Kavita Ramdas: Radical women, embracing tradition

82,652 views ใƒป 2010-04-26

TED


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

00:16
Salaam. Namaskar.
0
16260
2000
00:18
Good morning.
1
18260
2000
00:20
Given my TED profile, you might be expecting
2
20260
2000
00:22
that I'm going to speak to you about
3
22260
2000
00:24
the latest philanthropic trends --
4
24260
2000
00:26
the one that's currently got Wall Street
5
26260
2000
00:28
and the World Bank buzzing --
6
28260
2000
00:30
how to invest in women,
7
30260
2000
00:32
how to empower them, how to save them.
8
32260
3000
00:35
Not me.
9
35260
2000
00:37
I am interested in how women
10
37260
2000
00:39
are saving us.
11
39260
2000
00:41
They're saving us by redefining and re-imagining
12
41260
3000
00:44
a future that defies and blurs
13
44260
3000
00:47
accepted polarities,
14
47260
2000
00:49
polarities we've taken for granted for a long time,
15
49260
3000
00:52
like the ones between modernity and tradition,
16
52260
3000
00:55
First World and Third World,
17
55260
3000
00:58
oppression and opportunity.
18
58260
2000
01:00
In the midst of the daunting challenges
19
60260
2000
01:02
we face as a global community,
20
62260
2000
01:04
there's something about
21
64260
2000
01:06
this third way raga
22
66260
2000
01:08
that is making my heart sing.
23
68260
2000
01:10
What intrigues me most
24
70260
2000
01:12
is how women are doing this,
25
72260
2000
01:14
despite a set of paradoxes
26
74260
2000
01:16
that are both frustrating and fascinating.
27
76260
3000
01:19
Why is it that women are, on the one hand,
28
79260
3000
01:22
viciously oppressed by cultural practices,
29
82260
3000
01:25
and yet at the same time,
30
85260
2000
01:27
are the preservers of cultures in most societies?
31
87260
3000
01:30
Is the hijab or the headscarf
32
90260
2000
01:32
a symbol of submission
33
92260
2000
01:34
or resistance?
34
94260
2000
01:36
When so many women and girls
35
96260
3000
01:39
are beaten, raped, maimed
36
99260
2000
01:41
on a daily basis
37
101260
2000
01:43
in the name of all kinds of causes --
38
103260
2000
01:45
honor, religion, nationality --
39
105260
2000
01:47
what allows women to replant trees,
40
107260
3000
01:50
to rebuild societies,
41
110260
2000
01:52
to lead radical, non-violent movements
42
112260
2000
01:54
for social change?
43
114260
2000
01:56
Is it different women
44
116260
2000
01:58
who are doing the preserving and the radicalizing?
45
118260
3000
02:01
Or are they one and the same?
46
121260
2000
02:03
Are we guilty, as Chimamanda Adichie reminded us
47
123260
3000
02:06
at the TED conference in Oxford,
48
126260
2000
02:08
of assuming that there is a single story
49
128260
3000
02:11
of women's struggles for their rights
50
131260
2000
02:13
while there are, in fact, many?
51
133260
2000
02:15
And what, if anything,
52
135260
2000
02:17
do men have to do with it?
53
137260
2000
02:19
Much of my life has been a quest
54
139260
2000
02:21
to get some answers to these questions.
55
141260
3000
02:24
It's taken me across the globe
56
144260
2000
02:26
and introduced me to some amazing people.
57
146260
2000
02:28
In the process, I've gathered a few fragments
58
148260
3000
02:31
that help me shed some light on this puzzle.
59
151260
3000
02:34
Among those who've helped open my eyes
60
154260
2000
02:36
to a third way
61
156260
2000
02:38
are: a devout Muslim in Afghanistan,
62
158260
3000
02:41
a group of harmonizing lesbians in Croatia
63
161260
3000
02:44
and a taboo breaker in Liberia.
64
164260
3000
02:47
I'm indebted to them,
65
167260
2000
02:49
as I am to my parents,
66
169260
2000
02:51
who for some set of misdemeanors in their last life,
67
171260
3000
02:54
were blessed with three daughters in this one.
68
174260
3000
02:57
And for reasons equally unclear to me,
69
177260
2000
02:59
seem to be inordinately proud of the three of us.
