Chris Abani: On humanity | TED

73,732 views ・ 2008-07-22

TED


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

00:18
I just heard the best joke about Bond Emeruwa.
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I was having lunch with him just a few minutes ago,
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and a Nigerian journalist comes -- and this will only make sense
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if you've ever watched a James Bond movie --
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and a Nigerian journalist comes up to him and goes,
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"Aha, we meet again, Mr. Bond!"
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(Laughter)
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It was great.
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So, I've got a little sheet of paper here,
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mostly because I'm Nigerian and if you leave me alone,
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I'll talk for like two hours.
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I just want to say good afternoon, good evening.
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It's been an incredible few days.
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It's downhill from now on. I wanted to thank Emeka and Chris.
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But also, most importantly, all the invisible people behind TED
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that you just see flitting around the whole place
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that have made sort of this space for such a diverse and robust conversation.
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It's really amazing.
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I've been in the audience.
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I'm a writer, and I've been watching people with the slide shows
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and scientists and bankers, and I've been feeling a bit
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like a gangsta rapper at a bar mitzvah.
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(Laughter)
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Like, what have I got to say about all this?
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And I was watching Jane [Goodall] yesterday,
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and I thought it was really great, and I was watching
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those incredible slides of the chimpanzees, and I thought,
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"Wow. What if a chimpanzee could talk, you know? What would it say?"
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My first thought was, "Well, you know, there's George Bush."
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But then I thought, "Why be rude to chimpanzees?"
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I guess there goes my green card.
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(Laughter)
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There's been a lot of talk about narrative in Africa.
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And what's become increasingly clear to me is that
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we're talking about news stories about Africa;
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we're not really talking about African narratives.
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And it's important to make a distinction, because if the news is anything to go by,
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40 percent of Americans can't -- either can't afford health insurance
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or have the most inadequate health insurance,
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and have a president who, despite the protest
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of millions of his citizens -- even his own Congress --
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continues to prosecute a senseless war.
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So if news is anything to go by,
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the U.S. is right there with Zimbabwe, right?
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Which it isn't really, is it?
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And talking about war, my girlfriend has this great t-shirt
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that says, "Bombing for peace is like fucking for virginity."
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It's amazing, isn't it?
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The truth is, everything we know about America,
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everything Americans come to know about being American,
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isn't from the news.
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I live there.
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We don't go home at the end of the day and think,
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"Well, I really know who I am now
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because the Wall Street Journal says that the Stock Exchange
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closed at this many points."
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What we know about how to be who we are comes from stories.
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It comes from the novels, the movies, the fashion magazines.
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It comes from popular culture.
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In other words, it's the agents of our imagination
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who really shape who we are. And this is important to remember,
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because in Africa
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the complicated questions we want to ask about
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what all of this means has been asked
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from the rock paintings of the San people,
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through the Sundiata epics of Mali, to modern contemporary literature.
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If you want to know about Africa, read our literature --
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and not just "Things Fall Apart," because that would be like saying,
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"I've read 'Gone with the Wind' and so I know everything about America."
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That's very important.
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There's a poem by Jack Gilbert called "The Forgotten Dialect of the Heart."
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He says, "When the Sumerian tablets were first translated,
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they were thought to be business records.
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But what if they were poems and psalms?
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My love is like twelve Ethiopian goats
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standing still in the morning light.
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Shiploads of thuja are what my body wants to say to your body.
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Giraffes are this desire in the dark."
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This is important.
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It's important because misreading is really the chance
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for complication and opportunity.
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The first Igbo Bible was translated from English
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in about the 1800s by Bishop Crowther,
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who was a Yoruba.
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And it's important to know Igbo is a tonal language,
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and so they'll say the word "igwe" and "igwe":
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same spelling, one means "sky" or "heaven,"
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and one means "bicycle" or "iron."
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So "God is in heaven surrounded by His angels"
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was translated as --
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[Igbo].
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And for some reason, in Cameroon, when they tried
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to translate the Bible into Cameroonian patois,
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they chose the Igbo version.
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And I'm not going to give you the patois translation;
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I'm going to make it standard English.
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Basically, it ends up as "God is on a bicycle with his angels."
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This is good, because language complicates things.
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You know, we often think that language mirrors
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the world in which we live, and I find that's not true.
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The language actually makes the world in which we live.
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Language is not -- I mean, things don't have
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any mutable value by themselves; we ascribe them a value.
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And language can't be understood in its abstraction.
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It can only be understood in the context of story,
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and everything, all of this is story.
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And it's important to remember that,
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because if we don't, then we become ahistorical.
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We've had a lot of -- a parade of amazing ideas here.
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But these are not new to Africa.
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Nigeria got its independence in 1960.
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The first time the possibility for independence was discussed
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was in 1922, following the Aba women's market riots.
