The transformative power of classical music | Benjamin Zander | TED

7,883,278 views ・ 2008-06-27

TED


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00:12
Probably a lot of you know the story of the two salesmen
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who went down to Africa in the 1900s.
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They were sent down to find if there was any opportunity
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for selling shoes,
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and they wrote telegrams back to Manchester.
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And one of them wrote,
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"Situation hopeless. Stop. They don't wear shoes."
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And the other one wrote,
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"Glorious opportunity. They don't have any shoes yet."
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(Laughter)
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Now, there's a similar situation in the classical music world,
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because there are some people who think that classical music is dying.
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And there are some of us who think you ain't seen nothing yet.
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And rather than go into statistics and trends,
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and tell you about all the orchestras that are closing,
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and the record companies that are folding,
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I thought we should do an experiment tonight.
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Actually, it's not really an experiment, because I know the outcome.
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(Laughter)
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But it's like an experiment.
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Now, before we start --
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(Laughter)
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Before we start, I need to do two things.
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One is I want to remind you of what a seven-year-old child
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sounds like when he plays the piano.
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Maybe you have this child at home.
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He sounds something like this.
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(Music)
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(Music ends)
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I see some of you recognize this child.
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Now, if he practices for a year and takes lessons, he's now eight
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and he sounds like this.
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(Music)
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(Music ends)
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He practices for another year and takes lessons -- he's nine.
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(Music)
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(Music ends)
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Then he practices for another year and takes lessons -- now he's 10.
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(Music)
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(Music ends)
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At that point, they usually give up.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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Now, if you'd waited for one more year, you would have heard this.
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(Music)
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(Music ends)
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Now, what happened was not maybe what you thought,
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which is, he suddenly became passionate, engaged,
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involved, got a new teacher, he hit puberty, or whatever it is.
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What actually happened was the impulses were reduced.
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You see, the first time, he was playing with an impulse on every note.
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(Music)
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And the second, with an impulse every other note.
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(Music)
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You can see it by looking at my head.
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(Laughter)
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The nine-year-old put an impulse on every four notes.
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(Music)
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The 10-year-old, on every eight notes.
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(Music)
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And the 11-year-old, one impulse on the whole phrase.
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(Music)
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I don't know how we got into this position.
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(Laughter)
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I didn't say, "I'm going to move my shoulder over, move my body."
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No, the music pushed me over,
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which is why I call it one-buttock playing.
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(Music)
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It can be the other buttock.
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(Music)
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You know, a gentleman was once watching a presentation I was doing,
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when I was working with a young pianist.
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He was the president of a corporation in Ohio.
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I was working with this young pianist, and said,
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"The trouble with you is you're a two-buttock player.
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You should be a one-buttock player."
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I moved his body while he was playing.
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And suddenly, the music took off. It took flight.
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The audience gasped when they heard the difference.
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Then I got a letter from this gentleman.
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He said, "I was so moved.
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I went back and I transformed my entire company
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into a one-buttock company."
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(Laughter)
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Now, the other thing I wanted to do is to tell you about you.
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There are 1,600 people, I believe.
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My estimation is that probably 45 of you
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are absolutely passionate about classical music.
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You adore classical music. Your FM is always on that classical dial.
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You have CDs in your car, and you go to the symphony,
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your children are playing instruments.
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You can't imagine your life without classical music.
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That's the first group, quite small.
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Then there's another bigger group.
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The people who don't mind classical music.
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(Laughter)
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You know, you've come home from a long day,
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and you take a glass of wine, and you put your feet up.
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A little Vivaldi in the background doesn't do any harm.
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That's the second group.
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Now comes the third group:
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people who never listen to classical music.
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It's just simply not part of your life.
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You might hear it like second-hand smoke at the airport ...
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(Laughter)
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-- and maybe a little bit of a march from "Aida"
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when you come into the hall.
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But otherwise, you never hear it.
