Jeremy Gilley: One day of peace

149,244 views ・ 2011-08-10

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00:15
I was basically concerned about what was going on in the world.
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I couldn't understand
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the starvation, the destruction,
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the killing of innocent people.
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Making sense of those things
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is a very difficult thing to do.
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And when I was 12, I became an actor.
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I was bottom of the class. I haven't got any qualifications.
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I was told I was dyslexic.
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In fact, I have got qualifications.
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I got a D in pottery, which was the one thing that I did get --
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which was useful, obviously.
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And so concern
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is where all of this comes from.
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And then, being an actor, I was doing these different kinds of things,
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and I felt the content of the work that I was involved in
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really wasn't cutting it, that there surely had to be more.
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And at that point, I read a book by Frank Barnaby,
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this wonderful nuclear physicist,
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and he said that media had a responsibility,
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that all sectors of society had a responsibility
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to try and progress things and move things forward.
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And that fascinated me,
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because I'd been messing around with a camera most of my life.
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And then I thought, well maybe I could do something.
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Maybe I could become a filmmaker.
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Maybe I can use the form of film constructively
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to in some way make a difference.
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Maybe there's a little change I can get involved in.
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So I started thinking about peace,
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and I was obviously, as I said to you,
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very much moved by these images,
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trying to make sense of that.
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Could I go and speak to older and wiser people
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who would tell me how they made sense
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of the things that are going on?
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Because it's obviously incredibly frightening.
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But I realized that,
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having been messing around with structure as an actor,
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that a series of sound bites in itself wasn't enough,
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that there needed to be a mountain to climb,
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there needed to be a journey that I had to take.
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And if I took that journey,
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no matter whether it failed or succeeded, it would be completely irrelevant.
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The point was that I would have something
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to hook the questions of -- is humankind fundamentally evil?
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Is the destruction of the world inevitable? Should I have children?
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Is that a responsible thing to do? Etc., etc.
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So I was thinking about peace,
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and then I was thinking, well where's the starting point for peace?
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And that was when I had the idea.
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There was no starting point for peace.
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There was no day of global unity.
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There was no day of intercultural cooperation.
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There was no day when humanity came together,
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separate in all of those things
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and just shared it together --
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that we're in this together,
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and that if we united and we interculturally cooperated,
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then that might be the key to humanity's survival.
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That might shift the level of consciousness
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around the fundamental issues that humanity faces --
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if we did it just for a day.
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So obviously we didn't have any money.
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I was living at my mom's place.
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And we started writing letters to everybody.
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You very quickly work out what is it that you've got to do
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to fathom that out.
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How do you create a day voted by every single head of state in the world
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to create the first ever Ceasefire Nonviolence Day,
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the 21st of September?
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And I wanted it to be the 21st of September
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because it was my granddad's favorite number.
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He was a prisoner of war.
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He saw the bomb go off at Nagasaki.
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It poisoned his blood. He died when I was 11.
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So he was like my hero.
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And the reason why 21 was the number is
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700 men left, 23 came back,
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two died on the boat and 21 hit the ground.
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And that's why we wanted it to be the 21st of September as the date of peace.
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So we began this journey,
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and we launched it in 1999.
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And we wrote to heads of state, their ambassadors,
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Nobel Peace laureates, NGOs, faiths,
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various organizations -- literally wrote to everybody.
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And very quickly, some letters started coming back.
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And we started to build this case.
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And I remember the first letter.
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One of the first letters was from the Dalai Lama.
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And of course we didn't have the money; we were playing guitars
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and getting the money for the stamps that we were sending out all of [this mail].
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A letter came through from the Dalai Lama saying,
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"This is an amazing thing. Come and see me.
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I'd love to talk to you about the first ever day of peace."
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And we didn't have money for the flight.
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And I rang Sir Bob Ayling, who was CEO of BA at the time,
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and said, "Mate, we've got this invitation.
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Could you give me a flight? Because we're going to go see him."
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And of course, we went and saw him and it was amazing.
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And then Dr. Oscar Arias came forward.
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And actually, let me go back to that slide,
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because when we launched it in 1999 --
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this idea to create the first ever day of ceasefire and non-violence --
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we invited thousands of people.
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Well not thousands -- hundreds of people, lots of people --
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all the press, because we were going to try and create
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the first ever World Peace Day, a peace day.
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And we invited everybody,
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and no press showed up.
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There were 114 people there -- they were mostly my friends and family.
