What does it mean to be a citizen of the world? | Hugh Evans

520,109 views ใƒป 2016-05-04

TED


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

00:12
I want to introduce you to an amazing woman.
0
12856
2334
00:15
Her name is Davinia.
1
15690
2008
00:18
Davinia was born in Jamaica, emigrated to the US at the age of 18,
2
18444
4405
00:22
and now lives just outside of Washington, DC.
3
22873
2731
00:26
She's not a high-powered political staffer,
4
26262
2802
00:29
nor a lobbyist.
5
29088
1173
00:30
She'd probably tell you she's quite unremarkable,
6
30676
2929
00:33
but she's having the most remarkable impact.
7
33629
2525
00:36
What's incredible about Davinia
8
36471
1520
00:38
is that she's willing to spend time every single week
9
38015
2863
00:40
focused on people who are not her:
10
40902
2405
00:43
people not her in her neighborhood, her state, nor even in her country --
11
43331
4379
00:47
people she'd likely never meet.
12
47734
2233
00:49
Davinia's impact started a few years ago
13
49991
1940
00:51
when she reached out to all of her friends on Facebook,
14
51955
2744
00:54
and asked them to donate their pennies
15
54723
2183
00:56
so she could fund girls' education.
16
56930
2443
00:59
She wasn't expecting a huge response,
17
59397
2407
01:01
but 700,000 pennies later,
18
61828
2783
01:04
she's now sent over 120 girls to school.
19
64635
3316
01:07
When we spoke last week,
20
67975
1187
01:09
she told me she's become a little infamous at the local bank
21
69186
3038
01:12
every time she rocks up with a shopping cart full of pennies.
22
72248
4278
01:17
Now -- Davinia is not alone.
23
77042
2566
01:20
Far from it.
24
80161
1153
01:21
She's part of a growing movement.
25
81717
2286
01:24
And there's a name for people like Davinia:
26
84027
2033
01:26
global citizens.
27
86663
1437
01:28
A global citizen is someone who self-identifies first and foremost
28
88935
4471
01:33
not as a member of a state, a tribe or a nation,
29
93430
3802
01:37
but as a member of the human race,
30
97256
2187
01:39
and someone who is prepared to act on that belief,
31
99467
4840
01:44
to tackle our world's greatest challenges.
32
104331
2895
01:47
Our work is focused on finding,
33
107250
2453
01:49
supporting and activating global citizens.
34
109727
2883
01:52
They exist in every country
35
112634
1898
01:54
and among every demographic.
36
114556
1903
01:57
I want to make the case to you today
37
117008
1762
01:58
that the world's future depends on global citizens.
38
118794
3078
02:01
I'm convinced that if we had more global citizens active in our world,
39
121896
4302
02:06
then every single one of the major challenges we face --
40
126222
2735
02:08
from poverty, climate change, gender inequality --
41
128981
3598
02:12
these issues become solvable.
42
132603
2184
02:14
They are ultimately global issues,
43
134811
2596
02:17
and they can ultimately only be solved
44
137431
1881
02:19
by global citizens demanding global solutions from their leaders.
45
139336
4395
02:24
Now, some people's immediate reaction to this idea
46
144731
2501
02:27
is that it's either a bit utopian or even threatening.
47
147256
3868
02:31
So I'd like to share with you a little of my story today,
48
151561
3055
02:34
how I ended up here,
49
154640
1711
02:36
how it connects with Davinia
50
156375
1788
02:38
and, hopefully, with you.
51
158187
1441
02:40
Growing up in Melbourne, Australia,
52
160256
1816
02:42
I was one of those seriously irritating little kids
53
162096
3339
02:45
that never, ever stopped asking, "Why?"
54
165459
2324
02:47
You might have been one yourself.
55
167807
1595
02:49
I used to ask my mum the most annoying questions.
