Let’s Help Refugees Thrive, Not Just Survive | Melissa Fleming | TED Talks

160,288 views ・ 2014-10-16

TED


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

00:12
So I started working
0
12812
1637
00:14
with refugees because I wanted
1
14449
1884
00:16
to make a difference,
2
16333
2340
00:18
and making a difference starts
3
18673
1407
00:20
with telling their stories.
4
20080
2356
00:22
So when I meet refugees,
5
22436
1490
00:23
I always ask them questions.
6
23926
2800
00:26
Who bombed your house?
7
26726
2318
00:29
Who killed your son?
8
29044
2653
00:31
Did the rest of your family make it out alive?
9
31697
4044
00:35
How are you coping
10
35741
1986
00:37
in your life in exile?
11
37727
2531
00:40
But there's one question that always seems to me
12
40258
3003
00:43
to be most revealing, and that is:
13
43261
2464
00:45
What did you take?
14
45725
2182
00:47
What was that most important thing
15
47907
2250
00:50
that you had to take with you
16
50157
2072
00:52
when the bombs were exploding in your town,
17
52229
3406
00:55
and the armed gangs were approaching your house?
18
55635
4425
01:00
A Syrian refugee boy I know
19
60060
2605
01:02
told me that he didn't hesitate
20
62665
2690
01:05
when his life was in imminent danger.
21
65355
3790
01:09
He took his high school diploma,
22
69145
2981
01:12
and later he told me why.
23
72126
1929
01:14
He said, "I took my high school diploma
24
74055
3208
01:17
because my life depended on it."
25
77263
3206
01:20
And he would risk his life to get that diploma.
26
80469
3229
01:23
On his way to school, he would dodge snipers.
27
83698
3682
01:27
His classroom sometimes shook
28
87380
2515
01:29
with the sound of bombs and shelling,
29
89895
3234
01:33
and his mother told me,
30
93129
2807
01:35
"Every day, I would say to him every morning,
31
95936
3069
01:39
'Honey, please don't go to school.'"
32
99005
2926
01:41
And when he insisted, she said,
33
101931
3459
01:45
"I would hug him as if it were for the last time."
34
105390
3972
01:49
But he said to his mother,
35
109362
2030
01:51
"We're all afraid,
36
111392
1845
01:53
but our determination to graduate
37
113237
2891
01:56
is stronger than our fear."
38
116128
3334
01:59
But one day, the family got terrible news.
39
119462
3336
02:02
Hany's aunt, his uncle and his cousin
40
122798
2734
02:05
were murdered in their homes for refusing
41
125532
2689
02:08
to leave their house.
42
128221
994
02:09
Their throats were slit.
43
129215
2865
02:12
It was time to flee.
44
132080
2631
02:14
They left that day, right away, in their car,
45
134711
3014
02:17
Hany hidden in the back because they were facing
46
137725
1861
02:19
checkpoints of menacing soldiers.
47
139586
3910
02:23
And they would cross the border into Lebanon,
48
143496
3712
02:27
where they would find peace.
49
147208
2696
02:29
But they would begin a life of grueling hardship
50
149904
3682
02:33
and monotony.
51
153586
3004
02:36
They had no choice but to build a shack
52
156590
2699
02:39
on the side of a muddy field,
53
159289
1333
02:40
and this is Hany's brother Ashraf,
54
160622
2318
02:42
who plays outside.
55
162940
1738
02:44
And that day, they joined
56
164678
2422
02:47
the biggest population of refugees in the world,
57
167100
5204
02:52
in a country, Lebanon, that is tiny.
58
172304
3026
02:55
It only has four million citizens,
59
175330
2651
02:57
and there are one million Syrian refugees living there.
60
177981
3570
03:01
There's not a town, a city or a village
61
181551
4094
03:05
that is not host to Syrian refugees.
62
185645
4747
03:10
This is generosity and humanity
63
190392
3195
03:13
that is remarkable.
64
193587
4374
03:17
Think about it this way, proportionately.
65
197961
2994
03:20
It would be as if
66
200955
1756
03:22
the entire population of Germany,
67
202711
2991
03:25
80 million people,
68
205702
1865
03:27
would flee to the United States in just three years.
69
207567
5390
03:32
Half of the entire population of Syria
70
212957
3161
03:36
is now uprooted,
71
216118
2430
03:38
most of them inside the country.
72
218548
1755
03:40
Six and a half million people
73
220303
2295
03:42
have fled for their lives.
