Ory Okolloh: The making of an African activist | TED

27,808 views ・ 2008-09-10

TED


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

00:18
So what's image got do with it?
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And I must say, I think Emeka is trying to send
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a lot of subliminal messages,
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because I'm going to keep harping on some of the issues
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that have come up.
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But I'm going to try and do something different,
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and try and just close the loop with some of my personal stories,
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and try and put a face to a lot of the issues
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that we've been talking about.
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So, Africa is a complex continent full of contradictions,
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as you can see.
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We're not the only ones.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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And you know, it's amazing.
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I mean, we need a whole conference
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just devoted to telling the good stories about the continent.
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01:01
Just think about that, you know?
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And this is typically what we've been talking about,
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the role that the media plays in focusing
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just on the negative stuff.
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Now, why is that a problem?
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A typical disaster story:
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disease, corruption, poverty.
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01:18
And some of you might be standing here thinking,
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saying, "OK, you know, Ory, you're Harvard-educated,
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and all you privileged people come here, saying,
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'Forget the poor people.
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Let's focus on business and the markets, and whatever.' "
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And they're all, "There's the 80 percent of Africans
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who really need help."
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And I want to tell you that this is my story, OK?
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And it's the story of many of the Africans who are here.
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We start with poverty.
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I didn't grow up in the slums or anything that dire,
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but I know what it is to grow up without having money,
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or being able to support family.
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Euvin was talking about bellwether signs.
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The bellwether for whether our family was broke or not was breakfast.
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You know, when things were good, we had eggs and sausages.
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When things were bad, we had porridge.
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And like many African families,
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my parents could never save
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because they supported siblings, cousins, you know, their parents,
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and things were always dicey.
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Now, when I was born, they realized they had a pretty smart kid,
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and they didn't want me to go to the neighborhood school,
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which was free.
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And they adopted a very interesting
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approach to education, which was
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they were going to take me to a school that they can barely afford.
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So they took me to a private, Catholic, elementary school,
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which set the foundation for what ended up being my career.
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And what happened was,
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because they could afford it sometimes, sometimes not,
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I got kicked out pretty much every term.
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You know, someone would come in with a list
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of the people who haven't paid school fees,
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and when they started getting pretty strict,
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you had to leave, until your school fees could be paid.
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And I remember thinking, I mean,
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why don't these guys just take me to a cheap school?
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Because you know, as a kid
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you're embarrassed and
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you're sensitive, and everyone knows
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you guys don't have money.
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But they kept at it,
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and I now understand why they did what they did.
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They talk about corruption.
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In Kenya, we have an entrance exam to go into high school.
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And there's national schools, which are like the best schools,
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and provincial schools.
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My dream school at that time was Kenya High School,
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a national school.
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I missed the cutoff by one point.
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And I was so disappointed, and I was like,
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"Oh my God, you know, what am I going to do?"
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And my father said, "OK, listen.
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Let's go and try and talk to the headmistress.
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You know, it's just one point. I mean,
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maybe she'll let you in if that slot's still there."
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So we went to the school,
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and because we were nobodies, and because we didn't have privilege,
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and because my father didn't have the right last name,
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he was treated like dirt.
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And I sat and listened to the headmistress talk to him, saying,
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you know, who do you think you are?
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And, you know, you must be joking if you think
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you can get a slot.
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And I had gone to school with other girls, who were kids of politicians,
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and who had done much, much worse than I did,
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and they had slots there.
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And there's nothing worse than seeing your parent
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being humiliated in front of you, you know?
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And we left, and I swore to myself,
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and I was like, "I'm never, ever going to have
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to beg for anything in my life."
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They called me two weeks later, they're like,
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oh, yeah, you can come now. And I told them to stuff it.
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(Laughter) (Applause)
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Final story, and I sort of have to speak quickly.
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Disease.
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My father, who I've been talking about, died of AIDS in 1999.
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He never told anyone that he had AIDS,
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his fear of the stigma was so strong.
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And I'm pretty much the one who figured it out, because I was a nerd.
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And I was in the States at the time,
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and they called me. He was very sick, the first time he got sick.
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And he had Cryptococcal meningitis.
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And so I went on to Google, Cryptococcal meningitis, you know.
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Because of doctor-patient privilege,
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they couldn't really tell us what was going on.
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But they were like, you know, this is a long-term thing.
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And when I went online and looked at the infectious --
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read about the disease,
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I pretty much realized what was going on.
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The first time he got sick, he recovered.
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But what happened was that he had to be on medication