70
179260
3000
03:03
I was born and raised here in India,
71
183260
2000
03:05
and I learned from an early age
72
185260
2000
03:07
to be deeply suspicious of the aunties and uncles
73
187260
3000
03:10
who would bend down, pat us on the head
74
190260
2000
03:12
and then say to my parents
75
192260
2000
03:14
with no problem at all,
76
194260
2000
03:16
"Poor things. You only have three daughters.
77
196260
3000
03:19
But you're young, you could still try again."
78
199260
3000
03:22
My sense of outrage
79
202260
2000
03:24
about women's rights
80
204260
2000
03:27
was brought to a boil when I was about 11.
81
207260
3000
03:30
My aunt, an incredibly articulate
82
210260
2000
03:32
and brilliant woman,
83
212260
2000
03:34
was widowed early.
84
214260
3000
03:37
A flock of relatives descended on her.
85
217260
3000
03:40
They took off her colorful sari.
86
220260
2000
03:42
They made her wear a white one.
87
222260
3000
03:45
They wiped her bindi off her forehead.
88
225260
3000
03:48
They broke her bangles.
89
228260
2000
03:50
Her daughter, Rani,
90
230260
2000
03:52
a few years older than me,
91
232260
2000
03:54
sat in her lap bewildered,
92
234260
2000
03:56
not knowing what had happened
93
236260
2000
03:58
to the confident woman
94
238260
2000
04:00
she once knew as her mother.
95
240260
2000
04:02
Late that night, I heard my mother
96
242260
2000
04:04
begging my father,
97
244260
2000
04:06
"Please do something Ramu. Can't you intervene?"
98
246260
3000
04:09
And my father, in a low voice, muttering,
99
249260
3000
04:13
"I'm just the youngest brother, there's nothing I can do.
100
253260
3000
04:16
This is tradition."
101
256260
2000
04:18
That's the night I learned the rules
102
258260
2000
04:20
about what it means to be female in this world.
103
260260
3000
04:24
Women don't make those rules,
104
264260
2000
04:26
but they define us, and they define
105
266260
2000
04:28
our opportunities and our chances.
106
268260
2000
04:30
And men are affected by those rules too.
107
270260
3000
04:33
My father, who had fought in three wars,
108
273260
3000
04:37
could not save his own sister
109
277260
2000
04:39
from this suffering.
110
279260
2000
04:45
By 18,
111
285260
2000
04:47
under the excellent tutelage of my mother,
112
287260
2000
04:49
I was therefore, as you might expect,
113
289260
2000
04:51
defiantly feminist.
114
291260
2000
04:53
On the streets chanting,
115
293260
2000
04:55
"[Hindi]
116
295260
2000
04:57
[Hindi]
117
297260
2000
04:59
We are the women of India.
118
299260
3000
05:02
We are not flowers, we are sparks of change."
119
302260
2000
05:04
By the time I got to Beijing in 1995,
120
304260
3000
05:07
it was clear to me, the only way
121
307260
2000
05:09
to achieve gender equality
122
309260
2000
05:11
was to overturn centuries
123
311260
2000
05:13
of oppressive tradition.
124
313260
2000
05:15
Soon after I returned from Beijing,
125
315260
2000
05:17
I leapt at the chance to work for this wonderful organization,
126
317260
3000
05:20
founded by women,
127
320260
2000
05:22
to support women's rights organizations around the globe.
128
322260
3000
05:27
But barely six months into my new job,
129
327260
2000
05:29
I met a woman
130
329260
2000
05:31
who forced me to challenge all my assumptions.
131
331260
3000
05:34
Her name is Sakena Yacoobi.
132
334260
2000
05:38
She walked into my office
133
338260
2000
05:40
at a time when no one knew
134
340260
2000
05:42
where Afghanistan was in the United States.
135
342260
3000
05:47
She said to me, "It is not about the burka."
136
347260
3000
05:50
She was the most determined advocate
137
350260
2000
05:52
for women's rights I had ever heard.
138
352260
2000
05:54
She told me women were running underground schools
139
354260
3000
05:57
in her communities inside Afghanistan,
140
357260
3000
06:00
and that her organization, the Afghan Institute of Learning,
141
360260
2000
06:02
had started a school in Pakistan.
142
362260
3000
06:05
She said, "The first thing anyone who is a Muslim knows
143
365260
3000
06:09
is that the Koran requires
144
369260
3000
06:12
and strongly supports literacy.
145
372260
3000
06:15
The prophet wanted every believer
146
375260
2000
06:17
to be able to read the Koran for themselves."
147
377260
2000
06:19
Had I heard right?