74
222598
2722
03:45
Over and well over three million people
75
225320
2890
03:48
have crossed the borders
76
228210
1722
03:49
and have found sanctuary in the neighboring countries,
77
229932
3543
03:53
and only a small proportion, as you see,
78
233475
2925
03:56
have moved on to Europe.
79
236400
4134
04:00
What I find most worrying
80
240534
2671
04:03
is that half of all Syrian refugees are children.
81
243205
3926
04:07
I took this picture of this little girl.
82
247131
2238
04:09
It was just two hours after she had arrived
83
249369
2925
04:12
after a long trek from Syria into Jordan.
84
252294
4342
04:16
And most troubling of all
85
256636
3425
04:20
is that only 20 percent of Syrian refugee children
86
260061
3741
04:23
are in school in Lebanon.
87
263802
3475
04:27
And yet, Syrian refugee children,
88
267277
2933
04:30
all refugee children tell us
89
270210
2298
04:32
education is the most important thing in their lives.
90
272508
5066
04:37
Why? Because it allows them to think of their future
91
277574
4181
04:41
rather than the nightmare of their past.
92
281755
3395
04:45
It allows them to think of hope rather than hatred.
93
285150
5634
04:50
I'm reminded of a recent visit I took
94
290784
2029
04:52
to a Syrian refugee camp in northern Iraq,
95
292813
3577
04:56
and I met this girl,
96
296390
1812
04:58
and I thought, "She's beautiful,"
97
298202
1777
04:59
and I went up to her and asked her,
98
299979
1707
05:01
"Can I take your picture?"
99
301686
1948
05:03
And she said yes,
100
303634
1699
05:05
but she refused to smile.
101
305333
3037
05:08
I think she couldn't,
102
308370
3049
05:11
because I think she must realize that she represents
103
311419
3506
05:14
a lost generation of Syrian refugee children,
104
314925
4444
05:19
a generation isolated and frustrated.
105
319369
4581
05:23
And yet, look at what they fled:
106
323950
3546
05:27
utter destruction,
107
327496
1839
05:29
buildings, industries, schools, roads, homes.
108
329335
5579
05:34
Hany's home was also destroyed.
109
334914
2679
05:37
This will need to be rebuilt
110
337593
3213
05:40
by architects, by engineers, by electricians.
111
340806
4831
05:45
Communities will need teachers and lawyers
112
345637
3647
05:49
and politicians interested in reconciliation
113
349284
4241
05:53
and not revenge.
114
353525
2644
05:56
Shouldn't this be rebuilt
115
356169
1755
05:57
by the people with the largest stake,
116
357924
3091
06:01
the societies in exile, the refugees?
117
361015
5865
06:06
Refugees have a lot of time
118
366880
2754
06:09
to prepare for their return.
119
369634
2246
06:11
You might imagine that being a refugee
120
371880
2715
06:14
is just a temporary state.
121
374595
2508
06:17
Well far from it.
122
377103
2941
06:20
With wars going on and on,
123
380044
3516
06:23
the average time a refugee will spend in exile
124
383560
3802
06:27
is 17 years.
125
387362
3465
06:30
Hany was into his second year in limbo
126
390827
3588
06:34
when I went to visit him recently,
127
394415
2374
06:36
and we conducted our entire conversation in English,
128
396789
3757
06:40
which he confessed to me he learned
129
400546
1889
06:42
from reading all of Dan Brown's novels
130
402435
3654
06:46
and from listening to American rap.
131
406089
4355
06:50
We also spent some nice moments of laughter
132
410444
2745
06:53
and fun with his beloved brother Ashraf.
133
413189
4634
06:57
But I'll never forget what he told me
134
417823
1621
06:59
when we ended our conversation that day.
135
419444
3424
07:02
He said to me,
136
422868
2413
07:05
"If I am not a student, I am nothing."
137
425281
5529
07:10
Hany is one of 50 million people
138
430810
3717
07:14
uprooted in this world today.
139
434527
3578
07:18
Never since World War II
140
438105
2779
07:20
have so many people been forcibly displaced.
141
440884
5267
07:26
So while we're making sweeping progress
142
446151
2629
07:28
in human health,
143
448780
2101
07:30
in technology, in education and design,
144
450881
4994
07:35
we are doing dangerously little
145
455875
3363
07:39
to help the victims
146
459238
3308
07:42
and we are doing far too little
147
462546
2699
07:45
to stop and prevent
148
465245
2036
07:47
the wars that are driving them from their homes.
149
467281
3409
07:50
And there are more and more victims.