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And that was kind of like the launch of this thing.
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But it didn't matter because we were documenting, and that was the thing.
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For me, it was really about the process.
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It wasn't about the end result.
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And that's the beautiful thing about the camera.
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They used to say the pen is mightier than the sword. I think the camera is.
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And just staying in the moment with it was a beautiful thing
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and really empowering actually.
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So anyway, we began the journey.
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And here you see people like Mary Robinson, I went to see in Geneva.
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I'm cutting my hair, it's getting short and long,
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because every time I saw Kofi Annan,
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I was so worried that he thought I was a hippie that I cut it,
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and that was kind of what was going on.
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(Laughter)
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Yeah, I'm not worried about it now.
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So Mary Robinson,
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she said to me, "Listen, this is an idea whose time has come. This must be created."
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Kofi Annan said, "This will be beneficial to my troops on the ground."
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The OAU at the time, led by Salim Ahmed Salim,
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said, "I must get the African countries involved."
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Dr. Oscar Arias, Nobel Peace laureate,
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president now of Costa Rica,
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said, "I'll do everything that I can."
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So I went and saw Amr Moussa at the League of Arab States.
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I met Mandela at the Arusha peace talks,
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and so on and so on and so on --
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while I was building the case
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to prove whether this idea
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would make sense.
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And then we were listening to the people. We were documenting everywhere.
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76 countries in the last 12 years, I've visited.
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And I've always spoken to women and children wherever I've gone.
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I've recorded 44,000 young people.
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I've recorded about 900 hours of their thoughts.
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I'm really clear about how young people feel
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when you talk to them about this idea
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of having a starting point for their actions for a more peaceful world
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through their poetry, their art, their literature,
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their music, their sport, whatever it might be.
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And we were listening to everybody.
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And it was an incredibly thing, working with the U.N.
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and working with NGOs and building this case.
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I felt that I was presenting a case
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on behalf of the global community
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to try and create this day.
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And the stronger the case and the more detailed it was,
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the better chance we had of creating this day.
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And it was this stuff, this,
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where I actually was in the beginning
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kind of thinking no matter what happened, it didn't actually matter.
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It didn't matter if it didn't create a day of peace.
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The fact is that, if I tried and it didn't work,
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then I could make a statement
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about how unwilling the global community is to unite --
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until, it was in Somalia, picking up that young girl.
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And this young child
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who'd taken about an inch and a half out of her leg with no antiseptic,
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and that young boy who was a child soldier,
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who told me he'd killed people -- he was about 12 --
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these things made me realize
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that this was not a film that I could just stop.
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And that actually, at that moment something happened to me,
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which obviously made me go, "I'm going to document.
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If this is the only film that I ever make,
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I'm going to document until this becomes a reality."
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Because we've got to stop, we've got to do something
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where we unite --
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separate from all the politics and religion
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that, as a young person, is confusing me.
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I don't know how to get involved in that process.
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And then on the seventh of September, I was invited to New York.
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The Costa Rican government and the British government
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had put forward to the United Nations General Assembly,
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with 54 co-sponsors,
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the idea of the first ever Ceasefire Nonviolence Day,
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the 21st of September, as a fixed calendar date,
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and it was unanimously adopted by every head of state in the world.
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(Applause)
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Yeah, but there were hundreds of individuals, obviously, who made that a reality.
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And thank you to all of them.
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That was an incredible moment.
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I was at the top of the General Assembly just looking down into it and seeing it happen.
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And as I mentioned, when it started,
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we were at the Globe, and there was no press.
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And now I was thinking, "Well, the press it really going to hear this story."
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And suddenly, we started to institutionalize this day.
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Kofi Annan invited me on the morning of September the 11th
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to do a press conference.
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And it was 8:00 AM when I stood there.
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And I was waiting for him to come down, and I knew that he was on his way.
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And obviously he never came down. The statement was never made.
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The world was never told there was a day of global ceasefire and nonviolence.
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And it was obviously a tragic moment
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for the thousands of people who lost their lives,
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there and then subsequently all over the world.
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It never happened.
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And I remember thinking,
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"This is exactly why, actually,
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we have to work even harder.
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And we have to make this day work.
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It's been created; nobody knows.
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But we have to continue this journey,
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and we have to tell people,
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and we have to prove it can work."
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And I left New York freaked,
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but actually empowered.
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And I felt inspired
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by the possibilities
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that if it did, then maybe we wouldn't see things like that.