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That's probably the largest group.
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And then there's a very small group.
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These are the people who think they're tone-deaf.
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Amazing number of people think they're tone-deaf.
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Actually, I hear a lot, "My husband is tone-deaf."
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(Laughter)
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Actually, you cannot be tone-deaf.
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Nobody is tone-deaf.
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If you were tone-deaf, you couldn't change the gears
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on your car, in a stick shift car.
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You couldn't tell the difference between
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somebody from Texas and somebody from Rome.
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And the telephone. The telephone.
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If your mother calls
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on the miserable telephone, she calls and says, "Hello,"
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you not only know who it is, you know what mood she's in.
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You have a fantastic ear. Everybody has a fantastic ear.
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So nobody is tone-deaf.
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But I tell you what.
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It doesn't work for me to go on with this thing,
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with such a wide gulf between those who understand,
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love and are passionate about classical music,
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and those who have no relationship to it at all.
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The tone-deaf people, they're no longer here.
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But even between those three categories,
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it's too wide a gulf.
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So I'm not going to go on until every single person in this room,
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downstairs and in Aspen, and everybody else looking,
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will come to love and understand classical music.
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So that's what we're going to do.
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Now, you notice that there is not the slightest doubt in my mind
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that this is going to work, if you look at my face, right?
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It's one of the characteristics of a leader that he not doubt
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for one moment the capacity of the people he's leading
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to realize whatever he's dreaming.
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Imagine if Martin Luther King had said, "I have a dream.
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Of course, I'm not sure they'll be up to it."
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(Laughter)
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All right. So I'm going to take a piece of Chopin.
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This is a beautiful prelude by Chopin.
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Some of you will know it.
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(Music)
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Do you know what I think probably happened here?
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When I started, you thought, "How beautiful that sounds."
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(Music)
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"I don't think we should go to the same place
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for our summer holidays next year."
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(Laughter)
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It's funny, isn't it?
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It's funny how those thoughts kind of waft into your head.
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And of course --
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(Applause)
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Of course, if the piece is long and you've had a long day,
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you might actually drift off.
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Then your companion will dig you in the ribs
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and say, "Wake up! It's culture!" And then you feel even worse.
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(Laughter)
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But has it ever occurred to you that the reason you feel sleepy
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in classical music is not because of you, but because of us?
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Did anybody think while I was playing,
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"Why is he using so many impulses?"
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If I'd done this with my head you certainly would have thought it.
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(Music)
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(Music ends)
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And for the rest of your life, every time you hear classical music,
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you'll always be able to know if you hear those impulses.
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So let's see what's really going on here.
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We have a B. This is a B.
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The next note is a C.
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And the job of the C is to make the B sad.
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And it does, doesn't it?
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(Laughter)
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Composers know that.
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If they want sad music, they just play those two notes.
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(Music)
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But basically, it's just a B, with four sads.
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(Laughter)
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Now, it goes down to A.
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Now to G.
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And then to F.
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So we have B, A, G, F.
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And if we have B, A, G, F,
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what do we expect next?
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(Music)
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That might have been a fluke.
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Let's try it again.
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(Music)
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Oh, the TED choir.
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(Laughter)
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And you notice nobody is tone-deaf, right?
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Nobody is.
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You know, every village in Bangladesh
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and every hamlet in China -- everybody knows:
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da, da, da, da -- da.
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Everybody knows, who's expecting that E.
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Chopin didn't want to reach the E there,
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because what will have happened?
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It will be over, like Hamlet. Do you remember?
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Act One, scene three,
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he finds out his uncle killed his father.
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He keeps on going up to his uncle and almost killing him.
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And then he backs away, he goes up to him again, almost kills him.
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The critics sitting in the back row there,
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they have to have an opinion, so they say, "Hamlet is a procrastinator."
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Or they say, "Hamlet has an Oedipus complex."
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No, otherwise the play would be over, stupid.