56
169426
3372
02:52
I'd ask her questions like, "Mum, why I can't I dress up
57
172822
2799
02:55
and play with puppets all day?"
58
175645
1927
02:57
"Why do you want fries with that?"
59
177596
2000
02:59
"What is a shrimp,
60
179936
1190
03:01
and why do we have to keep throwing them on the barbie?"
61
181150
2672
03:03
(Laughter)
62
183846
1001
03:04
"And mum -- this haircut.
63
184871
1808
03:06
Why?"
64
186703
1173
03:07
(Laughter)
65
187900
1428
03:10
The worst haircut, I think.
66
190126
1754
03:13
Still terrible.
67
193364
1151
03:14
As a "why" kid, I thought I could change the world,
68
194539
2802
03:17
and it was impossible to convince me otherwise.
69
197365
2600
03:19
And when I was 12 and in my first year of high school,
70
199989
2587
03:22
I started raising money for communities in the developing world.
71
202600
3237
03:25
We were a really enthusiastic group of kids,
72
205861
2195
03:28
and we raised more money than any other school in Australia.
73
208080
3261
03:31
And so I was awarded the chance to go to the Philippines to learn more.
74
211365
3588
03:34
It was 1998.
75
214977
1914
03:36
We were taken into a slum in the outskirts of Manila.
76
216915
3687
03:40
It was there I became friends with Sonny Boy,
77
220626
3730
03:44
who lived on what was literally a pile of steaming garbage.
78
224380
3539
03:48
"Smoky Mountain" was what they called it.
79
228617
2009
03:50
But don't let the romance of that name fool you,
80
230650
2285
03:52
because it was nothing more than a rancid landfill
81
232959
2361
03:55
that kids like Sonny Boy spent hours rummaging through every single day
82
235344
4341
03:59
to find something, anything of value.
83
239709
2936
04:03
That night with Sonny Boy and his family changed my life forever,
84
243304
3276
04:06
because when it came time to go to sleep,
85
246604
2023
04:08
we simply laid down on this concrete slab the size of half my bedroom
86
248651
3747
04:12
with myself, Sonny Boy, and the rest of his family,
87
252422
2906
04:15
seven of us in this long line,
88
255352
1611
04:16
with the smell of rubbish all around us
89
256987
2394
04:19
and cockroaches crawling all around.
90
259405
2134
04:21
And I didn't sleep a wink,
91
261952
1279
04:23
but I lay awake thinking to myself,
92
263255
1709
04:24
"Why should anyone have to live like this
93
264988
2482
04:27
when I have so much?
94
267494
1352
04:29
Why should Sonny Boy's ability to live out his dreams
95
269290
2746
04:32
be determined by where he's born,
96
272060
2046
04:34
or what Warren Buffett called 'the ovarian lottery?'"
97
274130
2761
04:37
I just didn't get it,
98
277197
1757
04:38
and I needed to understand why.
99
278978
1866
04:41
Now, I only later came to understand
100
281656
2346
04:44
that the poverty I'd seen in the Philippines
101
284026
2428
04:46
was the result of decisions made or not made, man-made,
102
286478
4309
04:50
by a succession of colonial powers and corrupt governments
103
290811
3405
04:54
who had anything but the interests of Sonny Boy at heart.
104
294240
3165
04:57
Sure, they didn't create Smoky Mountain, but they may as well have.
105
297429
3800
05:01
And if we're to try to help kids like Sonny Boy,
106
301253
2601
05:03
it wouldn't work just to try to send him a few dollars
107
303878
2692
05:06
or to try to clean up the garbage dump on which he lived,
108
306594
3088
05:09
because the core of the problem lay elsewhere.
109
309706
2484
05:12
And as I worked on community development projects over the coming years
110
312214
3659
05:15
trying to help build schools,
111
315897
1842
05:17
train teachers, and tackle HIV and AIDS,
112
317763
3041
05:20
I came to see that community development
113
320828
2437
05:23
should be driven by communities themselves,
114
323289
2556
05:25
and that although charity is necessary, it's not sufficient.
