The refugee crisis is a test of our character | David Miliband

109,700 views ・ 2017-06-20

TED


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

00:12
I'm going to speak to you about the global refugee crisis
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and my aim is to show you that this crisis
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is manageable, not unsolvable,
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but also show you that this is as much about us and who we are
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as it is a trial of the refugees on the front line.
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For me, this is not just a professional obligation,
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because I run an NGO supporting refugees and displaced people around the world.
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It's personal.
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I love this picture.
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That really handsome guy on the right,
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that's not me.
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That's my dad, Ralph, in London, in 1940
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with his father Samuel.
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They were Jewish refugees from Belgium.
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They fled the day the Nazis invaded.
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And I love this picture, too.
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It's a group of refugee children
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arriving in England in 1946 from Poland.
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And in the middle is my mother, Marion.
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She was sent to start a new life
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in a new country
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on her own
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at the age of 12.
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I know this:
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if Britain had not admitted refugees
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in the 1940s,
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I certainly would not be here today.
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Yet 70 years on, the wheel has come full circle.
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The sound is of walls being built,
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vengeful political rhetoric,
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humanitarian values and principles on fire
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in the very countries that 70 years ago said never again
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to statelessness and hopelessness for the victims of war.
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Last year, every minute,
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24 more people were displaced from their homes
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by conflict, violence and persecution:
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another chemical weapon attack in Syria,
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the Taliban on the rampage in Afghanistan,
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girls driven from their school in northeast Nigeria by Boko Haram.
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These are not people moving to another country
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to get a better life.
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They're fleeing for their lives.
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It's a real tragedy
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that the world's most famous refugee can't come to speak to you here today.
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Many of you will know this picture.
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It shows the lifeless body
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of five-year-old Alan Kurdi,
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a Syrian refugee who died in the Mediterranean in 2015.
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He died alongside 3,700 others trying to get to Europe.
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The next year, 2016,
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5,000 people died.
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It's too late for them,
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but it's not too late for millions of others.
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It's not too late for people like Frederick.
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I met him in the Nyarugusu refugee camp in Tanzania.
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He's from Burundi.
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He wanted to know where could he complete his studies.
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He'd done 11 years of schooling. He wanted a 12th year.
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He said to me, "I pray that my days do not end here
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in this refugee camp."
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And it's not too late for Halud.
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Her parents were Palestinian refugees
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living in the Yarmouk refugee camp outside Damascus.
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She was born to refugee parents,
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and now she's a refugee herself in Lebanon.
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She's working for the International Rescue Committee to help other refugees,
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but she has no certainty at all
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about her future,
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where it is or what it holds.
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This talk is about Frederick, about Halud
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and about millions like them:
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why they're displaced,
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how they survive, what help they need and what our responsibilities are.
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I truly believe this,
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that the biggest question in the 21st century
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concerns our duty to strangers.
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The future "you" is about your duties
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to strangers.
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You know better than anyone,
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the world is more connected than ever before,
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yet the great danger
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is that we're consumed by our divisions.
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And there is no better test of that
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than how we treat refugees.
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Here are the facts: 65 million people
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displaced from their homes by violence and persecution last year.
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If it was a country,
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that would be the 21st largest country in the world.
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Most of those people, about 40 million, stay within their own home country,
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but 25 million are refugees.
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That means they cross a border into a neighboring state.
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Most of them are living in poor countries,
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relatively poor or lower-middle-income countries, like Lebanon,
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where Halud is living.
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In Lebanon, one in four people is a refugee,
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a quarter of the whole population.
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And refugees stay for a long time.
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The average length of displacement
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is 10 years.
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I went to what was the world's largest refugee camp, in eastern Kenya.
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It's called Dadaab.
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It was built in 1991-92
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as a "temporary camp" for Somalis fleeing the civil war.
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I met Silo.
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And naΓ―vely I said to Silo,
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"Do you think you'll ever go home to Somalia?"
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And she said, "What do you mean, go home?
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I was born here."
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And then when I asked the camp management
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how many of the 330,000 people in that camp were born there,
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they gave me the answer:
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100,000.
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That's what long-term displacement means.
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Now, the causes of this are deep:
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weak states that can't support their own people,
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an international political system
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weaker than at any time since 1945
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and differences over theology, governance, engagement with the outside world
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in significant parts of the Muslim world.
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Now, those are long-term, generational challenges.
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That's why I say that this refugee crisis is a trend and not a blip.