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(Laughter)
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That's why Shakespeare puts all that stuff in Hamlet --
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Ophelia going mad, the play within the play,
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and Yorick's skull, and the gravediggers.
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That's in order to delay --
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until Act Five, he can kill him.
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It's the same with the Chopin.
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He's just about to reach the E,
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and he says, "Oops, better go back up and do it again."
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So he does it again.
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Now, he gets excited.
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(Music)
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That's excitement, don't worry about it.
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Now, he gets to F-sharp, and finally he goes down to E,
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but it's the wrong chord --
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because the chord he's looking for is this one,
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and instead he does ...
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Now, we call that a deceptive cadence,
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because it deceives us.
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I tell my students, "If you have a deceptive cadence,
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raise your eyebrows, and everybody will know."
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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Right.
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He gets to E, but it's the wrong chord.
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Now, he tries E again.
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That chord doesn't work.
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Now, he tries the E again. That chord doesn't work.
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Now, he tries E again, and that doesn't work.
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And then finally ...
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There was a gentleman in the front row who went, "Mmm."
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(Laughter)
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It's the same gesture he makes when he comes home
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after a long day, turns off the key in his car and says,
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"Aah, I'm home."
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Because we all know where home is.
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So this is a piece which goes from away to home.
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I'm going to play it all the way through and you're going to follow.
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B, C, B, C, B, C, B --
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down to A, down to G, down to F.
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Almost goes to E, but otherwise the play would be over.
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He goes back up to B, he gets very excited.
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Goes to F-sharp. Goes to E.
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It's the wrong chord. It's the wrong chord.
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And finally goes to E, and it's home.
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And what you're going to see is one-buttock playing.
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(Laughter)
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Because for me, to join the B to the E,
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I have to stop thinking about every single note along the way,
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and start thinking about the long, long line from B to E.
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You know, we were just in South Africa, and you can't go to South Africa
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without thinking of Mandela in jail for 27 years.
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What was he thinking about? Lunch?
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No, he was thinking about the vision for South Africa
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and for human beings.
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This is about vision. This is about the long line.
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Like the bird who flies over the field
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and doesn't care about the fences underneath, all right?
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So now, you're going to follow the line all the way from B to E.
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And I've one last request before I play this piece all the way through.
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Would you think of somebody who you adore,
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who's no longer there?
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A beloved grandmother, a lover --
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somebody in your life who you love with all your heart,
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but that person is no longer with you.
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Bring that person into your mind,
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and at the same time,
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follow the line all the way from B to E,
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and you'll hear everything that Chopin had to say.
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(Music)
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(Music ends)
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(Applause)
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Now, you may be wondering --
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(Applause)
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(Applause ends)
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You may be wondering why I'm clapping.
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Well, I did this at a school in Boston
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with about 70 seventh graders, 12-year-olds.
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I did exactly what I did with you,
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and I explained the whole thing.
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At the end, they went crazy, clapping.
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I was clapping. They were clapping.
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Finally, I said, "Why am I clapping?"
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And one of them said, "Because we were listening."
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(Laughter)
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Think of it. 1,600 people, busy people,
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involved in all sorts of different things,
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listening, understanding and being moved
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by a piece by Chopin.
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Now, that is something.
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Am I sure that every single person followed that,
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understood it, was moved by it?
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Of course, I can't be sure.
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15:58
But I'll tell you what happened to me in Ireland
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16:00
during the Troubles, 10 years ago,
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and I was working with some Catholic and Protestant kids
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on conflict resolution.
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And I did this with them --
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a risky thing to do, because they were street kids.
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And one of them came to me the next morning
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16:15
and he said,
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"You know, I've never listened to classical music in my life,
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16:19
but when you played that shopping piece ..."
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16:21
(Laughter)
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He said, "My brother was shot last year and I didn't cry for him.
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But last night, when you played that piece,
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he was the one I was thinking about.
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And I felt the tears streaming down my face.
