Helping humans and animals live together | Jane Goodall

66,642 views ・ 2008-09-08

TED


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

00:19
Good afternoon, good evening, whatever.
0
19330
3000
00:23
We can go, jambo, guten Abend, bonsoir,
1
23330
5000
00:28
but we can also ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh.
2
28330
9000
00:38
That is the call that chimpanzees make
3
38330
3000
00:41
before they go to sleep in the evening.
4
41330
2000
00:43
You hear it going from one side of the valley to the other,
5
43330
4000
00:47
from one group of nests to the next.
6
47330
3000
00:51
And I want to pick up with my talk this evening
7
51330
3000
00:54
from where Zeray left off yesterday.
8
54330
4000
00:59
He was talking about this amazing, three-year-old Australopithecine child, Selam.
9
59330
6000
01:05
And we've also been hearing about the history, the family tree, of mankind
10
65330
7000
01:12
through DNA genetic profiling.
11
72330
3000
01:15
And it was a paleontologist, the late Louis Leakey,
12
75330
5000
01:20
who actually set me on the path for studying chimpanzees.
13
80330
4000
01:24
And it was pretty extraordinary, way back then.
14
84330
3000
01:27
It's kind of commonplace now,
15
87330
2000
01:29
but his argument was -- because he'd been searching
16
89330
3000
01:32
for the fossilized remains of early humans in Africa.
17
92330
5000
01:37
And you can tell an awful lot
18
97330
3000
01:40
about what those beings looked like from the fossils,
19
100330
3000
01:43
from the shape of the muscle attachments,
20
103330
3000
01:46
something about the way they lived
21
106330
2000
01:48
from the various artifacts found with them.
22
108330
3000
01:51
But what about how they behaved? That's what he wanted to know.
23
111330
4000
01:55
And of course, behavior doesn't fossilize.
24
115330
2000
01:57
He argued -- and it's now a fairly common theory --
25
117330
3000
02:00
that if we found behavior patterns similar or the same
26
120330
7000
02:07
in our closest living relatives, the great apes, and humans today,
27
127330
4000
02:11
then maybe those behaviors were present in the ape-like,
28
131330
4000
02:15
human-like ancestor some seven million years ago.
29
135330
4000
02:19
And therefore, perhaps we had brought those characteristics with us
30
139330
4000
02:23
from that ancient, ancient past.
31
143330
2000
02:25
Well, if you look in textbooks today that deal with human evolution,
32
145330
6000
02:31
you very often find people speculating about how early humans
33
151330
4000
02:35
may have behaved, based on the behavior of chimpanzees.
34
155330
4000
02:39
They are more like us than any other living creature,
35
159330
4000
02:43
and we've heard about that during this TED Conference.
36
163330
3000
02:46
So it remains for me to comment on the ways in which chimpanzees
37
166330
5000
02:51
are so like us, in certain aspects of their behavior.
38
171330
5000
02:57
Every chimpanzee has his or her own personality.
39
177330
3000
03:00
Of course, I gave them names. They can live to be 60 years or more,
40
180330
4000
03:04
although we think most of them probably don't make it to 60 in the wild.
41
184330
5000
03:09
Mr. Wurzel. The female has her first baby when she's 11 or 12.
42
189330
6000
03:15
Thereafter, she has one baby only every five or six years,
43
195330
4000
03:19
a long period of childhood dependency when the child is nursing,
44
199330
5000
03:24
sleeping with the mother at night, and riding on her back.
45
204330
4000
03:28
And we believe that this long period of childhood
46
208330
3000
03:31
is important for chimpanzees, just as it is for us, in relation to learning.
47
211330
5000
03:36
As the brain becomes ever more complex
48
216330
2000
03:38
during evolution in different forms of animals,
49
218330
4000
03:42
so we find that learning plays an ever more important role
50
222330
3000
03:45
in an individual's life history.
51
225330
3000
03:48
And young chimpanzees spend a lot of time watching what their elders do.
