Boniface Mwangi: The day I stood up alone

122,343 views ・ 2015-04-03

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00:13
People back home call me a heckler,
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a troublemaker, an irritant,
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a rebel, an activist,
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the voice of the people.
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But that wasn't always me.
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Growing up, I had a nickname.
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They used to call me Softy,
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meaning the soft, harmless boy.
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Like every other human being, I avoided trouble.
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In my childhood, they taught me silence.
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Don't argue, do as you're told.
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In Sunday school, they taught me don't confront, don't argue,
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even if you're right, turn the other cheek.
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This was reinforced by the political climate of the time.
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(Laughter)
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Kenya is a country where you are guilty
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until proven rich.
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(Laughter)
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Kenya's poor are five times more likely
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to be shot dead by the police who are meant to protect them
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than by criminals.
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This was reinforced by the political climate of the day.
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We had a president, Moi, who was a dictator.
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He ruled the country with an iron fist,
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and anyone who dared question his authority
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was arrested, tortured, jailed or even killed.
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That meant that people were taught to be smart cowards, stay out of trouble.
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Being a coward was not an insult.
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Being a coward was a compliment.
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We used to be told that a coward goes home to his mother.
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What that meant: that if you stayed out of trouble you're going to stay alive.
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I used to question this advice,
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and eight years ago we had an election in Kenya,
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and the results were violently disputed.
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What followed that election was terrible violence, rape,
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and the killing of over 1,000 people.
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My work was to document the violence.
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As a photographer, I took thousands of images,
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and after two months,
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the two politicians came together, had a cup of tea,
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signed a peace agreement, and the country moved on.
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I was a very disturbed man because I saw the violence firsthand.
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I saw the killings. I saw the displacement.
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I met women who had been raped, and it disturbed me,
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but the country never spoke about it.
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We pretended. We all became smart cowards.
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We decided to stay out of trouble and not talk about it.
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Ten months later, I quit my job. I said I could not stand it anymore.
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After quitting my job, I decided to organize my friends
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to speak about the violence in the country,
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to speak about the state of the nation,
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and June 1, 2009 was the day that we were meant to go to the stadium
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and try and get the president's attention.
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It's a national holiday,
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it's broadcast across the country,
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and I showed up at the stadium.
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My friends did not show up.
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I found myself alone,
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and I didn't know what to do.
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I was scared,
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but I knew very well that that particular day,
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I had to make a decision.
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Was I able to live as a coward, like everyone else,
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or was I going to make a stand?
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And when the president stood up to speak,
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I found myself on my feet shouting at the president,
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telling him to remember the post-election violence victims,
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to stop the corruption.
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And suddenly, out of nowhere,
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the police pounced on me like hungry lions.
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They held my mouth
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and dragged me out of the stadium,
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where they thoroughly beat me up and locked me up in jail.
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I spent that night in a cold cement floor in the jail,
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and that got me thinking.
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What was making me feel this way?
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My friends and family thought I was crazy because of what I did,
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and the images that I took were disturbing my life.
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The images that I took were just a number to many Kenyans.
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Most Kenyans did not see the violence.
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It was a story to them.
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And so I decided to actually start a street exhibition
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to show the images of the violence across the country
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and get people talking about it.
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We traveled the country and showed the images,
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and this was a journey that has started me to the activist path,
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where I decided to become silent no more,
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to talk about those things.
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We traveled, and our general site from our street exhibit
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became for political graffiti about the situation in the country,
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talking about corruption, bad leadership.
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We have even done symbolic burials.
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We have delivered live pigs to Kenya's parliament
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as a symbol of our politicians' greed.
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It has been done in Uganda and other countries,
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and what is most powerful is that the images have been picked by the media
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and amplified across the country, across the continent.
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Where I used to stand up alone seven years ago,
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now I belong to a community of many people who stand up with me.
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I am no longer alone when I stand up to speak about these things.
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I belong to a group of young people who are passionate about the country,
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who want to bring about change,
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and they're no longer afraid, and they're no longer smart cowards.
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So that was my story.
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That day in the stadium,
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I stood up as a smart coward.
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By that one action, I said goodbye to the 24 years living as a coward.
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There are two most powerful days in your life:
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the day you're born, and the day you discover why.
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That day standing up in that stadium shouting at the President,
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I discovered why I was truly born,
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that I would no longer be silent in the face of injustice.
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Do you know why you were born?
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Thank you.
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05:53
(Applause)
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06:00
Tom Rielly: It's an amazing story.
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I just want to ask you a couple quick questions.
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So PAWA254:
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you've created a studio, a place where young people can go
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and harness the power of digital media
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to do some of this action.
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What's happening now with PAWA?
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Boniface Mwangi: So we have this community of filmmakers,
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graffiti artists, musicians, and when there's an issue in the country,
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we come together, we brainstorm, and take up on that issue.
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So our most powerful tool is art,
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because we live in a very busy world where people are so busy in their life,
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and they don't have time to read.
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So we package our activism and we package our message in art.
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So from the music, the graffiti, the art, that's what we do.
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Can I say one more thing?
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TR: Yeah, of course. (Applause)
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BM: In spite of being arrested, beaten up, threatened,
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the moment I discovered my voice,
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that I could actually stand up for what I really believed in,
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I'm no longer afraid.
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I used to be called softy, but I'm no longer softy,
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because I discovered who I really am, as in, that's what I want to do,
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and there's such beauty in doing that.
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There's nothing as powerful as that, knowing that I'm meant to do this,
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because you don't get scared, you just continue living your life.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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