115
325869
3753
05:29
We need to confront these challenges
116
329646
1861
05:31
on a global scale and in a systemic way.
117
331531
2666
05:34
And the best thing I could do
118
334221
1445
05:35
is try to mobilize a large group of citizens back home
119
335690
3507
05:39
to insist that our leaders engage in that systemic change.
120
339221
3563
05:43
That's why, a few years later,
121
343315
2000
05:45
I joined with a group of college friends
122
345339
2269
05:47
in bringing the Make Poverty History campaign to Australia.
123
347632
3378
05:51
We had this dream of staging this small concert
124
351447
3378
05:54
around the time of the G20 with local Aussie artists,
125
354849
3873
05:58
and it suddenly exploded one day
126
358746
1652
06:00
when we got a phone call from Bono, the Edge and Pearl Jam,
127
360422
3602
06:04
who all agreed to headline our concert.
128
364048
3269
06:07
I got a little bit excited that day, as you can see.
129
367341
2601
06:09
(Laughter)
130
369966
1938
06:11
But to our amazement,
131
371928
1279
06:13
the Australian government heard our collective voices,
132
373231
3092
06:16
and they agreed to double investment into global health and development --
133
376347
3694
06:20
an additional 6.2 billion dollars.
134
380065
2715
06:23
It felt like --
135
383280
1175
06:24
(Applause)
136
384479
4459
06:28
It felt like this incredible validation.
137
388962
2593
06:31
By rallying citizens together, we helped persuade our government
138
391579
3366
06:34
to do the unthinkable,
139
394969
1486
06:36
and act to fix a problem miles outside of our borders.
140
396479
3645
06:40
But here's the thing:
141
400965
1302
06:43
it didn't last.
142
403156
1301
06:44
See, there was a change in government,
143
404999
1896
06:46
and six years later, all that new money
144
406919
2688
06:49
disappeared.
145
409631
1166
06:51
What did we learn?
146
411542
1232
06:53
We learned that one-off spikes are not enough.
147
413703
3077
06:57
We needed a sustainable movement,
148
417225
2460
06:59
not one that is susceptible to the fluctuating moods of a politician
149
419709
3984
07:03
or the hint of an economic downturn.
150
423717
2277
07:06
And it needed to happen everywhere;
151
426018
2102
07:08
otherwise, every individual government would have this built-in excuse mechanism
152
428144
3905
07:12
that they couldn't possibly carry the burden of global action alone.
153
432073
4109
07:17
And so this is what we embarked upon.
154
437405
2095
07:20
And as we embarked upon this challenge, we asked ourselves,
155
440103
2977
07:23
how do we gain enough pressure and build a broad enough army
156
443104
3497
07:26
to win these fights for the long term?
157
446625
2088
07:29
We could only think of one way.
158
449419
1967
07:32
We needed to somehow turn that short-term excitement
159
452034
2711
07:34
of people involved with the Make Poverty History campaign
160
454769
2897
07:37
into long-term passion.
161
457690
1602
07:39
It had to be part of their identity.
162
459822
1997
07:42
So in 2012, we cofounded an organization that had exactly that as its goal.
163
462319
4922
07:47
And there was only one name for it:
164
467836
1889
07:50
Global Citizen.
165
470359
1199
07:52
But this is not about any one organization.
166
472241
2507
07:55
This is about citizens taking action.
167
475295
2323
07:58
And research data tells us
168
478041
1761
07:59
that of the total population who even care about global issues,
169
479826
4231
08:04
only 18 percent have done anything about it.
170
484081
3505
08:08
It's not that people don't want to act.
171
488237
2334
08:10
It's often that they don't know how to take action,
172
490595
2431
08:13
or that they believe that their actions will have no effect.
