Cristina Domenech: Poetry that frees the soul (with English subtitles) | TED

64,787 views

2015-01-16 ・ TED


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Cristina Domenech: Poetry that frees the soul (with English subtitles) | TED

64,787 views ・ 2015-01-16

TED


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

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Translator: Sebastian Betti Reviewer: Gisela Giardino
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It's said that to be a poet
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you have to go to hell and back.
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The first time I visited the prison,
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I was not surprised by the noise of the padlocks,
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or the closing doors, or the cell bars,
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or by any of the things I had imagined.
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Maybe because the prison is in a quite open space.
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You can see the sky.
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Seagulls fly overhead, and you feel like you're next to the sea,
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that you're really close to the beach.
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But in fact, the gulls are looking for food in the dump near the prison.
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I went farther inside and I suddenly saw inmates moving across the corridors.
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Then it was as if I stepped back and thought
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that I could have very well been one of them.
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If I had another story, another context, different luck.
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Because nobody - nobody - can choose where they're born.
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In 2009, I was invited to join a project
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that San Martín National University conducted at the Unit 48 penitentiary,
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to coordinate a writing workshop.
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The prison service ceded some land at the end of the prison,
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which is where they constructed the University Center building.
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The first time I met with the prisoners,
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I asked them why they were asking for a writing workshop
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and they told me they wanted to put on paper
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all that they couldn't say and do.
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Right then I decided that I wanted poetry to enter the prison.
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So I said to them why don't we work with poetry,
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if they knew what poetry was.
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But nobody had a clue what poetry really was.
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They also suggested to me
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that the workshop should be not just for the inmates
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taking university classes, but for all the inmates.
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And so I said that to start this workshop,
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I needed to find a tool that we all had in common.
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That tool was language.
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We had language, we had the workshop. We could have poetry.
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But what I hadn't considered was that inequality exists in prison, too.
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Many of the prisoners hadn't even completed grammar school.
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Many couldn't use cursive, could barely print.
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They didn't write fluently, either.
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So we started looking for short poems.
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Very short, but very powerful.
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And we started to read, and we'd read one author, then another author,
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and by reading such short poems, they all began to realize
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that what the poetic language did was to break a certain logic,
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and create another system.
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Breaking the logic of language also breaks the logic of the system
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under which they've learned to respond.
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So a new system appeared,
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new rules that made them understand very quickly,
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- very quickly -
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that with poetic language
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they would be able to say absolutely whatever they wanted.
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It's said that to be a poet you have to go to hell and back.
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And they have plenty of hell. Plenty of hell.
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One of them once said: "In prison you never sleep.
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You can never sleep in jail. You can never close your eyelids."
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And so, like I’m doing now, I gave them a moment of silence,
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then said, “That's what poetry is, you guys.
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It's in this prison universe that you have all around you.
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Everything you say about how you never sleep,
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it exudes fear.
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All the things that go unwritten -- all of that is poetry."
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So we started appropriating that hell;
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we plunged ourselves, headfirst, into the seventh circle.
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And in that seventh circle of hell, our very own, beloved circle,
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they learned that they could make the walls invisible,
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that they could make the windows yell,
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and that we could hide inside the shadows.
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When the first year of the workshop had ended,
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we organized a little closing party,
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like you do when a job is done with so much love,
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and you want to celebrate with a party.
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We called family, friends, the university authorities.
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The only thing the inmates had to do was read a poem,
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and receive their diplomas and applause.
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That was our simple party.
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The only thing I want to leave you with
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is the moment in which those men,
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some of them just huge when standing next to me,
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or the young boys - so young, but with an enormous pride,
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held their papers and trembled like little kids and sweated,
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and read their poems with their voices completely broken.
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That moment made me think a lot
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that for most of them, it was surely the very first time
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that someone applauded them for something they had done.
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In prison there are things that can't be done.
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In prison, you can't dream. In prison, you can't cry.
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There are words that are virtually forbidden, like the word "time,"
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the word "future," the word "wish".
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But we dared to dream, and to dream a lot.
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We decided that they were going to write a book.
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Not only did they write a book, but they also bound it themselves.
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That was at the end of 2010.
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Then, we doubled the bet and wrote another book.
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And we bound that one, too.
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That was a short time ago, at the end of last year.
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What I see week after week,
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is how they're turning into different people;
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how they're being transformed.
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How words are empowering them with a dignity they had never known,
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that they couldn't even imagine.
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They had no idea such dignity could come from them.
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At the workshop, in that beloved hell we share, we all give something.
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We open our hands and hearts and give what we have, what we can.
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All of us; all of us equally.
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And so you feel that at least in a small way
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you're repairing that huge social fracture
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which makes it so that for many of them,
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prison is their only destination.
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I remember a verse by a tremendous poet, a great poet,
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from our Unit 48 workshop, Nicolás Dorado:
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"I will need an infinite thread to sew up this huge wound."
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Poetry does that; it sews up the wounds of exclusion.
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It opens doors. Poetry works as a mirror.
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It creates a mirror, which is the poem.
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They recognize themselves, they look at themselves in the poem
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and write from who they are, and are from what they write.
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In order to write,
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they need to appropriate the moment of writing
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which is a moment of extraordinary freedom.
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They have to get into their heads, search for that bit of freedom
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that can never be taken away when they write
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and that is also useful to realize that freedom is possible
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even inside a prison,
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and that the only bars we have in our wonderful space
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is the word "bars,"
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and that all of us in our hell burn with happiness
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when we light the wick of the word.
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(Applause)
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I told you a lot about the prison, a lot about what I experience
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every week, and how I enjoy it and transform myself with the inmates.
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But you don't know how much I'd like it
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if you could feel, live, experience, even for a few seconds,
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what I enjoy every week and what makes me who I am.
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(Applause)
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Martín Bustamante: The heart chews tears of time;
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blinded by that light,
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it hides the speed of existence
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where the images go rowing by.
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It fights; it hangs on.
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The heart cracks under sad gazes,
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rides on storms that spread fire,
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lifts chests lowered by shame,
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knows that it's not just reading and going on,
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it also wishes to see the infinite blue.
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The heart sits down to think about things,
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fights to avoid being ordinary,
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tries to love without hurting,
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breathes the sun, giving courage to itself,
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surrenders, travels toward reason.
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The heart fights among the swamps,
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skirts the edge of the underworld,
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falls exhausted, but won't give in to what's easy,
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while irregular steps of intoxication
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wake up,
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wake the stillness.
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I'm Martín Bustamante,
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I'm a prisoner in Unit 48 of San Martín,
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today is my day of temporary release.
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And for me, poetry and literature have changed my life.
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Thank you very much!
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Cristina Domenech: Thank you!
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(Applause)
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