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that, at that time -- Diflucan, which in the States
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is used for yeast infections -- cost 30 dollars a pill.
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He had to be on that pill for the rest of his life.
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You know, so money ran out.
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He got sick again.
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And up until that time, he had a friend who used to travel to India,
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and he used to import, bring him, could
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get him a generic version of it.
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And that kept him going.
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But the money ran out.
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He got sick again. He got sick on a Friday.
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At that time, there was only one bank that had ATMs in Kenya,
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and we could not get cash. The family couldn't get cash
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for him to start the treatment until Monday.
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The hospital put him on a water drip for three days.
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And finally, we figured, well, OK,
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we'd better just try and take him to a public hospital.
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At least he'll get treated
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while we try to figure out the money situation.
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And he died when the ambulance was coming
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to the hospital to take him.
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And, you know, now, imagine if -- and I could go on and on --
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imagine if this is all you know about me.
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How would you look at me?
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With pity, you know. Sadness.
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And this is how you look at Africa.
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This is the damage it causes.
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You don't see the other side of me.
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You don't see the blogger,
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you don't see the Harvard-educated lawyer,
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the vibrant person, you know?
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And I just wanted to personalize that.
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Because we talk about it in big terms,
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and you wonder, you know, so what?
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But it's damaging.
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And I'm not unique, right?
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Imagine if all you knew about William
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was the fact that he grew up in a poor village.
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And you didn't know about the windmill, you know?
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And I was just moved.
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I was actually crying during his presentation.
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He was like, I try and I make.
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I was like Nike should hire him, you know, "Just do it!"
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(Laughter)
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And this is, again, the point I'm trying to make.
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When you focus just on the disasters --
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(Laughter) (Applause)
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-- we're ignoring the potential.
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So, what is to be done?
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First of all,
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Africans, we need to get better at telling our stories.
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We heard about that yesterday.
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We had some of them this morning.
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And this is an example, you know,
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blogging is one way of doing that.
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Afrigator is an aggregator of African blogs
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that was developed in South Africa.
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So we need to start getting better.
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If no one else will tell our stories, let's do it.
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And going back to the point I was trying to make,
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this is the Swahili Wikipedia.
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Swahili is spoken by about 50 million people in East Africa.
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It only has five contributors.
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Four of them are white males -- non-native speakers.
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The other person is -- Ndesanjo, if you're here, stand up --
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is a Tanzanian, [the] first Swahili blogger.
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He's the only African who's contributing to this.
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People, please. We can't whine and complain
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the West is doing this.
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What are we doing?
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Where are the rest of the Swahili speakers?
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Why are we not generating our own content?
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You know, it's not enough to complain. We need to act.
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Reuters now integrates African blogs
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into their coverage of Africa.
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So, that's a start,
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and we've heard of all their other initiatives.
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The cheetah generation.
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The aid approach, you know, is flawed.
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And after all the hoopla of Live 8,
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we're still not anywhere in the picture.
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No, you're not.
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(Laughter)
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But the point I'm trying to make, though,
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is that it's not enough for us to criticize.
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And for those of you in the diaspora
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who are struggling with where should I be,
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should I move back,
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should I stay?
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You know, just jump.
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The continent needs you.
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And I can't emphasize that enough, you know.
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I walked away from a job with one of the top firms in D.C.,
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Covington and Burling, six figures.
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With two paychecks, or three paychecks,
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I could solve a lot of my family's problems.
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But I walked away from that, because my passion was here,
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and because I wanted to do things that were fulfilling.
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And because I'm needed here, you know?
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I probably can win a prize for the most ways
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to use a Harvard Law School degree
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because of all the things I'm doing.
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One is because I'm pretty aggressive,
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and I try and find, you know, opportunities.
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But there is such a need, you know?
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I'm a corporate lawyer most of the time
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for an organization called Enablis
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that supports entrepreneurs in South Africa.
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We're now moving into East Africa.
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And we give them business development services,
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as well as financing loan and equity.
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I've also set up a project in Kenya,
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and what we do is we track the performance
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of Kenyan MPs.
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My partner, M, who's a tech guru, hacked WordPress.
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It costs us, like, 20 dollars a month just for hosting.
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Everything else on there is a labor of love.
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We've manually entered all the data there.
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And you can get profiles of each MP,
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questions they've asked in parliament.
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We have a comment function,
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where people can ask their MPs questions.
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There are some MPs who participate,
