kidnapped or killed.
321
762260
3000
12:45
And then suddenly, I obviously knew at this point, there was a chance.
322
765260
3000
12:48
And days later,
323
768260
2000
12:50
1.6 million children were vaccinated against polio
324
770260
3000
12:53
as a consequence of everybody stopping.
325
773260
2000
12:55
(Applause)
326
775260
10000
13:05
And like the General Assembly,
327
785260
2000
13:07
obviously the most wonderful, wonderful moment.
328
787260
2000
13:09
And so then we wrapped the film up and we put it together
329
789260
2000
13:11
because we had to go back.
330
791260
2000
13:13
We put it into Dari and Pashto. We put it in the local dialects.
331
793260
3000
13:16
We went back to Afghanistan,
332
796260
2000
13:18
because the next year was coming, and we wanted to support.
333
798260
3000
13:21
But more importantly, we wanted to go back,
334
801260
2000
13:23
because these people in Afghanistan were the heroes.
335
803260
2000
13:25
They were the people who believed in peace
336
805260
3000
13:28
and the possibilities of it, etc., etc. -- and they made it real.
337
808260
3000
13:31
And we wanted to go back and show them the film
338
811260
2000
13:33
and say, "Look, you guys made this possible. And thank you very much."
339
813260
3000
13:36
And we gave the film over.
340
816260
2000
13:38
Obviously it was shown, and it was amazing.
341
818260
2000
13:40
And then that year, that year, 2008,
342
820260
3000
13:43
this ISAF statement from Kabul, Afghanistan, September 17th:
343
823260
3000
13:46
"General Stanley McChrystal,
344
826260
2000
13:48
commander of international security assistance forces in Afghanistan,
345
828260
2000
13:50
announced today ISAF will not conduct offensive military operations
346
830260
3000
13:53
on the 21st of September."
347
833260
2000
13:55
They were saying they would stop.
348
835260
2000
13:57
And then there was this other statement
349
837260
2000
13:59
that came out from the U.N. Department of Security and Safety
350
839260
3000
14:02
saying that, in Afghanistan,
351
842260
2000
14:04
because of this work,
352
844260
2000
14:06
the violence was down by 70 percent.
353
846260
2000
14:08
70 percent reduction in violence on this day at least.
354
848260
3000
14:11
And that completely blew my mind
355
851260
2000
14:13
almost more than anything.
356
853260
2000
14:15
And I remember being stuck in New York, this time because of the volcano,
357
855260
3000
14:18
which was obviously much less harmful.
358
858260
2000
14:20
And I was there thinking about what was going on.
359
860260
2000
14:22
And I kept thinking about this 70 percent.
360
862260
2000
14:24
70 percent reduction in violence --
361
864260
2000
14:26
in what everyone said was completely impossible
362
866260
2000
14:28
and you couldn't do.
363
868260
2000
14:30
And that made me think that, if we can get 70 percent in Afghanistan,
364
870260
3000
14:33
then surely we can get 70 percent reduction everywhere.
365
873260
5000
14:38
We have to go for a global truce.
366
878260
2000
14:40
We have to utilize this day of ceasefire and nonviolence
367
880260
2000
14:42
and go for a global truce,
368
882260
2000
14:44
go for the largest recorded cessation of hostilities,
369
884260
3000
14:47
both domestically and internationally, ever recorded.
370
887260
3000
14:50
That's exactly what we must do.
371
890260
2000
14:52
And on the 21st of September this year,
372
892260
2000
14:54
we're going to launch that campaign at the O2 Arena
373
894260
2000
14:56
to go for that process,
374
896260
2000
14:58
to try and create the largest recorded cessation of hostilities.
375
898260
3000
15:01
And we will utilize all kinds of things --
376
901260
2000
15:03
have a dance and social media
377
903260
2000
15:05
and visiting on Facebook and visit the website, sign the petition.
378
905260
3000
15:08
And it's in the six official languages of the United Nations.
379
908260
3000
15:11
And we'll globally link with government, inter-government,
380
911260
2000
15:13
non-government, education, unions, sports.
