Art that transforms cities into playgrounds of the imagination | Helen Marriage

46,114 views ・ 2019-04-05

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We live in a world increasingly tyrannized by the screen,
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by our phones, by our tablets, by our televisions and our computers.
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We can have any experience that we want,
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but feel nothing.
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We can have as many friends as we want,
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but have nobody to shake hands with.
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I want to take you to a different kind of world,
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the world of the imagination,
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where, using this most powerful tool that we have,
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we can transform both our physical surroundings,
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but in doing so, we can change forever how we feel
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and how we feel about the people that we share the planet with.
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My company, Artichoke, which I cofounded in 2006,
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was set up to create moments.
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We all have moments in our lives, and when we're on our deathbeds,
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we're not going to remember the daily commute to work
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on the number 38 bus
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or our struggle to find a parking space every day when we go to the shop.
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We're going to remember those moments when our kid took their first step
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or when we got picked for the football team
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or when we fell in love.
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So Artichoke exists to create moving, ephemeral moments
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that transform the physical world using the imagination of the artist
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to show us what is possible.
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We create beauty amongst ruins.
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We reexamine our history.
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We create moments to which everyone is invited,
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either to witness or to take part.
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It all started for me way back in the 1990s,
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when I was appointed as festival director in the tiny British city of Salisbury.
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You'll probably have heard of it.
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Here's the Salisbury Cathedral, and here's the nearby Stonehenge Monument,
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which is world-famous.
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Salisbury is a city that's been dominated for hundreds of years by the Church,
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the Conservative Party
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and the army.
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It's a place where people really love to observe the rules.
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So picture me on my first year in the city,
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cycling the wrong way down a one-way street, late.
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I'm always late.
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It's a wonder I've even turned up today.
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(Laughter)
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A little old lady on the sidewalk helpfully shouted at me,
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"My dear, you're going the wrong way!"
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Charmingly -- I thought -- I said, "Yeah, I know."
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"I hope you die!" she screamed.
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(Laughter)
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And I realized that this was a place where I was in trouble.
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And yet, a year later,
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persuasion, negotiation -- everything I could deploy --
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saw me producing the work.
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Not a classical concert in a church or a poetry reading,
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but the work of a French street theater company
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who were telling the story of Faust,
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"Mephistomania," on stilts, complete with handheld pyrotechnics.
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The day after, the same little old lady stopped me in the street and said,
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"Were you responsible for last night?"
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I backed away.
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(Laughter)
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"Yes."
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"When I heard about it," she said, "I knew it wasn't for me.
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But Helen, my dear, it was."
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So what had happened?
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Curiosity had triumphed over suspicion,
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and delight had banished anxiety.
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So I wondered how one could transfer these ideas to a larger stage
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and started on a journey to do the same kind of thing to London.
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Imagine: it's a world city.
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Like all our cities, it's dedicated to toil, trade and traffic.
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It's a machine to get you to work on time and back,
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and we're all complicit in wanting the routines to be fixed
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and for everybody to be able to know what's going to happen next.
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And yet, what if this amazing city could be turned into a stage,
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a platform for something so unimaginable
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that would somehow transform people's lives?
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We do these things often in Britain.
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I'm sure you do them wherever you're from.
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Here's Horse Guards Parade.
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And here's something that we do often. It's always about winning things.
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It's about the marathon or winning a war
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or a triumphant cricket team coming home.
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We close the streets. Everybody claps.
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But for theater? Not possible.
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Except a story told by a French company:
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a saga about a little girl and a giant elephant
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that came to visit
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for four days.
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And all I had to do was persuade the public authorities
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that shutting the city for four days was something completely normal.
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(Laughter)
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No traffic, just people enjoying themselves,
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coming out to marvel and witness this extraordinary artistic endeavor
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by the French theater company Royal de Luxe.
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It was a seven-year journey,
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with me saying to a group of men -- almost always men -- sitting in a room,
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"Eh, it's like a fairy story with a little girl and this giant elephant,
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and they come to town for four days
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and everybody gets to come and watch and play."
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And they would go,
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"Why would we do this?
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Is it for something?
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Is it celebrating a presidential visit?
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Is it the Entente Cordiale between France and England?
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Is it for charity? Are you trying to raise money?"
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And I'd say,
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"None of these things."
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And they'd say, "Why would we do this?"
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But after four years, this magic trick, this extraordinary thing happened.
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I was sitting in the same meeting I'd been to for four years,
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saying, "Please, please, may I?"