52
228330
4000
03:52
We know now that they're capable of imitating behaviors that they see.
53
232330
6000
03:58
And we believe that it's in this way
54
238330
3000
04:01
that the different tool-using behaviors -- that have now been seen
55
241330
3000
04:04
in all the different chimpanzee populations studied in Africa --
56
244330
4000
04:08
how these are passed from one generation to the next,
57
248330
3000
04:11
through observation, imitation and practice,
58
251330
3000
04:14
so that we can describe these tool-using behaviors as primitive culture.
59
254330
5000
04:19
Chimpanzees don't have a spoken language. We've talked about that.
60
259330
4000
04:23
They do have a very rich repertoire of postures and gestures,
61
263330
4000
04:27
many of which are similar, or even identical, to ours
62
267330
4000
04:31
and formed in the same context. Greeting chimpanzees embracing.
63
271330
4000
04:35
They also kiss, hold hands, pat one another on the back.
64
275330
3000
04:38
And they swagger and they throw rocks.
65
278330
3000
04:42
In chimpanzee society, we find many, many examples of compassion,
66
282330
6000
04:48
precursors to love and true altruism.
67
288330
3000
04:51
Unfortunately, they, like us, have a dark side to their nature.
68
291330
4000
04:55
They're capable of extreme brutality, even a kind of primitive war.
69
295330
5000
05:00
And these really aggressive behaviors, for the most part,
70
300330
3000
05:03
are directed against individuals of the neighboring social group.
71
303330
4000
05:07
They are very territorially aggressive.
72
307330
4000
05:12
Chimpanzees, I believe, more than any other living creature,
73
312330
4000
05:16
have helped us to understand that, after all, there is no sharp line
74
316330
4000
05:20
between humans and the rest of the animal kingdom.
75
320330
3000
05:23
It's a very blurry line, and it's getting more blurry all the time
76
323330
4000
05:27
as we make even more observations.
77
327330
3000
05:30
The study that I began in 1960 is still continuing to this day.
78
330330
5000
05:35
And these chimpanzees, living their complex social lives in the wild,
79
335330
5000
05:40
have helped -- more than anything else --
80
340330
3000
05:43
to make us realize we are part of, and not separated from,
81
343330
4000
05:47
the amazing animals with whom we share the planet.
82
347330
3000
05:50
So it's pretty sad to find that chimpanzees,
83
350330
3000
05:53
like so many other creatures around the world, are losing their habitats.
84
353330
4000
05:57
This is just one photograph from the air,
85
357330
3000
06:00
and it shows you the forested highlands of Gombe.
86
360330
4000
06:04
And it was when I flew over the whole area, about 16 years ago,
87
364330
6000
06:10
and realized that outside the park, this forest,
88
370330
3000
06:13
which in 1960 had stretched almost unbroken
89
373330
3000
06:16
along the eastern shore of Lake Tanganyika,
90
376330
3000
06:19
which is where the tiny, 30-square-mile Gombe National Park lies,
91
379330
5000
06:24
that a question came to my mind.
92
384330
3000
06:27
"How can we even try to save these famous chimpanzees,
93
387330
4000
06:31
when the people living around the National Park are struggling to survive?"
94
391330
4000
06:35
More people are living there than the land could possibly support.
95
395330
4000
06:39
The numbers increased by refugees pouring in from Burundi
96
399330
4000
06:43
and over the lake from Congo.
97
403330
2000
06:45
And very poor people -- they couldn't afford to buy food from elsewhere.
98
405330
7000
06:52
This led to a program, which we call TACARE.
99
412330
3000
06:55
It's a very holistic way of improving the lives
100
415330
5000
07:00
of the people living in the villages around the park.
101
420330
3000
07:03
It started small with 12 villages. It's now in 24.
102
423330
4000
07:07
There isn't time to go into it, but it's including things like tree nurseries,
103
427330
5000
07:12
methods of farming most suitable to this now very degraded,
104
432330
4000
07:16
almost desert-like land up in these mountains.