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In 1967, in the middle of the Biafran-Nigerian Civil War,
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Dr. Njoku-Obi invented the Cholera vaccine.
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So, you know, the thing is to remember that
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because otherwise, 10 years from now,
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we'll be back here trying to tell this story again.
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So, what it says to me then is that it's not really --
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the problem isn't really the stories that are being told
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or which stories are being told,
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the problem really is the terms of humanity
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that we're willing to bring to complicate every story,
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and that's really what it's all about.
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Let me tell you a Nigerian joke.
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Well, it's just a joke, anyway.
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So there's Tom, Dick and Harry and they're working construction.
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And Tom opens up his lunch box and there's rice in it,
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and he goes on this rant about, "Twenty years,
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my wife has been packing rice for lunch.
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If she does it again tomorrow, I'm going to throw myself
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off this building and kill myself."
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And Dick and Harry repeat this.
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The next day, Tom opens his lunchbox, there's rice,
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so he throws himself off and kills himself,
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and Tom, Dick and Harry follow.
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And now the inquest -- you know, Tom's wife
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and Dick's wife are distraught.
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They wished they'd not packed rice.
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But Harry's wife is confused, because she said, "You know,
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Harry had been packing his own lunch for 20 years."
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(Laughter)
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This seemingly innocent joke, when I heard it as a child in Nigeria,
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was told about Igbo, Yoruba and Hausa,
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with the Hausa being Harry.
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So what seems like an eccentric if tragic joke about Harry
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becomes a way to spread ethnic hatred.
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My father was educated in Cork, in the University of Cork, in the '50s.
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In fact, every time I read in Ireland,
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people get me all mistaken and they say,
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"Oh, this is Chris O'Barney from Cork."
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But he was also in Oxford in the '50s,
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and yet growing up as a child in Nigeria,
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my father used to say to me, "You must never eat or drink
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in a Yoruba person's house because they will poison you."
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It makes sense now when I think about it,
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because if you'd known my father,
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you would've wanted to poison him too.
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(Laughter)
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So I was born in 1966, at the beginning
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of the Biafran-Nigerian Civil War, and the war ended after three years.
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And I was growing up in school and the federal government
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didn't want us taught about the history of the war,
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because they thought it probably would make us
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generate a new generation of rebels.
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So I had a very inventive teacher, a Pakistani Muslim,
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who wanted to teach us about this.
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So what he did was to teach us Jewish Holocaust history,
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and so huddled around books with photographs of people in Auschwitz,
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I learned the melancholic history of my people
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through the melancholic history of another people.
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I mean, picture this -- really picture this.
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A Pakistani Muslim teaching Jewish Holocaust history
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to young Igbo children.
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Story is powerful.
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Story is fluid and it belongs to nobody.
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And it should come as no surprise
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that my first novel at 16 was about Neo-Nazis
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taking over Nigeria to institute the Fourth Reich.
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It makes perfect sense.
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And they were to blow up strategic targets
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and take over the country, and they were foiled
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by a Nigerian James Bond called Coyote Williams,
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and a Jewish Nazi hunter.
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And it happened over four continents.
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And when the book came out, I was heralded as Africa's answer
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to Frederick Forsyth, which is a dubious honor at best.
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But also, the book was launched in time for me to be accused
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of constructing the blueprint for a foiled coup attempt.
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So at 18, I was bonded off to prison in Nigeria.
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I grew up very privileged, and it's important
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to talk about privilege, because we don't talk about it here.
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A lot of us are very privileged.
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I grew up -- servants, cars, televisions, all that stuff.
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My story of Nigeria growing up was very different from the story
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I encountered in prison, and I had no language for it.
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I was completely terrified, completely broken,
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and kept trying to find a new language,
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a new way to make sense of all of this.
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Six months after that, with no explanation,
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they let me go.
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Now for those of you who have seen me at the buffet tables know
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that it was because it was costing them too much to feed me.
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(Laughter)
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But I mean, I grew up with this incredible privilege,
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and not just me -- millions of Nigerians
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grew up with books and libraries.
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In fact, we were talking last night about how all
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of the steamy novels of Harold Robbins
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had done more for sex education of horny teenage boys in Africa
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than any sex education programs ever had.
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All of those are gone.
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We are squandering the most valuable resource
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we have on this continent: the valuable resource
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of the imagination.
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In the film, "Sometimes in April" by Raoul Peck,
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Idris Elba is poised in a scene with his machete raised,
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and he's being forced by a crowd to chop up his best friend --
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fellow Rwandan Army officer, albeit a Tutsi --
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played by Fraser James.
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And Fraser's on his knees, arms tied behind his back,
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and he's crying.
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He's sniveling.
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It's a pitiful sight.
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And as we watch it, we are ashamed.
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And we want to say to Idris, "Chop him up.
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Shut him up."
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And as Idris moves, Fraser screams, "Stop!
