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If you adults won't save the world, we will

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    Dear Abuelita,
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    I know I haven't been home for a while.
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    You are in our lovely home in Mexico,
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    and I'm here in the US,
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    fighting for our future.
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    You're probably watering the roses,
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    taking care of the peaches
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    and making sure your turtles are well-fed.
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    That's one of the things
    I miss the most about home --
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    spending time with the flowers
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    while you tell me stories
    about your childhood.
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    As you know, we have been living
    in New York City since 2015.
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    But life has completely changed
    over the past year.
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    At first, New York City was about museums
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    and parks
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    and school and friends.
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    Now it serves as a web
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    that connects me with all the other people
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    who are organizing to save the planet.
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    You know how it started for me?
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    It was Dad and his wisdom.
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    Everything you taught him,
    he went and taught the world.
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    All of his words about
    the responsibility that we have as humans
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    to live in balance with nature
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    were passed down to me.
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    I noticed the universal
    disconnect to our planet
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    and remembered what you once told me:
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    "Leave everything better
    than you found it."
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    I know you were talking about the dishes,
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    but of course, that applies
    to the planet as well.
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    I didn't know what to do at first.
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    The world is so big,
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    and it has so many bad habits.
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    I didn't know how a 15-year-old
    was supposed to change anything,
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    but I had to try.
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    To put this philosophy into practice,
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    I joined the environmental club
    at my high school.
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    However, I noticed that my classmates
    were talking about recycling
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    and watching movies about the ocean.
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    It was a view of environmentalism
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    that was so catered towards
    an ineffective way of climate activism,
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    one that blames the consumer
    for the climate crisis
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    and preaches that
    temperatures are going up
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    because we forgot to bring
    a reusable bag to the store.
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    You taught me that taking care
    of Mother Earth
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    is about every decision
    that we make as a collective.
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    I am happy to tell you, Abuelita,
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    that I changed everybody's
    mind in that club.
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    Instead of talking about recycling,
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    we started to write letters
    to our politicians
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    to ban soft plastic altogether.
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    And then, the unexpected happened:
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    we started striking from school.
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    I know you've probably
    seen it on the news,
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    and maybe it's not that special anymore.
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    But at the time,
    it was a huge deal, Abuelita.
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    Imagine kids not going to school,
    because we want people to save the world.
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    (Video) Crowd: Another world
    is possible! We are unstoppable!
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    Xiye Bastida: For the first
    global climate strike,
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    which was called on by Greta Thunberg,
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    I got 600 of my classmates
    to walk out with me.
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    Greta Thunberg is a teenager
    who first started striking for climate.
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    Her boldness inspired me,
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    and I was shocked by the realization
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    that youth could turn
    public opinion on social issues.
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    The movement exploded.
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    (Video) Crowd: Shut it down!
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    XB: And I became
    one of the main organizers
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    for New York, the US and the world.
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    (Video) XB: What do we want?
    Crowd: Climate justice!
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    XB: When do we want it?
    Crowd: Now!
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    XB: I started speaking up about
    climate justice and Indigenous rights
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    and intergenerational cooperation.
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    That was only the beginning, though.
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    The busiest week of my life
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    will forever be the week
    of September 20, 2019.
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    Me and my friends got 300,000 people
    to strike for climate in New York.
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    I wish you could have been there.
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    We walked through Wall Street,
    demanding climate justice.
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    (Video) Crowd: No more coal, no more oil,
    keep the carbon in the soil!
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    XB: That same month, I went
    to the United Nations Climate Summit.
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    I spoke on a panel with Al Gore.
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    I met Jay Inslee and Naomi Klein
    and Bill McKibben
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    and the president of the United Nations.
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    It was the most amazing week of my life,
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    because everyone I knew came together --
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    all my teachers, all my classmates ...
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    And even some of my favorite stores
    closed down to strike for climate.
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    If you had asked me why I did all of that,
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    my only answer would be,
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    "How could I not?"
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    It's been one year
    since it all started for me,
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    and it gets a little tiring at times.
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    But if there is one thing
    that you taught me, it's resilience.
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    I remember that you went to Mexico City
    every day for 30 years
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    to get money for the family.
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    And I know that Abuelito
    has been going out for 20 years
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    to protect sacred land from big companies
    that want to take it.
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    A year is nothing
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    compared to the struggles
    that our family has been through.
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    And if our struggles
    make the world a better place,
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    they will make us better people.
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    There have been some hardships, Abuelita.
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    Out there in the world,
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    people expect us kids to know everything,
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    or at least they want us to.
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    They ask questions and I give answers,
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    as if I really knew how the world works.
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    They want hope, and we give it.
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    I have organized, written, spoken
    and read about climate and policy
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    almost every day for the past year.
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    And I'm just a little worried
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    that I won't be able
    to do enough, Abuelita.
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    For me, being 18 years old
    and trying to save the world
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    means being a climate activist.
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    Before, maybe it meant
    studying to be a doctor
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    or a politician or a researcher.
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    But I can't wait to grow up
    and become one of those things.
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    The planet is suffering,
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    and we don't have the luxury
    of time anymore.
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    Saving the world as a teenager
    means being good with words,
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    understanding the science
    behind the climate crisis,
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    bringing a unique perspective
    into the issue to stand out
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    and forgetting about
    almost everything else.
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    But sometimes, I want to care
    about other things again.
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    I want to be able to sing
    and dance and do gymnastics.
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    I truly feel that if all of us
    took care of the Earth
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    as a practice,
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    as a culture,
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    none of us would have to be
    full-time climate activists.
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    When businesses turn sustainable,
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    when the power grid
    runs on renewable energy,
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    when the school curriculum teaches us
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    that taking care of the Earth
    is part of our humanity,
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    maybe I can do gymnastics once again.
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    Don't you think so, Abuelita?
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    We can do this.
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    All I'm trying to do with my work
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    is give that optimistic mindset
    to other people.
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    But it's been a little hard.
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    There is greed,
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    there's pride,
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    there's money,
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    and there's materialism.
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    People make it so easy
    for me to talk to them,
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    but they make it so hard
    for me to teach them.
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    I want them to have the confidence
    to always do their best.
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    I want them to have
    the heart and the courage
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    to love the world,
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    just like you taught me.
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    I wrote this letter to thank you.
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    Thank you for inviting me
    to love the world
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    since the moment I was born.
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    Thank you for laughing at everything.
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    Thank you for teaching me
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    that hope and optimism
    are the most powerful tools we have
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    to tackle any problem.
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    I do this work because you showed me
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    that resilience, love and knowledge
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    are enough to make a difference.
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    I want to go back to Mexico and visit you.
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    I want to show you the pictures
    of the things that I have done.
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    I want to show you the climate legislation
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    that we've been able to pass.
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    I want to smell the flowers
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    and fight for climate justice
    alongside you.
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    Te quiero mucho.
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    I love you.
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    Xiye.
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    [Te quiero mucho. Xiye.]
Title:
If you adults won't save the world, we will
Speaker:
Xiye Bastida
Description:

In a deeply moving letter to her grandmother, Xiye Bastida reflects on what led her to become a leading voice for global climate activism -- from mobilizing school climate strikes to speaking at the United Nations Climate Summit alongside Greta Thunberg -- and traces her resolve, resilience and profound love of the earth to the values passed down to her. "Thank you for inviting me to love the world since the moment I was born," she says.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
08:37

English subtitles

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