105
436330
3000
07:19
Ways of controlling, preventing soil erosion.
106
439330
4000
07:23
Ways of reclaiming overused farmland,
107
443330
3000
07:26
so that within two years they can again be productive.
108
446330
3000
07:29
Working to help the villagers obtain fresh water from wells.
109
449330
6000
07:35
Perhaps build some schoolrooms.
110
455330
3000
07:38
Most important of all, I believe,
111
458330
3000
07:41
is working with small groups of women,
112
461330
4000
07:45
providing them with opportunities for micro-credit loans.
113
465330
4000
07:49
And we've got, as is the case around the world,
114
469330
3000
07:52
about 95 percent of all loans returned.
115
472330
4000
07:56
Empowering women, working with education,
116
476330
5000
08:01
providing scholarships for girls so they can finish secondary school,
117
481330
6000
08:07
in the clear understanding that, all around the world,
118
487330
3000
08:10
as women's education improves, family size drops.
119
490330
5000
08:15
We provide information about family planning and about HIV/AIDS.
120
495330
5000
08:20
And as a result of this program,
121
500330
4000
08:24
something's happening for conservation.
122
504330
2000
08:26
What's happening for conservation is that the farmers living in these 24 villages,
123
506330
6000
08:32
instead of looking on us as a bunch of white people
124
512330
3000
08:35
coming to study a whole bunch of monkeys --
125
515330
3000
08:38
and by the way, many of the staff are now Tanzanian --
126
518330
4000
08:42
but when we began the TACARE program,
127
522330
3000
08:45
it was a Tanzanian team going into the villages.
128
525330
3000
08:48
It was a Tanzanian team talking to the villagers,
129
528330
3000
08:51
asking what they were interested in.
130
531330
2000
08:53
Were they interested in conservation? Absolutely not.
131
533330
3000
08:56
They were interested in health; they were interested in education.
132
536330
3000
08:59
And as time went on, and as their situation began to improve,
133
539330
7000
09:06
they began to understand ever more about the need for conservation.
134
546330
5000
09:11
They began to understand
135
551330
2000
09:13
that as the upper levels of the hills were denuded of trees,
136
553330
3000
09:16
so you've got this terrible soil erosion and mudslides.
137
556330
4000
09:20
Today, we are developing what we call the Greater Gombe Ecosystem.
138
560330
5000
09:25
This is an area way outside the National Park,
139
565330
3000
09:28
stretching out into all these very degraded lands.
140
568330
4000
09:32
And as these villages have a better standard of life,
141
572330
4000
09:36
they are actually agreeing to put
142
576330
2000
09:38
between 10 percent and 20 percent of their land in the highlands aside,
143
578330
5000
09:43
so that once again, as the trees grow back,
144
583330
4000
09:47
the chimpanzees will have leafy corridors
145
587330
2000
09:49
through which they can travel to interact --
146
589330
3000
09:52
as they must for genetic viability --
147
592330
3000
09:55
with other remnant groups outside the National Park.
148
595330
3000
09:58
So TACARE is a success.
149
598330
4000
10:02
We're replicating it in other parts of Africa,
150
602330
3000
10:05
around other wilderness areas
151
605330
2000
10:07
which are faced with extreme population pressure.
152
607330
3000
10:10
The problems in Africa, however, as we've been discussing
153
610330
5000
10:15
for the whole of these first couple of days of TED,
154
615330
4000
10:19
are major problems.
155
619330
3000
10:22
There is a great deal of poverty.
156
622330
2000
10:24
And when you get large numbers of people
157
624330
4000
10:28
living in land that is not that fertile,
158
628330
4000
10:32
particularly when you cut down trees,
159
632330
2000
10:34
and you leave the soil open to the wind for erosion,
160
634330
4000
10:39
as desperate populations cut down more and more trees,
161
639330
3000
10:42
so that they can try and grow food for themselves and their families,
162
642330
4000
10:46
what's going to happen? Something's got to give.