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Instead of which, I didn't say, "Please."
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I said, "This thing that we've been talking about for such a long time,
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it's happening on these dates,
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and I really need you to help me."
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This magic thing happened.
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Everybody in the room somehow decided that somebody else had said yes.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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They decided that they were not being asked to take responsibility,
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or maybe the bus planning manager was being asked to take responsibility
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for planning the bus diversions,
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and the council officer was being asked to close the roads,
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and the transport for London people were being asked to sort out the Underground.
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All these people were only being asked to do the thing that they could do
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that would help us.
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Nobody was being asked to take responsibility.
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And I, in my innocence, thought, "Well, I'll take responsibility,"
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for what turned out to be a million people on the street.
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It was our first show.
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(Applause)
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It was our first show, and it changed the nature of the appreciation of culture,
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not in a gallery, not in a theater, not in an opera house,
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but live and on the streets,
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transforming public space for the broadest possible audience,
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people who would never buy a ticket to see anything.
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So there we were.
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We'd finished, and we've continued to produce work of this kind.
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As you can see, the company's work is astonishing,
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but what's also astonishing is the fact that permission was granted.
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And you don't see any security.
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And this was nine months after terrible terrorist bombings
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that had ripped London apart.
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So I began to wonder whether it was possible
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to do this kind of stuff in even more complicated circumstances.
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We turned our attention to Northern Ireland,
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the North of Ireland, depending on your point of view.
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This is a map of England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland,
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the island to the left.
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For generations, it's been a place of conflict,
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the largely Catholic republic in the south
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and the largely Protestant loyalist community --
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hundreds of years of conflict,
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British troops on the streets for over 30 years.
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And now, although there is a peace process,
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this is today in this city, called Londonderry if you're a loyalist,
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called Derry if you're a Catholic.
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But everybody calls it home.
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And I began to wonder
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whether there was a way in which the community tribalism could be addressed
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through art and the imagination.
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This is what the communities do,
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every summer, each community.
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This is a bonfire filled with effigies and insignia
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from the people that they hate on the other side.
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This is the same from the loyalist community.
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And every summer, they burn them.
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They're right in the center of town.
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So we turned to here, to the Nevada desert, to Burning Man,
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where people also do bonfires,
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but with a completely different set of values.
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Here you see the work of David Best and his extraordinary temples,
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which are built during the Burning Man event
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and then incinerated on the Sunday.
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So we invited him and his community to come,
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and we recruited from both sides of the political and religious divide:
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young people, unemployed people,
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people who would never normally come across each other
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or speak to each other.
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And out of their extraordinary work rose a temple
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to rival the two cathedrals that exist in the town,
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one Catholic and one Protestant.
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But this was a temple to no religion,
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for everyone,
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for no community, but for everyone.
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And we put it in this place where everyone told me nobody would come.
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It was too dangerous. It sat between two communities.
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I just kept saying, "But it's got such a great view."
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(Laughter)
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And again, that same old question:
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Why wouldn't we do this?
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What you see in the picture
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is the beginning of 426 primary school children
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who were walked up the hill by the head teacher,
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who didn't want them to lose this opportunity.
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And just as happens in the Nevada desert,
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though in slightly different temperatures,
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the people of this community, 65,000 of them,
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turned out to write their grief, their pain, their hope,
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their hopes for the future,
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their love.
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Because in the end, this is only about love.
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They live in a post-conflict society:
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lots of post-traumatic stress,
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high suicide.
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And yet, for this brief moment --
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and it would be ridiculous to assume that it was more than that --
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somebody like Kevin -- a Catholic whose father was shot when he was nine,
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upstairs in bed --
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Kevin came to work as a volunteer.
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And he was the first person to embrace the elderly Protestant lady
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who came through the door on the day we opened the temple to the public.
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It rose up. It sat there for five days.
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And then we chose -- from our little tiny band of nonsectarian builders,
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who had given us their lives for this period of months
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to make this extraordinary thing --
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we chose from them the people who would incinerate it.
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And here you see the moment when,
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witnessed by 15,000 people who turned out on a dark, cold, March evening,
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the moment when they decided to put their enmity behind them,
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to inhabit this shared space,
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where everybody had an opportunity to say the things that had been unsayable,
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to say out loud,
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"You hurt me and my family, but I forgive you."
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And together, they watched
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as members of their community let go of this thing that was so beautiful,
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but was as hard to let go of
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as those thoughts and feelings
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that had gone into making it.
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(Music)
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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