173
493050
3101
08:16
So we had to somehow recruit and activate millions of citizens
174
496175
3525
08:19
in dozens of countries
175
499724
1661
08:21
to put pressure on their leaders to behave altruistically.
176
501409
3299
08:24
And as we did so, we discovered something really thrilling,
177
504732
3021
08:28
that when you make global citizenship your mission,
178
508261
2952
08:31
you suddenly find yourself with some extraordinary allies.
179
511237
3482
08:34
See, extreme poverty isn't the only issue that's fundamentally global.
180
514743
3865
08:38
So, too, is climate change,
181
518632
1864
08:40
human rights, gender equality,
182
520520
2576
08:43
even conflict.
183
523120
1586
08:44
We found ourselves shoulder to shoulder
184
524730
2592
08:47
with people who are passionate about targeting all these interrelated issues.
185
527346
3645
08:51
But how did we actually go about recruiting
186
531316
2037
08:53
and engaging those global citizens?
187
533377
1926
08:55
Well, we used the universal language:
188
535327
3271
08:59
music.
189
539034
1229
09:00
We launched the Global Citizen Festival
190
540287
2263
09:02
in the heart of New York City in Central Park,
191
542574
2850
09:05
and we persuaded some of the world's biggest artists to participate.
192
545448
3768
09:09
We made sure that these festivals coincided
193
549240
2316
09:11
with the UN General Assembly meeting,
194
551580
2141
09:13
so that leaders who need to hear our voices
195
553745
2454
09:16
couldn't possible ignore them.
196
556223
1729
09:18
But there was a twist:
197
558828
1341
09:20
you couldn't buy a ticket.
198
560884
1655
09:22
You had to earn it.
199
562563
1190
09:24
You had to take action on behalf of a global cause,
200
564220
2977
09:27
and only once you'd done that could you earn enough points to qualify.
201
567221
3592
09:31
Activism is the currency.
202
571200
2263
09:34
I had no interest in citizenship purely as some sort of feel-good thing.
203
574079
4400
09:38
For me, citizenship means you have to act, and that's what we required.
204
578503
4277
09:42
And amazingly, it worked.
205
582804
1961
09:44
Last year, more than 155,000 citizens in the New York area alone
206
584789
4707
09:49
earned enough points to qualify.
207
589520
1903
09:51
Globally, we've now signed up citizens in over 150 countries around the world.
208
591447
4364
09:55
And last year, we signed up more than 100,000 new members
209
595835
3412
09:59
each and every week of the whole year.
210
599271
1953
10:01
See, we don't need to create global citizens from nothing.
211
601708
4103
10:05
We're already everywhere.
212
605835
1929
10:07
We just need to be organized
213
607788
2179
10:09
and motivated to start acting.
214
609991
1648
10:12
And this is where I believe we can learn a lot from Davinia,
215
612229
3095
10:15
who started taking action as a global citizen back in 2012.
216
615348
3950
10:19
Here's what she did.
217
619925
1222
10:21
It wasn't rocket science.
218
621587
1544
10:23
She started writing letters,
219
623537
2276
10:25
emailing politicians' offices.
220
625837
2286
10:28
She volunteered her time in her local community.
221
628147
2995
10:31
That's when she got active on social media
222
631166
2612
10:33
and started to collect pennies --
223
633802
2230
10:36
a lot of pennies.
224
636056
1301
10:38
Now, maybe that doesn't sound like a lot to you.
225
638264
3278
10:42
How will that achieve anything?
226
642252
1496
10:44
Well, it achieved a lot because she wasn't alone.
227
644502
3115
10:48
Her actions, alongside 142,000 other global citizens',
228
648220
4430
10:52
led the US government to double their investment
229
652674
2641
10:55
into Global Partnership for Education.
230
655339
1831
10:57
And here's Dr. Raj Shah,
231
657194
1539
10:58
the head of USAID, making that announcement.