163
646330
3000
10:49
And the other problems -- in not only Africa,
164
649330
6000
10:55
but the rest of the developing world and, indeed, everywhere --
165
655330
4000
10:59
what are we doing to our planet?
166
659330
3000
11:02
You know, the famous scientist, E. O. Wilson
167
662330
3000
11:05
said that if every person on this planet
168
665330
3000
11:08
attains the standard of living of the average European or American,
169
668330
4000
11:12
we need three new planets.
170
672330
2000
11:14
Today, they are saying four. But we don't have them. We've got one.
171
674330
5000
11:20
And what's happened? I mean, the question here is, here we are,
172
680330
6000
11:26
arguably the most intelligent being that's ever walked planet Earth,
173
686330
5000
11:31
with this extraordinary brain,
174
691330
2000
11:33
capable of the kind of technology
175
693330
3000
11:36
that is so well illustrated by these TED Conferences,
176
696330
4000
11:40
and yet we're destroying the only home we have.
177
700330
4000
11:44
The indigenous people around the world,
178
704330
3000
11:47
before they made a major decision,
179
707330
2000
11:49
used to sit around and ask themselves,
180
709330
3000
11:52
"How does this decision affect our people seven generations ahead?"
181
712330
4000
11:56
Today, major decisions -- and I'm not particularly talking about Africa here,
182
716330
5000
12:01
but the developed world --
183
721330
2000
12:03
major decisions involving millions of dollars,
184
723330
3000
12:06
and millions of people, are often based on,
185
726330
2000
12:08
"How will this affect the next shareholders' meeting?"
186
728330
3000
12:11
And these decisions affect Africa.
187
731330
2000
12:13
As I began traveling around Africa
188
733330
2000
12:15
talking about the problems faced by chimpanzees and their vanishing forests,
189
735330
5000
12:20
I realized more and more how so many of Africa's problems
190
740330
3000
12:23
could be laid at the door of previous colonial exploitation.
191
743330
5000
12:28
So I began traveling outside Africa, talking in Europe,
192
748330
3000
12:31
talking in the United States, going to Asia.
193
751330
3000
12:34
And everywhere there were these terrible problems.
194
754330
3000
12:37
And you know the kind I'm talking about. I'm talking about pollution.
195
757330
4000
12:41
The air that we breathe that often poisons us.
196
761330
3000
12:44
The earth is poisoning our foods.
197
764330
2000
12:46
The water -- water is perhaps one of the most crucial issues
198
766330
4000
12:50
that we're going to face in this century --
199
770330
3000
12:53
and everywhere water is being polluted by agricultural,
200
773330
3000
12:56
industrial and household chemicals
201
776330
3000
12:59
that still are being sprayed around the world,
202
779330
3000
13:02
seemingly with the inability to profit from past experience.
203
782330
5000
13:07
The mangroves are being cut down;
204
787330
3000
13:10
the effects of things like the tsunami get worse.
205
790330
3000
13:13
We've talked about the soil erosion.
206
793330
2000
13:15
We have the reckless burning of fossil fuels
207
795330
4000
13:19
along with other greenhouse gasses, so called,
208
799330
3000
13:22
leading to climate change.
209
802330
2000
13:24
Finally, all around the world, people have begun to believe
210
804330
4000
13:28
that there is something going on very wrong with our climate.
211
808330
3000
13:31
All around the world climates are mixed up.
212
811330
3000
13:34
And it's the poor people who are affected worse.
213
814330
3000
13:37
It's Africa that already is affected.
214
817330
3000
13:40
In many parts of sub-Saharan Africa, the droughts are so much worse.
215
820330
4000
13:44
And when the rain does come, it so often leads to flooding
216
824330
3000
13:47
and added distress, and the cycle of poverty and hunger and disease.
217
827330
7000
13:54
And the numbers of people living in an area that the land cannot support,
218
834330
6000
14:00
who are too poor to buy food,
219
840330
3000
14:03
who can't move away because the whole land is degraded.