148
379260
2000
06:21
Was a women's rights advocate
149
381260
2000
06:23
invoking religion?
150
383260
3000
06:26
But Sakena defies labels.
151
386260
2000
06:28
She always wears a headscarf,
152
388260
3000
06:31
but I've walked alongside with her on a beach
153
391260
2000
06:33
with her long hair flying in the breeze.
154
393260
3000
06:36
She starts every lecture with a prayer,
155
396260
2000
06:38
but she's a single, feisty,
156
398260
3000
06:41
financially independent woman
157
401260
2000
06:43
in a country where girls are married off at the age of 12.
158
403260
3000
06:46
She is also immensely pragmatic.
159
406260
3000
06:50
"This headscarf and these clothes," she says,
160
410260
3000
06:53
"give me the freedom to do what I need to do
161
413260
3000
06:56
to speak to those whose support and assistance
162
416260
2000
06:58
are critical for this work.
163
418260
3000
07:01
When I had to open the school in the refugee camp,
164
421260
2000
07:03
I went to see the imam.
165
423260
2000
07:05
I told him, 'I'm a believer, and women and children
166
425260
3000
07:08
in these terrible conditions
167
428260
2000
07:10
need their faith to survive.'"
168
430260
3000
07:13
She smiles slyly.
169
433260
2000
07:15
"He was flattered.
170
435260
2000
07:17
He began to come twice a week to my center
171
437260
3000
07:20
because women could not go to the mosque.
172
440260
2000
07:22
And after he would leave,
173
442260
2000
07:24
women and girls would stay behind.
174
444260
2000
07:26
We began with a small literacy class
175
446260
2000
07:28
to read the Koran,
176
448260
2000
07:30
then a math class, then an English class, then computer classes.
177
450260
3000
07:33
In a few weeks, everyone in the refugee camp
178
453260
3000
07:36
was in our classes."
179
456260
2000
07:38
Sakena is a teacher
180
458260
3000
07:41
at a time when to educate women
181
461260
3000
07:44
is a dangerous business in Afghanistan.
182
464260
2000
07:46
She is on the Taliban's hit list.
183
466260
3000
07:49
I worry about her every time she travels across that country.
184
469260
3000
07:52
She shrugs when I ask her about safety.
185
472260
3000
07:55
"Kavita jaan, we cannot allow ourselves to be afraid.
186
475260
3000
07:58
Look at those young girls who go back to school
187
478260
2000
08:00
when acid is thrown in their face."
188
480260
2000
08:02
And I smile, and I nod,
189
482260
2000
08:04
realizing I'm watching women and girls
190
484260
2000
08:06
using their own religious traditions and practices,
191
486260
3000
08:09
turning them into instruments
192
489260
2000
08:11
of opposition and opportunity.
193
491260
3000
08:14
Their path is their own
194
494260
2000
08:16
and it looks towards an Afghanistan
195
496260
3000
08:19
that will be different.
196
499260
2000
08:21
Being different is something the women
197
501260
2000
08:23
of Lesbor in Zagreb, Croatia
198
503260
2000
08:25
know all too well.
199
505260
2000
08:27
To be a lesbian, a dyke,
200
507260
2000
08:29
a homosexual
201
509260
2000
08:31
in most parts of the world, including right here
202
511260
2000
08:33
in our country, India,
203
513260
2000
08:35
is to occupy a place of immense discomfort
204
515260
2000
08:37
and extreme prejudice.
205
517260
2000
08:39
In post-conflict societies like Croatia,
206
519260
3000
08:42
where a hyper-nationalism and religiosity
207
522260
3000
08:45
have created an environment unbearable
208
525260
2000
08:47
for anyone who might
209
527260
2000
08:49
be considered a social outcast.
210
529260
2000
08:51
So enter a group of out dykes,
211
531260
2000
08:53
young women who love the old music
212
533260
3000
08:56
that once spread across that region
213
536260
2000
08:58
from Macedonia to Bosnia,
214
538260
2000
09:00
from Serbia to Slovenia.
215
540260
2000
09:02
These folk singers met at college at a gender studies program.
216
542260
3000
09:06
Many are in their 20s, some are mothers.
217
546260
3000
09:09
Many have struggled to come out to their communities,
218
549260
3000
09:12
in families whose religious beliefs make it hard to accept
219
552260
3000
09:15
that their daughters are not sick,
220
555260
2000
09:17
just queer.