232
658757
2502
11:01
See, when thousands of global citizens find inspiration from each other,
233
661283
3839
11:05
it's amazing to see their collective power.
234
665146
2679
11:07
Global citizens like Davinia helped persuade the World Bank
235
667849
3412
11:11
to boost their investment into water and sanitation.
236
671285
2675
11:13
Here's the Bank's president Jim Kim announcing 15 billion dollars onstage
237
673984
4040
11:18
at Global Citizen,
238
678048
1262
11:19
and Prime Minister Modi of India affirmed his commitment
239
679334
3506
11:22
to put a toilet in every household and school across India by 2019.
240
682864
4884
11:28
Global citizens encouraged by the late-night host Stephen Colbert
241
688494
4216
11:32
launched a Twitter invasion on Norway.
242
692734
2952
11:35
Erna Solberg, the country's Prime Minister, got the message,
243
695710
3207
11:38
committing to double investment into girls' education.
244
698941
3008
11:42
Global citizens together with Rotarians called on the Canadian, UK,
245
702440
3795
11:46
and Australian governments
246
706259
1401
11:47
to boost their investment into polio eradication.
247
707684
2862
11:50
They got together and committed 665 million dollars.
248
710570
4109
11:56
But despite all of this momentum,
249
716309
2048
11:59
we face some huge challenges.
250
719277
2000
12:02
See, you might be thinking to yourself,
251
722008
1880
12:03
how can we possibly persuade world leaders
252
723912
2324
12:06
to sustain a focus on global issues?
253
726260
2357
12:09
Indeed, the powerful American politician Tip O'Neill once said,
254
729474
5083
12:14
"All politics is local."
255
734581
1999
12:17
That's what always got politicians elected:
256
737762
2773
12:20
to seek, gain and hold onto power
257
740559
3022
12:23
through the pursuit of local or at very best national interests.
258
743605
3873
12:28
I experienced this for the first time when I was 21 years old.
259
748185
4312
12:33
I took a meeting
260
753113
1382
12:34
with a then-Australian Foreign Minister who shall remain nameless --
261
754519
4439
12:39
[Alexander Downer]
262
759655
1291
12:40
(Laughter)
263
760970
1758
12:43
And behind closed doors,
264
763515
1222
12:44
I shared with him my passion to end extreme poverty.
265
764761
2476
12:47
I said, "Minister -- Australia has this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity
266
767261
3919
12:51
to help achieve the Millennium Development Goals.
267
771204
2689
12:53
We can do this."
268
773917
1246
12:55
And he paused,
269
775806
1438
12:57
looked down on me with cold, dismissive eyes,
270
777268
2522
13:00
and he said, "Hugh,
271
780465
1468
13:01
no one gives a funk about foreign aid."
272
781957
2190
13:04
Except he didn't use the word "funk."
273
784615
1810
13:07
He went on.
274
787528
1161
13:08
He said we need to look after our own backyard first.
275
788713
2557
13:11
This is, I believe,
276
791872
1163
13:13
outdated, even dangerous thinking.
277
793059
2467
13:16
Or as my late grandfather would say,
278
796059
1873
13:17
complete BS.
279
797956
1345
13:19
Parochialism offers this false dichotomy
280
799958
2989
13:22
because it pits the poor in one country against the poor in another.
281
802971
3506
13:26
It pretends we can isolate ourselves and our nations from one another.
282
806501
3849
13:30
The whole world is our backyard,
283
810699
2067
13:32
and we ignore it at our peril.
284
812790
1881
13:34
See, look what happened when we ignored Rwanda,
285
814695
2198
13:36
when we ignore Syria,
286
816917
1468
13:38
when we ignore climate change.
287
818409
1903
13:40
Political leaders ought to give a "funk"
288
820336
2183
13:42
because the impact of climate change and extreme poverty
289
822543
2663
13:45
comes right to our shore.
290
825230
1356
13:47
Now, global citizens -- they understand this.