220
843330
3000
14:06
And so you get desertification -- creeping, creeping, creeping --
221
846330
6000
14:12
as the last of the trees are cut down.
222
852330
2000
14:14
And this kind of thing is not just in Africa. It's all over the world.
223
854330
4000
14:20
So it wasn't surprising to me
224
860330
4000
14:24
that as I was traveling around the world
225
864330
2000
14:26
I met so many young people who seemed to have lost hope.
226
866330
4000
14:30
We seem to have lost wisdom, the wisdom of the indigenous people.
227
870330
5000
14:35
I asked a question. "Why?"
228
875330
3000
14:38
Well, do you think there could be some kind of disconnect
229
878330
4000
14:42
between this extraordinarily clever brain,
230
882330
3000
14:45
the kind of brain that the TED technologies exemplify,
231
885330
6000
14:51
and the human heart? Talking about it in the non-scientific term,
232
891330
4000
14:55
in terms of love and compassion. Is there some disconnect?
233
895330
5000
15:00
And these young people, when I talk to them,
234
900330
4000
15:04
basically they were either depressed or apathetic,
235
904330
3000
15:07
or bitter and angry. And they said more or less the same thing,
236
907330
4000
15:11
"We feel this way because we feel you've compromised our future
237
911330
3000
15:14
and there's nothing we can do about it."
238
914330
3000
15:17
We have compromised their future.
239
917330
2000
15:19
I've got three little grandchildren, and every time I look at them
240
919330
3000
15:22
and I think how we've harmed this beautiful planet since I was their age,
241
922330
5000
15:27
I feel this desperation.
242
927330
2000
15:29
And that led to this program we call Roots and Shoots,
243
929330
3000
15:32
which began right here in Tanzania
244
932330
3000
15:35
and has now spread to 97 countries around the world.
245
935330
4000
15:39
It's symbolic. Roots make a firm foundation.
246
939330
3000
15:42
Shoots seem tiny; to reach the sun they can break through a brick wall.
247
942330
4000
15:46
See the brick wall as all these problems we've inflicted on the planet,
248
946330
4000
15:50
environmental and social. It's a message of hope.
249
950330
3000
15:53
Hundreds and thousands of young people around the world
250
953330
3000
15:56
can break through and can make this a better world for all living things.
251
956330
5000
16:01
The most important message of Roots and Shoots:
252
961330
3000
16:04
every single one of us makes a difference, every single day.
253
964330
5000
16:09
We have a choice. Every one of us in this room,
254
969330
4000
16:13
we have a choice as to what kind of difference we want to make.
255
973330
5000
16:18
The very poor have no choice. It's up to us to change things
256
978330
5000
16:23
so that the poor have choice as well.
257
983330
3000
16:26
The Roots and Shoots groups all choose three projects.
258
986330
4000
16:30
It depends on how old they are, and which country,
259
990330
4000
16:34
whether they're in a city or rural, as to what kinds of projects.
260
994330
4000
16:38
But basically, we have programs now from preschool right through university,
261
998330
4000
16:42
with more and more adults starting their own Roots and Shoots groups.
262
1002330
6000
16:48
And every group chooses, between them,
263
1008330
3000
16:51
three different kinds of project to make this a better world,
264
1011330
3000
16:54
recognizing that all these different problems are interconnected
265
1014330
4000
16:58
and impinge on each other.
266
1018330
2000
17:00
So one of their projects will be to help their own human community.
267
1020330
3000
17:03
And then, if they're able, they may raise money to help communities
268
1023330
4000
17:07
in other parts of the world.
269
1027330
2000
17:09
One of their projects will be to help animals -- not just wildlife,
270
1029330
4000
17:13
domestic animals as well.
271
1033330
2000
17:15
And one of their projects will be to help the environment that we all share.
272
1035330
4000
17:19
And woven throughout all of this is a message
273
1039330
4000
17:23
of learning to live in peace and harmony within ourselves,
274
1043330
5000
17:28
in our families, in our communities, between nations, between cultures,
275
1048330
4000
17:32
between religions and between us and the natural world.