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Please stop!"
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Idris pauses, then he moves again,
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and Fraser says, "Please!
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Please stop!"
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And it's not the look of horror and terror on Fraser's face that stops Idris or us;
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it's the look in Fraser's eyes.
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It's one that says, "Don't do this.
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And I'm not saying this to save myself,
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although this would be nice. I'm doing it to save you,
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because if you do this, you will be lost."
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To be so afraid that you're standing in the face
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of a death you can't escape and that you're soiling yourself
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and crying, but to say in that moment,
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as Fraser says to Idris, "Tell my girlfriend I love her."
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In that moment, Fraser says,
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"I am lost already, but not you ... not you."
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This is a redemption we can all aspire to.
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African narratives in the West, they proliferate.
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I really don't care anymore.
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I'm more interested in the stories we tell about ourselves --
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how as a writer, I find that African writers
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have always been the curators of our humanity on this continent.
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The question is, how do I balance narratives that are wonderful
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with narratives of wounds and self-loathing?
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And this is the difficulty that I face.
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I am trying to move beyond political rhetoric
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to a place of ethical questioning.
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I am asking us to balance the idea
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of our complete vulnerability with the complete notion
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of transformation of what is possible.
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As a young middle-class Nigerian activist,
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I launched myself along with a whole generation of us
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into the campaign to stop the government.
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And I asked millions of people,
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without questioning my right to do so,
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to go up against the government.
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And I watched them being locked up in prison and tear gassed.
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I justified it, and I said, "This is the cost of revolution.
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Have I not myself been imprisoned?
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Have I not myself been beaten?"
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It wasn't until later, when I was imprisoned again,
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that I understood the real meaning of torture,
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and how easy your humanity can be taken from you,
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for the time I was engaged in war,
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righteous, righteous war.
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Excuse me.
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Sometimes I can stand before the world --
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and when I say this, transformation
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is a difficult and slow process --
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sometimes I can stand before the world and say,
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"My name is Chris Abani.
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I have been human six days, but only sometimes."
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But this is a good thing.
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It's never going to be easy.
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There are no answers.
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As I was telling Rachel from Google Earth,
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that I had challenged my students in America --
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I said, "You don't know anything about Africa, you're all idiots."
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And so they said, "Tell me about Africa, Professor Abani."
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So I went to Google Earth and learned about Africa.
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And the truth be told, this is it, isn't it?
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There are no essential Africans,
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and most of us are as completely ignorant as everyone else
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about the continent we come from,
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and yet we want to make profound statements about it.
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And I think if we can just admit that we're all trying
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to approximate the truth of our own communities,
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it will make for a much more nuanced
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and a much more interesting conversation.
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I want to believe that we can be agnostic about this,
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that we can rise above all of this.
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When I was 10, I read James Baldwin's "Another Country,"
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and that book broke me.
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Not because I was encountering homosexual sex and love
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15:14
for the first time, but because the way James wrote about it
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15:17
made it impossible for me to attach otherness to it.
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15:20
"Here," Jimmy said.
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"Here is love, all of it."
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The fact that it happens in "Another Country"
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15:26
takes you quite by surprise.
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15:29
My friend Ronald Gottesman says there are three kinds of people in the world:
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those who can count, and those who can't.
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15:34
(Laughter)
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He also says that the cause of all our trouble
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is the belief in an essential, pure identity:
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religious, ethnic, historical, ideological.
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I want to leave you with a poem by Yusef Komunyakaa
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that speaks to transformation.
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It's called "Ode to the Drum," and I'll try and read it
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15:58
the way Yusef would be proud to hear it read.
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16:04
"Gazelle, I killed you for your skin's exquisite touch,
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16:10
for how easy it is to be nailed to a board
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16:13
weathered raw as white butcher paper.
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Last night I heard my daughter praying for the meat here at my feet.
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You know it wasn't anger that made me stop my heart till the hammer fell.
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Weeks ago, you broke me as a woman
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once shattered me into a song beneath her weight,
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before you slouched into that grassy hush.
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16:36
And now I'm tightening lashes, shaped in hide as if around a ribcage,
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16:41
shaped like five bowstrings.
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16:43
Ghosts cannot slip back inside the body's drum.
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16:46
You've been seasoned by wind, dusk and sunlight.
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Pressure can make everything whole again.
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16:54
Brass nails tacked into the ebony wood,
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your face has been carved five times.
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16:59
I have to drive trouble in the hills.
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17:01
Trouble in the valley,
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and trouble by the river too.
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There is no palm wine, fish, salt, or calabash.
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17:09
Kadoom. Kadoom. Kadoom.
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17:13
Ka-doooom.
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Now I have beaten a song back into you.
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Rise and walk away like a panther."
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17:23
Thank you.
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17:25
(Applause)
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Original video on YouTube.com
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