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And it felt really good to cry for my brother."
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So I made up my mind at that moment
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that classical music is for everybody.
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Everybody.
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16:47
Now, how would you walk --
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16:49
my profession, the music profession doesn't see it that way.
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16:53
They say three percent of the population likes classical music.
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16:57
If only we could move it to four percent, our problems would be over.
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(Laughter)
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How would you walk? How would you talk? How would you be?
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If you thought, "Three percent of the population likes classical music,
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17:08
if only we could move it to four percent."
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How would you walk or talk? How would you be?
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17:12
If you thought, "Everybody loves classical music --
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17:15
they just haven't found out about it yet."
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17:17
See, these are totally different worlds.
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17:20
Now, I had an amazing experience.
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17:22
I was 45 years old,
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I'd been conducting for 20 years,
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17:25
and I suddenly had a realization.
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The conductor of an orchestra doesn't make a sound.
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17:32
My picture appears on the front of the CD --
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17:35
(Laughter)
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17:37
But the conductor doesn't make a sound.
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17:39
He depends, for his power,
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17:41
on his ability to make other people powerful.
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17:45
And that changed everything for me.
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17:47
It was totally life-changing.
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People in my orchestra said,
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17:50
"Ben, what happened?" That's what happened.
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17:53
I realized my job was to awaken possibility in other people.
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17:58
And of course, I wanted to know whether I was doing that.
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18:01
How do you find out?
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18:02
You look at their eyes.
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18:04
If their eyes are shining, you know you're doing it.
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18:08
You could light up a village with this guy's eyes.
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18:10
(Laughter)
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18:11
Right. So if the eyes are shining, you know you're doing it.
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18:14
If the eyes are not shining, you get to ask a question.
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18:17
And this is the question:
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18:18
who am I being
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18:21
that my players' eyes are not shining?
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18:23
We can do that with our children, too.
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18:25
Who am I being,
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18:28
that my children's eyes are not shining?
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18:31
That's a totally different world.
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18:33
Now, we're all about to end this magical, on-the-mountain week,
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18:38
we're going back into the world.
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18:40
And I say, it's appropriate for us to ask the question,
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18:44
who are we being as we go back out into the world?
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18:49
And you know, I have a definition of success.
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18:52
For me, it's very simple.
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18:53
It's not about wealth and fame and power.
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18:55
It's about how many shining eyes I have around me.
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18:58
So now, I have one last thought,
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19:00
which is that it really makes a difference what we say --
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19:05
the words that come out of our mouth.
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19:07
I learned this from a woman who survived Auschwitz,
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19:10
one of the rare survivors.
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19:11
She went to Auschwitz when she was 15 years old.
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19:16
And ...
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19:19
And her brother was eight,
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19:21
and the parents were lost.
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19:23
And she told me this, she said,
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19:28
"We were in the train going to Auschwitz,
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19:30
and I looked down and saw my brother's shoes were missing.
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19:34
I said, 'Why are you so stupid, can't you keep your things together
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19:37
for goodness' sake?'"
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19:38
The way an elder sister might speak to a younger brother.
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19:43
Unfortunately, it was the last thing she ever said to him,
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19:46
because she never saw him again.
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19:47
He did not survive.
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19:49
And so when she came out of Auschwitz, she made a vow.
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19:52
She told me this.
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19:53
She said, "I walked out of Auschwitz into life
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19:57
and I made a vow.
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19:58
And the vow was,
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20:00
"I will never say anything that couldn't stand as the last thing I ever say."
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20:06
Now, can we do that? No.
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20:08
And we'll make ourselves wrong and others wrong.
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20:12
But it is a possibility to live into.
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20:15
Thank you.
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20:17
(Applause)
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20:23
Shining eyes.
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20:25
(Applause)
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20:26
Shining eyes.
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1376
20:27
(Applause)
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3000
20:34
Thank you, thank you.
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2468
About this website

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