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And it's complex, and when you have big, large, long-term, complex problems,
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people think nothing can be done.
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When Pope Francis went to Lampedusa,
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off the coast of Italy, in 2014,
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he accused all of us and the global population
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of what he called "the globalization of indifference."
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It's a haunting phrase.
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It means that our hearts have turned to stone.
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Now, I don't know, you tell me.
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Are you allowed to argue with the Pope, even at a TED conference?
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But I think it's not right.
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I think people do want to make a difference,
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but they just don't know whether there are any solutions to this crisis.
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And what I want to tell you today
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is that though the problems are real, the solutions are real, too.
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Solution one:
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these refugees need to get into work in the countries where they're living,
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and the countries where they're living need massive economic support.
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In Uganda in 2014, they did a study:
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80 percent of refugees in the capital city Kampala
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needed no humanitarian aid because they were working.
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They were supported into work.
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Solution number two:
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education for kids is a lifeline, not a luxury,
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when you're displaced for so long.
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Kids can bounce back when they're given the proper social, emotional support
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alongside literacy and numeracy.
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I've seen it for myself.
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But half of the world's refugee children of primary school age
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get no education at all,
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and three-quarters of secondary school age get no education at all.
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That's crazy.
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Solution number three:
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most refugees are in urban areas, in cities, not in camps.
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What would you or I want if we were a refugee in a city?
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We would want money to pay rent or buy clothes.
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That is the future of the humanitarian system,
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or a significant part of it:
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give people cash so that you boost the power of refugees
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and you'll help the local economy.
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And there's a fourth solution, too,
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that's controversial but needs to be talked about.
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The most vulnerable refugees need to be given a new start
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and a new life in a new country,
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including in the West.
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The numbers are relatively small, hundreds of thousands, not millions,
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but the symbolism is huge.
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Now is not the time to be banning refugees,
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as the Trump administration proposes.
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It's a time to be embracing people who are victims of terror.
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And remember --
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(Applause)
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Remember, anyone who asks you, "Are they properly vetted?"
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that's a really sensible and good question to ask.
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The truth is, refugees arriving for resettlement
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are more vetted than any other population arriving in our countries.
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So while it's reasonable to ask the question,
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it's not reasonable to say that refugee is another word for terrorist.
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Now, what happens --
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(Applause)
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What happens when refugees can't get work,
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they can't get their kids into school,
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they can't get cash, they can't get a legal route to hope?
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What happens is they take risky journeys.
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I went to Lesbos, this beautiful Greek island, two years ago.
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It's a home to 90,000 people.
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In one year, 500,000 refugees went across the island.
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And I want to show you what I saw
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when I drove across to the north of the island:
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a pile of life jackets of those who had made it to shore.
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And when I looked closer,
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there were small life jackets for children,
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yellow ones.
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And I took this picture.
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You probably can't see the writing, but I want to read it for you.
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"Warning: will not protect against drowning."
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So in the 21st century,
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children are being given life jackets
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to reach safety in Europe
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even though those jackets will not save their lives
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if they fall out of the boat that is taking them there.
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This is not just a crisis, it's a test.
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It's a test that civilizations have faced down the ages.
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It's a test of our humanity.
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It's a test of us in the Western world
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of who we are and what we stand for.
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It's a test of our character, not just our policies.
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And refugees are a hard case.
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They do come from faraway parts of the world.
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They have been through trauma.
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They're often of a different religion.
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Those are precisely the reasons we should be helping refugees,
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not a reason not to help them.
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And it's a reason to help them because of what it says about us.
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It's revealing of our values.
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Empathy and altruism are two of the foundations of civilization.
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Turn that empathy and altruism into action
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and we live out a basic moral credo.
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And in the modern world, we have no excuse.
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We can't say we don't know what's happening in Juba, South Sudan,
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or Aleppo, Syria.
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It's there, in our smartphone
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in our hand.
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Ignorance is no excuse at all.
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Fail to help, and we show we have no moral compass at all.
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It's also revealing about whether we know our own history.
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The reason that refugees have rights around the world
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is because of extraordinary Western leadership
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by statesmen and women after the Second World War
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that became universal rights.
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Trash the protections of refugees, and we trash our own history.
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This is --
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(Applause)
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This is also revealing about the power of democracy
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as a refuge from dictatorship.
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How many politicians have you heard say,
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"We believe in the power of our example, not the example of our power."
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What they mean is what we stand for is more important than the bombs we drop.