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I remember putting that film out and going to cynics.
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I was showing the film,
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and I remember being in Israel and getting it absolutely slaughtered
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by some guys having watched the film --
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that it's just a day of peace, it doesn't mean anything.
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It's not going to work; you're not going to stop the fighting in Afghanistan;
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the Taliban won't listen, etc., etc.
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It's just symbolism.
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And that was even worse
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than actually what had just happened in many ways,
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because it couldn't not work.
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I'd spoken in Somalia, Burundi, Gaza, the West Bank,
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India, Sri Lanka, Congo, wherever it was,
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and they'd all tell me, "If you can create a window of opportunity,
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we can move aid, we can vaccinate children.
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Children can lead their projects.
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They can unite. They can come together. If people would stop, lives will be saved."
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That's what I'd heard.
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And I'd heard that from the people who really understood what conflict was about.
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And so I went back to the United Nations.
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I decided that I'd continue filming and make another movie.
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And I went back to the U.N. for another couple of years.
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We started moving around the corridors of the U.N. system,
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governments and NGOs,
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trying desperately to find somebody
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to come forward and have a go at it,
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see if we could make it possible.
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And after lots and lots of meetings obviously,
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I'm delighted that this man, Ahmad Fawzi,
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one of my heroes and mentors really,
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he managed to get UNICEF involved.
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And UNICEF, God bless them, they said, "Okay, we'll have a go."
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And then UNAMA became involved in Afghanistan.
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It was historical. Could it work in Afghanistan
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with UNAMA and WHO
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and civil society, etc., etc., etc.?
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And I was getting it all on film and I was recording it,
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and I was thinking, "This is it. This is the possibility of it maybe working.
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But even if it doesn't, at least the door is open
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and there's a chance."
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And so I went back to London,
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and I went and saw this chap, Jude Law.
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And I saw him because he was an actor, I was an actor,
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I had a connection to him,
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because we needed to get to the press, we needed this attraction,
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we needed the media to be involved.
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Because if we start pumping it up a bit maybe more people would listen
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and there'd be more --
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when we got into certain areas,
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maybe there would be more people interested.
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And maybe we'd be helped financially a little bit more,
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which had been desperately difficult.
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I won't go into that.
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So Jude said, "Okay, I'll do some statements for you."
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While I was filming these statements, he said to me, "Where are you going next?"
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I said, "I'm going to go to Afghanistan." He said, "Really?"
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And I could sort of see a little look in his eye of interest.
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So I said to him, "Do you want to come with me?
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It'd be really interesting if you came.
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It would help and bring attention.
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And that attention
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would help leverage the situation,
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as well as all of the other sides of it."
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I think there's a number of pillars to success.
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One is you've got to have a great idea.
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The other is you've got to have a constituency, you've got to have finance,
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and you've got to be able to raise awareness.
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And actually I could never raise awareness by myself, no matter what I'd achieved.
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So these guys were absolutely crucial.
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So he said yes,
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and we found ourselves in Afghanistan.
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It was a really incredible thing that when we landed there,
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I was talking to various people, and they were saying to me,
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"You've got to get everybody involved here.
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You can't just expect it to work. You have to get out and work."
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And we did, and we traveled around,
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and we spoke to elders, we spoke to doctors, we spoke to nurses,
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we held press conferences, we went out with soldiers,
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we sat down with ISAF, we sat down with NATO,
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we sat down with the U.K. government.
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I mean, we basically sat down with everybody --
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in and out of schools with ministers of education,
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holding these press conferences,
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which of course, now were loaded with press, everybody was there.
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There was an interest in what was going on.
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This amazing woman, Fatima Gailani, was absolutely instrumental in what went on
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as she was the spokesperson for the resistance against the Russians.
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And her Afghan network
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was just absolutely everywhere.
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And she was really crucial in getting the message in.
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And then we went home. We'd sort of done it.
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We had to wait now and see what happened.
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And I got home,
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and I remember one of the team bringing in a letter to me
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from the Taliban.
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And that letter basically said, "We'll observe this day.
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We will observe this day.
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We see it as a window of opportunity.
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And we will not engage. We're not going to engage."
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And that meant that humanitarian workers
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wouldn't be kidnapped or killed.
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And then suddenly, I obviously knew at this point, there was a chance.
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And days later,
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1.6 million children were vaccinated against polio
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as a consequence of everybody stopping.
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(Applause)
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And like the General Assembly,
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obviously the most wonderful, wonderful moment.