291
827110
2610
13:49
We live in a time that favors the global citizen,
292
829744
3250
13:53
in an age where every single voice can be heard.
293
833018
2912
13:55
See, do you remember
294
835954
1168
13:57
when the Millennium Development Goals were signed back in the year 2000?
295
837146
3466
14:00
The most we could do in those days was fire off a letter
296
840636
2905
14:03
and wait for the next election.
297
843565
1711
14:05
There was no social media.
298
845737
1674
14:07
Today, billions of citizens have more tools,
299
847998
3215
14:11
more access to information,
300
851237
1818
14:13
more capacity to influence than ever before.
301
853079
2451
14:16
Both the problems and the tools to solve them are right before us.
302
856151
3742
14:20
The world has changed,
303
860377
2066
14:22
and those of us who look beyond our borders
304
862467
2397
14:24
are on the right side of history.
305
864888
2040
14:28
So where are we?
306
868063
1246
14:29
So we run this amazing festival,
307
869898
2367
14:32
we've scored some big policy wins,
308
872289
2315
14:34
and citizens are signing up all over the world.
309
874628
2499
14:37
But have we achieved our mission?
310
877817
2056
14:40
No.
311
880651
1158
14:42
We have such a long way to go.
312
882285
1645
14:44
But this is the opportunity that I see.
313
884946
2182
14:48
The concept of global citizenship,
314
888414
2127
14:51
self-evident in its logic but until now impractical in many ways,
315
891716
5696
14:57
has coincided with this particular moment in which we are privileged to live.
316
897436
4130
15:02
We, as global citizens,
317
902044
1152
15:03
now have a unique opportunity to accelerate large-scale positive change
318
903220
4587
15:07
around the world.
319
907831
1237
15:09
So in the months and years ahead,
320
909554
2159
15:11
global citizens will hold world leaders accountable
321
911737
3044
15:14
to ensure that the new Global Goals for Sustainable Development
322
914805
3046
15:17
are tracked and implemented.
323
917875
1665
15:20
Global citizens will partner with the world's leading NGOs
324
920048
2878
15:22
to end diseases like polio and malaria.
325
922950
2832
15:26
Global citizens will sign up in every corner of this globe,
326
926243
3167
15:29
increasing the frequency, quality
327
929434
2656
15:32
and impact of their actions.
328
932114
1745
15:34
These dreams are within reach.
329
934851
2087
15:37
Imagine an army of millions
330
937503
2540
15:40
growing into tens of millions,
331
940067
2197
15:42
connected, informed, engaged
332
942288
3747
15:46
and unwilling to take no for an answer.
333
946638
2182
15:50
Over all these years,
334
950432
1560
15:53
I've tried to reconnect with Sonny Boy.
335
953230
2175
15:56
Sadly, I've been unable to.
336
956770
1833
16:00
We met long before social media,
337
960611
2193
16:03
and his address has now been relocated by the authorities,
338
963479
2764
16:06
as often happens with slums.
339
966267
1863
16:09
I'd love to sit down with him,
340
969923
1434
16:11
wherever he is,
341
971381
1193
16:13
and share with him how much the time I spent on Smoky Mountain inspired me.
342
973312
4078
16:18
Thanks to him and so many others,
343
978680
1749
16:20
I came to understand the importance of being part of a movement of people --
344
980453
3671
16:24
the kids willing to look up from their screens and out to the world,
345
984752
3467
16:28
the global citizens.
346
988743
1468
16:31
Global citizens who stand together,
347
991104
2123
16:33
who ask the question "Why?,"
348
993973
1802
16:36
who reject the naysayers,
349
996663
1752
16:38
and embrace the amazing possibilities of the world we share.
350
998938
3223
16:43
I'm a global citizen.
351
1003240
1365
16:45
Are you?
352
1005190
1153
16:46
Thank you.
353
1006841
1182
16:48
(Applause)
354
1008047
7566
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