276
1052330
4000
17:36
We need the natural world. We cannot go on destroying it at the rate we are.
277
1056330
5000
17:41
We not do have more than this one planet.
278
1061330
4000
17:45
Just picking one or two of the projects right here in Africa
279
1065330
4000
17:49
that the Roots and Shoots groups are doing,
280
1069330
3000
17:52
one or two projects only -- in Tanzania, in Uganda, Kenya,
281
1072330
5000
17:57
South Africa, Congo-Brazzaville, Sierra Leone, Cameroon
282
1077330
5000
18:02
and other groups. And as I say, it's in 97 countries around the world.
283
1082330
4000
18:06
Of course, they're planting trees. They're growing organic vegetables.
284
1086330
4000
18:10
They're working in the refugee camps, with chickens
285
1090330
3000
18:13
and selling the eggs for a little amount of money,
286
1093330
2000
18:15
or just using them to feed their families,
287
1095330
3000
18:18
and feeling a sense of pride and empowerment,
288
1098330
3000
18:21
because they're no longer helpless and depending on others
289
1101330
2000
18:23
with their vegetables and their chickens.
290
1103330
3000
18:26
It's being used in Uganda
291
1106330
2000
18:28
to give some psychological help to ex-child soldiers.
292
1108330
5000
18:33
Doing projects like this is bringing them out of themselves.
293
1113330
3000
18:36
Once again, they're useful members of society.
294
1116330
3000
18:39
We have this program in prisons as well.
295
1119330
2000
18:42
So, there's no time for more Roots and Shoots now.
296
1122330
3000
18:45
But -- oh, they're also working on HIV/AIDS.
297
1125330
4000
18:49
That's a very important component of Roots and Shoots,
298
1129330
3000
18:52
with older kids talking to younger ones.
299
1132330
2000
18:54
And unwanted pregnancies and things like that,
300
1134330
3000
18:57
which young people listen to better from other youth, rather than adults.
301
1137330
5000
19:03
Hope. That's the question I get asked as I'm going around the world:
302
1143330
5000
19:08
"Jane, you've seen so many terrible things,
303
1148330
2000
19:10
you've seen your chimpanzees decrease in number
304
1150330
3000
19:13
from about one million, at the turn of the century,
305
1153330
2000
19:15
to no more than 150,000 now, and the same with so many other animals.
306
1155330
5000
19:20
Forests disappearing, deserts where once there was forest.
307
1160330
4000
19:24
Do you really have hope?" Well, yes.
308
1164330
4000
19:28
You can't come to a conference like TED and not have hope, can you?
309
1168330
4000
19:32
And of course, there's hope. One is this amazing human brain.
310
1172330
4000
19:36
And I mean, think of the technologies.
311
1176330
2000
19:38
And I've just been so thrilled, finally, to come to people talking about compost latrines.
312
1178330
7000
19:45
It's one of my hobbyhorses.
313
1185330
2000
19:47
We just flush all this water down the lavatory, it's terrible.
314
1187330
4000
19:51
And then talking about renewable energy -- desperately important.
315
1191330
5000
19:56
Do we care about the planet for our children?
316
1196330
3000
19:59
How many of us have children or grandchildren, nieces, nephews?
317
1199330
3000
20:02
Do we care about their future?
318
1202330
3000
20:05
And if we care about their future, we, as the elite around the world,
319
1205330
5000
20:10
we can do something about it. We can make choices as to how we live each day.
320
1210330
4000
20:14
What we buy. What we wear.
321
1214330
2000
20:16
And choose to make these choices with the question,
322
1216330
5000
20:21
how will this affect the environment around me?
323
1221330
3000
20:24
How will it affect the life of my child when he or she grows up?
324
1224330
5000
20:29
Or my grandchild, or whatever it is.
325
1229330
2000
20:31
So the human brain, coupled with the human heart,
326
1231330
5000
20:36
and we join hands around the world.