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Refugees seeking sanctuary
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have seen the West as a source of hope and a place of haven.
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Russians, Iranians,
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Chinese, Eritreans, Cubans,
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they've come to the West for safety.
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We throw that away at our peril.
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And there's one other thing it reveals about us:
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whether we have any humility for our own mistakes.
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I'm not one of these people
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who believes that all the problems in the world are caused by the West.
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They're not.
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But when we make mistakes, we should recognize it.
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It's not an accident that the country which has taken
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more refugees than any other, the United States,
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has taken more refugees from Vietnam than any other country.
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It speaks to the history.
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But there's more recent history, in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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You can't make up for foreign policy errors
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by humanitarian action,
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but when you break something, you have a duty to try to help repair it,
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and that's our duty now.
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Do you remember at the beginning of the talk,
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I said I wanted to explain that the refugee crisis
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was manageable, not insoluble?
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That's true. I want you to think in a new way,
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but I also want you to do things.
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If you're an employer,
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hire refugees.
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If you're persuaded by the arguments,
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take on the myths
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when family or friends or workmates repeat them.
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If you've got money, give it to charities
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that make a difference for refugees around the world.
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If you're a citizen,
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vote for politicians
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who will put into practice the solutions that I've talked about.
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(Applause)
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The duty to strangers
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shows itself
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in small ways and big,
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prosaic and heroic.
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In 1942,
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my aunt and my grandmother were living in Brussels
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under German occupation.
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They received a summons
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from the Nazi authorities to go to Brussels Railway Station.
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My grandmother immediately thought something was amiss.
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She pleaded with her relatives
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not to go to Brussels Railway Station.
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Her relatives said to her,
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"If we don't go, if we don't do what we're told,
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then we're going to be in trouble."
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You can guess what happened
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to the relatives who went to Brussels Railway Station.
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They were never seen again.
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But my grandmother and my aunt,
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they went to a small village
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south of Brussels
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where they'd been on holiday in the decade before,
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and they presented themselves at the house of the local farmer,
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a Catholic farmer called Monsieur Maurice,
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and they asked him to take them in.
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And he did,
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and by the end of the war,
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17 Jews, I was told, were living in that village.
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And when I was teenager, I asked my aunt,
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"Can you take me to meet Monsieur Maurice?"
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And she said, "Yeah, I can. He's still alive. Let's go and see him."
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And so, it must have been '83, '84,
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we went to see him.
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And I suppose, like only a teenager could,
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when I met him,
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he was this white-haired gentleman,
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I said to him,
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"Why did you do it?
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Why did you take that risk?"
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And he looked at me and he shrugged,
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and he said, in French,
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"On doit."
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"One must."
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It was innate in him.
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It was natural.
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And my point to you is it should be natural and innate in us, too.
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Tell yourself,
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this refugee crisis is manageable,
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not unsolvable,
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and each one of us
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has a personal responsibility to help make it so.
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Because this is about the rescue of us and our values
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as well as the rescue of refugees and their lives.
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Thank you very much indeed.
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(Applause)
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Bruno Giussani: David, thank you. David Miliband: Thank you.
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BG: Those are strong suggestions
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and your call for individual responsibility is very strong as well,
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but I'm troubled by one thought, and it's this:
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you mentioned, and these are your words, "extraordinary Western leadership"
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which led 60-something years ago
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to the whole discussion about human rights,
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to the conventions on refugees, etc. etc.
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That leadership happened after a big trauma
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and happened in a consensual political space,
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and now we are in a divisive political space.
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Actually, refugees have become one of the divisive issues.
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So where will leadership come from today?
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DM: Well, I think that you're right to say
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that the leadership forged in war
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has a different temper and a different tempo
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and a different outlook
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than leadership forged in peace.
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And so my answer would be the leadership has got to come from below,
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not from above.
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I mean, a recurring theme of the conference this week
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has been about the democratization of power.
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And we've got to preserve our own democracies,
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but we've got to also activate our own democracies.
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And when people say to me,
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"There's a backlash against refugees,"
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what I say to them is,
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"No, there's a polarization,
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and at the moment,
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those who are fearful are making more noise
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than those who are proud."
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And so my answer to your question is that we will sponsor and encourage
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and give confidence to leadership
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when we mobilize ourselves.
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And I think that when you are in a position of looking for leadership,
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you have to look inside
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and mobilize in your own community
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to try to create conditions for a different kind of settlement.
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BG: Thank you, David. Thanks for coming to TED.
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(Applause)
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