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and come back and ask.
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And basically, we started this because we were tired
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of complaining about our politicians.
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You know, I believe that accountability stems from demand.
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You're not just going to be accountable
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out of the goodness of your heart.
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And we as Africans need to start challenging our leaders.
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What are they doing?
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You know, they're not going to change
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just out of nowhere.
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So we need new policies, we need --
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where's that coming from, you know?
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Another thing is that these leaders
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are a reflection of our society.
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We talk about African governments
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like they've been dropped from Mars, you know?
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They come from us.
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And what is it about our society that is generating leaders that we don't like?
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And how can we change that?
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So Mzalendo was one small way we thought we could start
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inspiring people to start holding their leaders accountable.
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Where do we go from here?
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I believe in the power of ideas.
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I believe in the power of sharing knowledge.
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And I'd ask all of you, when you leave here, please just share,
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and keep the ideas that you've gotten out of here going,
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because it can make a difference.
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The other thing I want to urge you to do
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is take an interest in the individual.
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I've had lots of conversations about things I think
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need to be happening in Africa.
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People are like, "OK, if you don't do aid,
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I'm a bleeding heart liberal, what can I do?"
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And when I talk about my ideas, they're like,
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"BBut it's not scalable, you know.
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Give me something I can do with Paypal."
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It's not that easy, you know?
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And sometimes just taking an interest in the individual,
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in the fellows you've met, and the businesspeople you've met,
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it can make a huge difference, especially in Africa,
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because usually the individual in Africa
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carries a lot of people behind them.
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Practically. I mean, when I was a first-year student in law school,
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my mom's business had collapsed, so I was supporting her.
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My sister was struggling to get through undergrad.
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I was helping her pay her tuition.
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My cousin ran out of school fees, and she's really smart.
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I was paying her school fees.
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A cousin of mine died of AIDS, left an orphan,
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so we said, well, what are we going to do with her?
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You know, she's now my baby sister.
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And because of the opportunities that were afforded to me,
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I am able to lift all those people.
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So, don't underestimate that.
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An example. This man changed my life.
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He's a professor. He's now at Vanderbilt.
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He's an undergrad professor, Mitchell Seligson.
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And because of him, I got into Harvard Law School,
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because he took an interest.
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I was taking a class of his, and he was just like,
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this is an overeager student,
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which we don't normally get in the United States,
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because everyone else is cynical and jaded.
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He called me to his office and said,
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"What do you want to do when you grow up?"
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I said, "I want to be a lawyer."
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And he was like, "Why? You know,
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we don't need another lawyer in the United States."
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14:17
And he tried to talk me out of it,
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14:19
but it was like, "OK, I know nothing about applying to law school,
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14:22
I'm poli-sci Ph.D.
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But, you know, let's figure out what I need you to do,
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what I need to do to help you out."
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14:28
It was like, "Where do you want to go?"
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And to me at that time university --
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I was at University of Pitts for undergrad,
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and that was like heaven, OK,
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because compared to what could have been in Kenya.
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So I'm like, "Yeah, I'm just applying to Pitt for law school."
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He was like, "Why? You know, you're smart,
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you have all these things going for you."
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And I'm like, "Because I'm here and it's cheap,
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and you know, I kind of like Pittsburgh."
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14:49
Like, that's the dumbest reason I've ever heard
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for applying to law school.
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And, you know, so he took me under his wing, and he encouraged me.
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And he said, "Look, you can get into Harvard,
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you're that good, OK?
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And if they don't admit you, they're the ones who are messed up."
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And he built me up, you know?
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And this is just an illustration.
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You can meet other individuals here.
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We just need a push.
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That's all I needed was a push to go to the next level.
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Basically, I want to end with my vision for Africa, you know?
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A gentleman spoke yesterday about the indignity
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of us having to leave the continent
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so that we can fulfill our potential.
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You know, my vision is that my daughter,
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and any other African child being born today,
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can be whoever they want to be here,
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without having to leave.
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And they can have the possibility of transcending
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the circumstances under which they were born.
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That's one thing you Americans take for granted, you know?
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That you can grow up, you know, not so good circumstances,
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and you can move.
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Just because you are born in rural Arkansas, whatever,
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that doesn't define who you are.
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For most Africans today, where you live, or where you were born,
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and the circumstances under which you were born,
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determine the rest of your life.
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I would like to see that change,
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and the change starts with us.
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And as Africans, we need to take responsibility for our continent.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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About this website

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