221
557260
2000
09:19
As Leah, one of the founders of the group, says,
222
559260
3000
09:22
"I like traditional music very much.
223
562260
3000
09:25
I also like rock and roll.
224
565260
2000
09:27
So Lesbor, we blend the two.
225
567260
2000
09:29
I see traditional music like a kind of rebellion,
226
569260
2000
09:31
in which people can really speak their voice,
227
571260
3000
09:34
especially traditional songs
228
574260
2000
09:36
from other parts of the former Yugoslav Republic.
229
576260
2000
09:38
After the war, lots of these songs were lost,
230
578260
3000
09:41
but they are a part of our childhood and our history,
231
581260
2000
09:43
and we should not forget them."
232
583260
2000
09:45
Improbably, this LGBT singing choir
233
585260
3000
09:48
has demonstrated how women
234
588260
2000
09:50
are investing in tradition to create change,
235
590260
3000
09:53
like alchemists turning discord into harmony.
236
593260
3000
09:56
Their repertoire includes
237
596260
2000
09:58
the Croatian national anthem,
238
598260
2000
10:00
a Bosnian love song
239
600260
2000
10:02
and Serbian duets.
240
602260
2000
10:04
And, Leah adds with a grin,
241
604260
2000
10:06
"Kavita, we especially are proud of our Christmas music,
242
606260
3000
10:09
because it shows we are open to religious practices
243
609260
3000
10:12
even though Catholic Church
244
612260
2000
10:14
hates us LGBT."
245
614260
2000
10:16
Their concerts draw from
246
616260
2000
10:18
their own communities, yes,
247
618260
2000
10:20
but also from an older generation:
248
620260
2000
10:22
a generation that might be
249
622260
2000
10:24
suspicious of homosexuality,
250
624260
2000
10:26
but is nostalgic for its own music and the past it represents.
251
626260
3000
10:29
One father, who had initially balked at his daughter
252
629260
3000
10:32
coming out in such a choir,
253
632260
2000
10:34
now writes songs for them.
254
634260
2000
10:36
In the Middle Ages, troubadours
255
636260
2000
10:38
would travel across the land
256
638260
2000
10:40
singing their tales and sharing their verses:
257
640260
3000
10:43
Lesbor travels through the Balkans like this,
258
643260
3000
10:46
singing, connecting people divided
259
646260
2000
10:48
by religion, nationality and language.
260
648260
3000
10:51
Bosnians, Croats and Serbs
261
651260
2000
10:53
find a rare shared space of pride in their history,
262
653260
3000
10:56
and Lesbor reminds them that
263
656260
2000
10:58
the songs one group often claims as theirs alone
264
658260
3000
11:01
really belong to them all.
265
661260
2000
11:03
(Singing)
266
663260
7000
11:23
Yesterday, Mallika Sarabhai showed us
267
683260
2000
11:25
that music can create a world
268
685260
2000
11:27
more accepting of difference
269
687260
2000
11:29
than the one we have been given.
270
689260
3000
11:32
The world Leymah Gbowee was given
271
692260
2000
11:34
was a world at war.
272
694260
2000
11:36
Liberia had been torn apart by civil strife for decades.
273
696260
3000
11:40
Leymah was not an activist, she was a mother of three.
274
700260
3000
11:43
But she was sick with worry:
275
703260
2000
11:45
She worried her son would be abducted
276
705260
2000
11:47
and taken off to be a child soldier,
277
707260
2000
11:49
she worried her daughters would be raped,
278
709260
2000
11:51
she worried for their lives.
279
711260
3000
11:54
One night, she had a dream.
280
714260
2000
11:56
She dreamt she and thousands of other women
281
716260
2000
11:58
ended the bloodshed.
282
718260
2000
12:00
The next morning at church, she asked others how they felt.
283
720260
3000
12:03
They were all tired of the fighting.
284
723260
2000
12:05
We need peace, and we need our leaders to know
285
725260
3000
12:08
we will not rest until there is peace.
286
728260
3000
12:11
Among Leymah's friends was a policewoman who was Muslim.
287
731260
3000
12:14
She promised to raise the issue with her community.
288
734260
3000
12:17
At the next Friday sermon,
289
737260
2000
12:19
the women who were sitting in the side room of the mosque
290
739260
2000
12:21
began to share their distress at the state of affairs.
291
741260
3000
12:24
"What does it matter?" they said, "A bullet doesn't distinguish
292
744260
3000
12:27
between a Muslim and a Christian."