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And so then we wrapped the film up and we put it together
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because we had to go back.
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We put it into Dari and Pashto. We put it in the local dialects.
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We went back to Afghanistan,
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because the next year was coming, and we wanted to support.
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But more importantly, we wanted to go back,
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because these people in Afghanistan were the heroes.
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They were the people who believed in peace
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and the possibilities of it, etc., etc. -- and they made it real.
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And we wanted to go back and show them the film
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and say, "Look, you guys made this possible. And thank you very much."
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And we gave the film over.
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Obviously it was shown, and it was amazing.
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And then that year, that year, 2008,
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this ISAF statement from Kabul, Afghanistan, September 17th:
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"General Stanley McChrystal,
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commander of international security assistance forces in Afghanistan,
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announced today ISAF will not conduct offensive military operations
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on the 21st of September."
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They were saying they would stop.
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And then there was this other statement
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that came out from the U.N. Department of Security and Safety
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saying that, in Afghanistan,
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because of this work,
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the violence was down by 70 percent.
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70 percent reduction in violence on this day at least.
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And that completely blew my mind
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almost more than anything.
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And I remember being stuck in New York, this time because of the volcano,
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which was obviously much less harmful.
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And I was there thinking about what was going on.
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And I kept thinking about this 70 percent.
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70 percent reduction in violence --
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in what everyone said was completely impossible
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and you couldn't do.
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And that made me think that, if we can get 70 percent in Afghanistan,
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then surely we can get 70 percent reduction everywhere.
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We have to go for a global truce.
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We have to utilize this day of ceasefire and nonviolence
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and go for a global truce,
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go for the largest recorded cessation of hostilities,
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both domestically and internationally, ever recorded.
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That's exactly what we must do.
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And on the 21st of September this year,
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we're going to launch that campaign at the O2 Arena
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to go for that process,
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to try and create the largest recorded cessation of hostilities.
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And we will utilize all kinds of things --
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have a dance and social media
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and visiting on Facebook and visit the website, sign the petition.
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And it's in the six official languages of the United Nations.
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And we'll globally link with government, inter-government,
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non-government, education, unions, sports.
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And you can see the education box there.
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We've got resources at the moment in 174 countries
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trying to get young people to be the driving force
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behind the vision of that global truce.
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And obviously the life-saving is increased, the concepts help.
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Linking up with the Olympics --
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I went and saw Seb Coe. I said, "London 2012 is about truce.
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Ultimately, that's what it's about."
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Why don't we all team up? Why don't we bring truce to life?
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Why don't you support the process of the largest ever global truce?
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We'll make a new film about this process.
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We'll utilize sport and football.
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On the Day of Peace, there's thousands of football matches all played,
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from the favelas of Brazil to wherever it might be.
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So, utilizing all of these ways
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to inspire individual action.
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And ultimately, we have to try that.
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We have to work together.
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And when I stand here in front of all of you,
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and the people who will watch these things,
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I'm excited, on behalf of everybody I've met,
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that there is a possibility that our world could unite,
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that we could come together as one,
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that we could lift the level of consciousness around the fundamental issues,
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brought about by individuals.
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I was with Brahimi, Ambassador Brahimi.
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I think he's one of the most incredible men
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in relation to international politics -- in Afghanistan, in Iraq.
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He's an amazing man.
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And I sat with him a few weeks ago.
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And I said to him, "Mr. Brahimi, is this nuts, going for a global truce?
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Is this possible? Is it really possible that we could do this?"
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He said, "It's absolutely possible."
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I said, "What would you do?
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Would you go to governments and lobby and use the system?"
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He said, "No, I'd talk to the individuals."
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It's all about the individuals.
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It's all about you and me.
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It's all about partnerships.
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It's about your constituencies; it's about your businesses.
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Because together, by working together,
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I seriously think we can start to change things.
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And there's a wonderful man sitting in this audience, and I don't know where he is,
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who said to me a few days ago -- because I did a little rehearsal --
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and he said, "I've been thinking about this day
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and imagining it as a square
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with 365 squares,
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and one of them is white."
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And it then made me think about a glass of water, which is clear.
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If you put one drop,
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one drop of something, in that water,
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it'll change it forever.
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By working together, we can create peace one day.
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Thank you TED. Thank you.
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(Applause)
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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Thanks a lot.
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(Applause)
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Thank you very much. Thank you.
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Original video on YouTube.com
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