150
470690
4443
07:55
Every day, on average,
151
475133
3134
07:58
by the end of this day,
152
478267
2182
08:00
32,000 people will be forcibly displaced
153
480449
3848
08:04
from their homes —
154
484297
2035
08:06
32,000 people.
155
486332
2912
08:11
They flee across borders like this one.
156
491271
3749
08:15
We captured this on the Syrian border to Jordan,
157
495020
3695
08:18
and this is a typical day.
158
498715
2960
08:25
Or they flee on unseaworthy and overcrowded boats,
159
505588
4904
08:30
risking their lives in this case
160
510492
1800
08:32
just to reach safety in Europe.
161
512292
2631
08:34
This Syrian young man
162
514923
1715
08:36
survived one of these boats that capsized —
163
516638
2786
08:39
most of the people drowned —
164
519424
1623
08:41
and he told us,
165
521047
2215
08:43
"Syrians are just looking for a quiet place
166
523262
4159
08:47
where nobody hurts you,
167
527421
2869
08:50
where nobody humiliates you,
168
530290
2542
08:52
and where nobody kills you."
169
532832
2711
08:55
Well, I think that should be the minimum.
170
535543
3218
08:58
How about a place of healing,
171
538761
3127
09:01
of learning,
172
541888
1878
09:03
and even opportunity?
173
543766
3394
09:08
Americans and Europeans
174
548832
2024
09:10
have the impression that proportionally
175
550856
3251
09:14
huge numbers of refugees are coming
176
554107
2373
09:16
to their country,
177
556480
2020
09:18
but the reality is
178
558500
2142
09:20
that 86 percent, the vast majority of refugees,
179
560642
3645
09:24
are living in the developing world,
180
564287
2680
09:26
in countries struggling with their own insecurity,
181
566967
4553
09:31
with their own issues of helping their own populations
182
571520
4019
09:35
and poverty.
183
575539
2123
09:37
So wealthy countries in the world should recognize
184
577662
3273
09:40
the humanity and the generosity of the countries
185
580935
3701
09:44
that are hosting so many refugees.
186
584636
4118
09:48
And all countries should make sure that no one
187
588754
3632
09:52
fleeing war and persecution
188
592386
2553
09:54
arrives at a closed border.
189
594939
3713
09:58
(Applause)
190
598652
2630
10:01
Thank you.
191
601282
3237
10:06
But there is something more that we can do
192
606200
2305
10:08
than just simply helping refugees survive.
193
608505
4410
10:12
We can help them thrive.
194
612915
3531
10:16
We should think of refugee camps and communities
195
616446
3060
10:19
as more than just temporary population centers
196
619506
4207
10:23
where people languish
197
623713
2160
10:25
waiting for the war to end.
198
625873
2909
10:28
Rather, as centers of excellence,
199
628782
3729
10:32
where refugees can triumph over their trauma
200
632511
3948
10:36
and train for the day that they can go home
201
636459
3184
10:39
as agents of positive change
202
639643
3081
10:42
and social transformation.
203
642724
4398
10:47
It makes so much sense,
204
647122
2386
10:49
but I'm reminded of the terrible war in Somalia
205
649508
4309
10:53
that has been raging on for 22 years.
206
653817
3924
10:57
And imagine living in this camp.
207
657741
2509
11:00
I visited this camp.
208
660250
1573
11:01
It's in Djibouti, neighboring Somalia,
209
661823
1877
11:03
and it was so remote
210
663700
2544
11:06
that we had to take a helicopter to fly there.
211
666244
2441
11:08
It was dusty and it was terribly hot.
212
668685
3446
11:12
And we went to visit a school
213
672131
2294
11:14
and started talking to the children,
214
674425
1917
11:16
and then I saw this girl across the room
215
676342
2594
11:18
who looked to me to be the same age
216
678936
1849
11:20
as my own daughter, and I went up and talked to her.
217
680785
3281
11:24
And I asked her the questions
218
684066
1544
11:25
that grown-ups ask kids,
219
685610
2179
11:27
like, "What is your favorite subject?"
220
687789
1923
11:29
and, "What do you want to be when you grow up?"
221
689712
2655
11:32
And this is when her face turned blank,
222
692367
3297
11:35
and she said to me,
223
695664
2050
11:37
"I have no future.
224
697714
2471
11:40
My schooling days are over."
225
700185
2977
11:43
And I thought, there must be some misunderstanding,
226
703162
1648
11:44
so I turned to my colleague
227
704810
2309
11:47
and she confirmed to me
228
707119
2098
11:49
there is no funding for secondary education
229
709217
2693
11:51
in this camp.
230
711910
2270
11:54
And how I wished at that moment
231
714180
1469
11:55
that I could say to her,
232
715649
2318
11:57
"We will build you a school."