293
747260
2000
12:29
This small group of women,
294
749260
2000
12:31
determined to bring an end to the war,
295
751260
2000
12:33
and they chose to use their traditions to make a point:
296
753260
3000
12:36
Liberian women usually wear
297
756260
2000
12:38
lots of jewelry and colorful clothing.
298
758260
2000
12:40
But no, for the protest, they dressed
299
760260
2000
12:42
all in white, no makeup.
300
762260
2000
12:44
As Leymah said, "We wore the white
301
764260
2000
12:46
saying we were out for peace."
302
766260
2000
12:48
They stood on the side of the road on which
303
768260
2000
12:50
Charles Taylor's motorcade passed every day.
304
770260
2000
12:52
They stood for weeks --
305
772260
2000
12:54
first just 10, then 20, then 50, then hundreds of women --
306
774260
3000
12:57
wearing white, singing, dancing,
307
777260
3000
13:00
saying they were out for peace.
308
780260
3000
13:03
Eventually, opposing forces in Liberia
309
783260
2000
13:05
were pushed to hold peace talks in Ghana.
310
785260
3000
13:09
The peace talks dragged on and on and on.
311
789260
3000
13:12
Leymah and her sisters had had enough.
312
792260
2000
13:14
With their remaining funds, they took
313
794260
2000
13:16
a small group of women down to the venue of the peace talks
314
796260
2000
13:18
and they surrounded the building.
315
798260
2000
13:20
In a now famous CNN clip,
316
800260
3000
13:23
you can see them sitting on the ground, their arms linked.
317
803260
2000
13:25
We know this in India. It's called a [Hindi].
318
805260
3000
13:29
Then things get tense.
319
809260
2000
13:31
The police are called in to physically remove the women.
320
811260
3000
13:34
As the senior officer approaches with a baton,
321
814260
3000
13:37
Leymah stands up with deliberation,
322
817260
2000
13:39
reaches her arms up over her head,
323
819260
2000
13:41
and begins, very slowly,
324
821260
2000
13:43
to untie her headdress that covers her hair.
325
823260
3000
13:46
You can see the policeman's face.
326
826260
3000
13:49
He looks embarrassed. He backs away.
327
829260
3000
13:52
And the next thing you know,
328
832260
2000
13:54
the police have disappeared.
329
834260
2000
13:56
Leymah said to me later,
330
836260
2000
13:58
"It's a taboo, you know, in West Africa.
331
838260
3000
14:01
If an older woman undresses in front of a man
332
841260
3000
14:04
because she wants to,
333
844260
2000
14:06
the man's family is cursed."
334
846260
2000
14:08
(Laughter)
335
848260
2000
14:10
(Applause)
336
850260
2000
14:12
She said, "I don't know if he did it because he believed,
337
852260
3000
14:15
but he knew we were not going to leave.
338
855260
2000
14:17
We were not going to leave until the peace accord was signed."
339
857260
3000
14:20
And the peace accord was signed.
340
860260
2000
14:22
And the women of Liberia
341
862260
2000
14:24
then mobilized in support of Ellen Johnson Sirleaf,
342
864260
3000
14:27
a woman who broke a few taboos herself
343
867260
2000
14:29
becoming the first elected woman head of state
344
869260
2000
14:31
in Africa in years.
345
871260
3000
14:35
When she made her presidential address,
346
875260
3000
14:38
she acknowledged these brave women of Liberia
347
878260
2000
14:40
who allowed her to win against a football star --
348
880260
3000
14:43
that's soccer for you Americans --
349
883260
2000
14:45
no less.
350
885260
2000
14:47
Women like Sakena and Leah
351
887260
2000
14:49
and Leymah
352
889260
2000
14:51
have humbled me and changed me
353
891260
3000
14:54
and made me realize that I should not be so quick
354
894260
3000
14:57
to jump to assumptions of any kind.
355
897260
3000
15:01
They've also saved me from my righteous anger
356
901260
2000
15:03
by offering insights into this third way.
357
903260
3000
15:07
A Filipina activist once said to me,
358
907260
2000
15:09
"How do you cook a rice cake?
359
909260
2000
15:11
With heat from the bottom and heat from the top."
360
911260
3000
15:14
The protests, the marches,
361
914260
2000
15:16
the uncompromising position that
362
916260
2000
15:18
women's rights are human rights, full stop.
363
918260
3000
15:22
That's the heat from the bottom.