327
1236330
2000
20:38
And that's what TED is helping so well with, and Google who help us,
328
1238330
4000
20:42
and Esri are helping us with mapping in Gombe National Park.
329
1242330
5000
20:47
All of these technologies we can use.
330
1247330
2000
20:49
Now let's link them, and it's beginning to happen, isn't it?
331
1249330
3000
20:52
You've heard about it this afternoon. It's beginning to happen.
332
1252330
4000
20:56
This change, this change. To see change
333
1256330
2000
20:58
that we must have if we care about the future.
334
1258330
3000
21:01
And the next reason for hope -- nature is amazingly resilient.
335
1261330
4000
21:05
You can take an area that's absolutely destroyed,
336
1265330
3000
21:08
with time and perhaps some help it can regenerate.
337
1268330
3000
21:11
And an example is the TACARE program.
338
1271330
3000
21:14
I told you, where a seemingly dead tree stump --
339
1274330
3000
21:17
if you stop hacking them for firewood,
340
1277330
2000
21:19
which you don't need to because you have wood lots,
341
1279330
2000
21:21
then in five years you can have a 30-foot tree.
342
1281330
4000
21:25
And animals, almost on the brink of extinction,
343
1285330
3000
21:28
can be given a second chance. That's my next book.
344
1288330
3000
21:31
It's inspiring. And it brings me to my last category of hope,
345
1291330
4000
21:35
and we've heard about this so much in the last two days:
346
1295330
3000
21:38
this indomitable human spirit. This determination of people,
347
1298330
4000
21:42
the resilience of the human spirit,
348
1302330
2000
21:44
So that people who you would think would be battered by poverty,
349
1304330
4000
21:48
or disease, or whatever, can pull themselves up out of it,
350
1308330
5000
21:53
sometimes with a helping hand, and take their part in society,
351
1313330
6000
21:59
and take their part in changing the world.
352
1319330
3000
22:02
And just to think of one or two people out of Africa who are just really inspiring.
353
1322330
4000
22:06
We could make a very long list,
354
1326330
3000
22:09
but obviously Nelson Mandela, emerging from 17 years
355
1329330
3000
22:12
of hard physical labor, 23 years of imprisonment,
356
1332330
3000
22:15
with this amazing ability to forgive, so that he could lead his nation
357
1335330
4000
22:19
out the evil regime of apartheid without a bloodbath.
358
1339330
4000
22:23
Ken Saro-Wiwa, in Nigeria, who took on the giant oil companies,
359
1343330
5000
22:28
and although people around the world tried their best, was executed.
360
1348330
5000
22:33
People like this are so inspirational.
361
1353330
4000
22:37
People like this are the role models we need for young Africans.
362
1357330
4000
22:41
And we need some environmental role models as well,
363
1361330
4000
22:45
and I've been hearing some of them today.
364
1365330
2000
22:47
So I'm really grateful for this opportunity to share this message
365
1367330
5000
22:52
again, with everyone at TED.
366
1372330
2000
22:54
And I hope that some of us can get together and talk about some of these things,
367
1374330
5000
22:59
especially the Roots and Shoots program.
368
1379330
2000
23:01
And just a last word on that --
369
1381330
2000
23:03
the young woman who's running this entire conference center,
370
1383330
3000
23:06
I met her today.
371
1386330
2000
23:08
She came up so excited, with her certificate. She was [in] Roots and Shoots.
372
1388330
5000
23:13
She was in the leadership in Dar es Salaam.
373
1393330
2000
23:15
She said it's helped her to do what she's doing.
374
1395330
3000
23:18
And it was very, very exciting for me to meet her
375
1398330
3000
23:21
and see just one example of how young people,
376
1401330
3000
23:24
when they are empowered, given the opportunity to take action,
377
1404330
6000
23:30
to make the world a better place,
378
1410330
2000
23:32
truly are our hope for tomorrow.
379
1412330
2000
23:34
Thank you.
380
1414330
2000
23:37
(Applause)
381
1417330
3000
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