233
717967
2405
12:00
And I also thought, what a waste.
234
720372
4174
12:04
She should be and she is
235
724546
3048
12:07
the future of Somalia.
236
727594
4331
12:11
A boy named Jacob Atem
237
731925
3206
12:15
had a different chance, but not before he experienced
238
735131
3195
12:18
terribly tragedy.
239
738326
2092
12:20
He watched — this is in Sudan —
240
740418
2464
12:22
as his village — he was only seven years old —
241
742882
2294
12:25
burned to the ground, and he learned
242
745176
2382
12:27
that his mother and his father
243
747558
1839
12:29
and his entire family
244
749397
1989
12:31
were killed that day.
245
751386
1864
12:33
Only his cousin survived, and the two of them
246
753250
1790
12:35
walked for seven months —
247
755040
2280
12:37
this is boys like him —
248
757320
1850
12:39
chased and pursued by wild animals and armed gangs,
249
759170
3208
12:42
and they finally made it to refugee camps
250
762378
2360
12:44
where they found safety,
251
764738
1533
12:46
and he would spend the next seven years
252
766271
2123
12:48
in Kenya in a refugee camp.
253
768394
3187
12:51
But his life changed
254
771581
2528
12:54
when he got the chance to be resettled
255
774109
2103
12:56
to the United States,
256
776212
2205
12:58
and he found love in a foster family
257
778417
2696
13:01
and he was able to go to school,
258
781113
2588
13:03
and he wanted me to share with you
259
783701
2294
13:05
this proud moment
260
785995
1568
13:07
when he graduated from university.
261
787563
2305
13:09
(Applause)
262
789868
3942
13:15
I spoke to him on Skype the other day,
263
795829
2414
13:18
and he was in his new university in Florida
264
798243
4994
13:23
pursuing his Ph.D. in public health,
265
803237
2999
13:26
and he proudly told me how he was able to raise
266
806236
3070
13:29
enough funds from the American public
267
809306
2684
13:31
to establish a health clinic back in his village
268
811990
4585
13:36
back home.
269
816575
3080
13:39
So I want to take you back to Hany.
270
819655
3284
13:42
When I told him I was going to have the chance
271
822939
2221
13:45
to speak to you here on the TED stage,
272
825160
2717
13:47
he allowed me to read you a poem
273
827877
2295
13:50
that he sent in an email to me.
274
830172
3360
13:53
He wrote:
275
833532
2917
13:57
"I miss myself,
276
837270
2560
13:59
my friends,
277
839830
2505
14:02
times of reading novels or writing poems,
278
842335
4255
14:06
birds and tea in the morning.
279
846590
4925
14:11
My room, my books, myself,
280
851515
4949
14:16
and everything that was making me smile.
281
856464
5658
14:22
Oh, oh, I had so many dreams
282
862122
4128
14:26
that were about to be realized."
283
866250
3546
14:31
So here is my point:
284
871323
2228
14:33
Not investing in refugees
285
873551
2046
14:35
is a huge missed opportunity.
286
875597
5644
14:41
Leave them abandoned,
287
881241
1851
14:43
and they risk exploitation and abuse,
288
883092
5347
14:48
and leave them unskilled and uneducated,
289
888439
3273
14:51
and delay by years the return
290
891712
2553
14:54
to peace and prosperity in their countries.
291
894265
5850
15:00
I believe how we treat the uprooted
292
900115
3284
15:03
will shape the future of our world.
293
903399
4573
15:07
The victims of war can hold the keys
294
907972
2954
15:10
to lasting peace,
295
910926
2521
15:13
and it's the refugees
296
913447
1809
15:15
who can stop the cycle of violence.
297
915256
3667
15:18
Hany is at a tipping point.
298
918923
3021
15:21
We would love to help him go to university
299
921944
2265
15:24
and to become an engineer,
300
924209
3060
15:27
but our funds are prioritized for the basics in life:
301
927269
3847
15:31
tents and blankets and mattresses and kitchen sets,
302
931116
4047
15:35
food rations and a bit of medicine.
303
935163
4356
15:39
University is a luxury.
304
939519
3397
15:42
But leave him to languish in this muddy field,
305
942916
4337
15:47
and he will become a member
306
947253
1961
15:49
of a lost generation.
307
949214
3422
15:52
Hany's story is a tragedy,
308
952636
4704
15:57
but it doesn't have to end that way.
309
957340
3733
16:01
Thank you.
310
961073
2377
16:03
(Applause)
311
963450
3595
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