364
922260
2000
15:24
That's Malcolm X and the suffragists
365
924260
2000
15:26
and gay pride parades.
366
926260
2000
15:28
But we also need the heat from the top.
367
928260
2000
15:30
And in most parts of the world,
368
930260
2000
15:32
that top is still
369
932260
2000
15:34
controlled by men.
370
934260
2000
15:36
So to paraphrase Marx: Women make change,
371
936260
3000
15:39
but not in circumstances of their own choosing.
372
939260
3000
15:42
They have to negotiate.
373
942260
2000
15:44
They have to subvert tradition that once silenced them
374
944260
3000
15:47
in order to give voice to new aspirations.
375
947260
3000
15:50
And they need allies from their communities.
376
950260
3000
15:53
Allies like the imam,
377
953260
2000
15:55
allies like the father who now writes songs
378
955260
2000
15:57
for a lesbian group in Croatia,
379
957260
3000
16:00
allies like the policeman who honored a taboo and backed away,
380
960260
3000
16:03
allies like my father,
381
963260
2000
16:05
who couldn't help his sister but has helped three daughters
382
965260
3000
16:08
pursue their dreams.
383
968260
2000
16:10
Maybe this is because feminism,
384
970260
2000
16:12
unlike almost every other social movement,
385
972260
2000
16:14
is not a struggle against a distinct oppressor --
386
974260
3000
16:17
it's not the ruling class
387
977260
2000
16:19
or the occupiers or the colonizers --
388
979260
3000
16:22
it's against a deeply held set of beliefs and assumptions
389
982260
3000
16:25
that we women, far too often,
390
985260
3000
16:28
hold ourselves.
391
988260
2000
16:30
And perhaps this is the ultimate gift of feminism,
392
990260
3000
16:33
that the personal is in fact the political.
393
993260
3000
16:36
So that, as Eleanor Roosevelt said once of human rights,
394
996260
2000
16:38
the same is true of gender equality:
395
998260
3000
16:41
that it starts in small places, close to home.
396
1001260
3000
16:44
On the streets, yes,
397
1004260
2000
16:46
but also in negotiations at the kitchen table
398
1006260
3000
16:49
and in the marital bed
399
1009260
2000
16:51
and in relationships between lovers and parents
400
1011260
2000
16:53
and sisters and friends.
401
1013260
2000
16:57
And then
402
1017260
2000
16:59
you realize that by integrating
403
1019260
2000
17:01
aspects of tradition and community
404
1021260
2000
17:03
into their struggles,
405
1023260
2000
17:05
women like Sakena and Leah and Leymah --
406
1025260
3000
17:08
but also women like Sonia Gandhi here in India
407
1028260
2000
17:10
and Michelle Bachelet in Chile
408
1030260
3000
17:13
and Shirin Ebadi in Iran --
409
1033260
3000
17:16
are doing something else.
410
1036260
2000
17:18
They're challenging the very notion
411
1038260
2000
17:20
of Western models of development.
412
1040260
3000
17:23
They are saying, we don't have to be like you
413
1043260
3000
17:26
to make change.
414
1046260
2000
17:28
We can wear a sari or a hijab
415
1048260
3000
17:31
or pants or a boubou,
416
1051260
2000
17:33
and we can be party leaders and presidents
417
1053260
3000
17:36
and human rights lawyers.
418
1056260
2000
17:38
We can use our tradition to navigate change.
419
1058260
3000
17:41
We can demilitarize societies
420
1061260
3000
17:44
and pour resources, instead,
421
1064260
2000
17:46
into reservoirs of genuine security.
422
1066260
3000
17:50
It is in these little stories,
423
1070260
3000
17:53
these individual stories,
424
1073260
2000
17:55
that I see a radical epic being written
425
1075260
2000
17:57
by women around the world.
426
1077260
2000
17:59
It is in these threads
427
1079260
2000
18:01
that are being woven into a resilient fabric
428
1081260
2000
18:03
that will sustain communities,
429
1083260
3000
18:06
that I find hope.
430
1086260
2000
18:08
And if my heart is singing,
431
1088260
2000
18:10
it's because in these little fragments,
432
1090260
3000
18:13
every now and again, you catch a glimpse
433
1093260
2000
18:15
of a whole, of a whole new world.
434
1095260
3000
18:18
And she is definitely on her way.
435
1098260
3000
18:21
Thank you.
436
1101260
2000
18:23
(Applause)
437
1103260
8000
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