381
913260
2000
15:15
And you can see the education box there.
382
915260
2000
15:17
We've got resources at the moment in 174 countries
383
917260
3000
15:20
trying to get young people to be the driving force
384
920260
2000
15:22
behind the vision of that global truce.
385
922260
3000
15:25
And obviously the life-saving is increased, the concepts help.
386
925260
3000
15:28
Linking up with the Olympics --
387
928260
2000
15:30
I went and saw Seb Coe. I said, "London 2012 is about truce.
388
930260
2000
15:32
Ultimately, that's what it's about."
389
932260
2000
15:34
Why don't we all team up? Why don't we bring truce to life?
390
934260
2000
15:36
Why don't you support the process of the largest ever global truce?
391
936260
3000
15:39
We'll make a new film about this process.
392
939260
2000
15:41
We'll utilize sport and football.
393
941260
2000
15:43
On the Day of Peace, there's thousands of football matches all played,
394
943260
3000
15:46
from the favelas of Brazil to wherever it might be.
395
946260
2000
15:48
So, utilizing all of these ways
396
948260
2000
15:50
to inspire individual action.
397
950260
3000
15:53
And ultimately, we have to try that.
398
953260
2000
15:55
We have to work together.
399
955260
2000
15:57
And when I stand here in front of all of you,
400
957260
2000
15:59
and the people who will watch these things,
401
959260
2000
16:02
I'm excited, on behalf of everybody I've met,
402
962260
2000
16:04
that there is a possibility that our world could unite,
403
964260
3000
16:07
that we could come together as one,
404
967260
2000
16:09
that we could lift the level of consciousness around the fundamental issues,
405
969260
2000
16:11
brought about by individuals.
406
971260
2000
16:13
I was with Brahimi, Ambassador Brahimi.
407
973260
2000
16:15
I think he's one of the most incredible men
408
975260
2000
16:17
in relation to international politics -- in Afghanistan, in Iraq.
409
977260
3000
16:20
He's an amazing man.
410
980260
2000
16:22
And I sat with him a few weeks ago.
411
982260
2000
16:24
And I said to him, "Mr. Brahimi, is this nuts, going for a global truce?
412
984260
3000
16:27
Is this possible? Is it really possible that we could do this?"
413
987260
2000
16:29
He said, "It's absolutely possible."
414
989260
2000
16:31
I said, "What would you do?
415
991260
2000
16:33
Would you go to governments and lobby and use the system?"
416
993260
2000
16:35
He said, "No, I'd talk to the individuals."
417
995260
2000
16:37
It's all about the individuals.
418
997260
2000
16:39
It's all about you and me.
419
999260
2000
16:41
It's all about partnerships.
420
1001260
2000
16:43
It's about your constituencies; it's about your businesses.
421
1003260
2000
16:45
Because together, by working together,
422
1005260
2000
16:47
I seriously think we can start to change things.
423
1007260
3000
16:50
And there's a wonderful man sitting in this audience, and I don't know where he is,
424
1010260
3000
16:53
who said to me a few days ago -- because I did a little rehearsal --
425
1013260
3000
16:56
and he said, "I've been thinking about this day
426
1016260
3000
16:59
and imagining it as a square
427
1019260
2000
17:01
with 365 squares,
428
1021260
2000
17:03
and one of them is white."
429
1023260
2000
17:05
And it then made me think about a glass of water, which is clear.
430
1025260
3000
17:08
If you put one drop,
431
1028260
2000
17:10
one drop of something, in that water,
432
1030260
2000
17:12
it'll change it forever.
433
1032260
3000
17:15
By working together, we can create peace one day.
434
1035260
2000
17:17
Thank you TED. Thank you.
435
1037260
2000
17:19
(Applause)
436
1039260
3000
17:22
Thank you.
437
1042260
2000
17:24
(Applause)
438
1044260
4000
17:28
Thanks a lot.
439
1048260
2000
17:30
(Applause)
440
1050260
2000
17:32
Thank you very much. Thank you.
441
1052260
3000

Original video on YouTube.com
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7