In May 2013, I attended a lecture
at the Federal University
of Santa Catarina.
They were offering
social exchange opportunities.
There were three students giving a talk,
one had been to Africa, the other to India
and the third to Eastern Europe.
Their stories were so incredible
that they made me question
that moment I was living.
I'd just graduated
in Business Administration,
and had returned
to my senior year at law school.
I had a full-time job,
so I was professionally satisfied,
but deep down I felt
that something was missing.
I lacked life experiences like those.
I started researching some places
I was interested in,
I was torn between Asia and Africa.
So I talked to some friends about where
they'd been, and their impressions.
Two friends of mine who had been to Kenya
described it with such passion,
such emotion, and even nostalgia
what they’d experienced there,
that I'm sure they would’ve killed me
if I'd considered going somewhere else,
But mostly I wanted to feel for myself
and see with my own eyes
if everything they'd told me was true.
At that time, the hardest thing
was quitting my job.
My boss thought I'd become a hippie
because I was going to leave everything
to do volunteer work in Africa.
But the decision was made,
I bought my ticket
the day after leaving my job,
so there was no turning back.
In July, I flew to Kenya,
and as soon as I arrived,
the journey proved to me
that if I was seeking adventure,
I had found it on that first day.
The airline company lost my bag. Great!
The guy who'd pick me up didn't arrive.
I was left alone
in the airport for four hours.
The house where I'd stay
no longer existed.
I ended up going to another house,
and all of this on my first day.
That's fine, I wanted adventure,
that's what I was there for,
so I had to face it.
Nairobi, to my surprise, or rather
to my ignorance, was a very rich city.
I saw BMWs, five-star hotels,
even an expensive Brazilian steakhouse.
The first time I saw this reality,
this stereotype we have about Africa,
was my first day in the school.
I remember waking up early around 7 a.m.,
leaving home with my two
Chinese friends, Alan and Dousy.
We got into a Matatu,
a small shuttle for 16 passengers,
really tight, with very loud music.
Some even have neon lights,
almost a party.
I strongly recommend it to anyone
who goes to Nairobi, to try a Matatu.
It took one hour to get to the slums.
I remember when we got there
what surprised me most was the filth.
There was no sewage system.
I mean nothing at all.
They make huge piles of garbage
and burn them into embers.
They'd burn releasing this horrible odor
and toxic smoke into the air.
Not to mention all the dust around
because the streets weren't asphalted.
In some slum areas the majority of people
can't afford private toilets,
so they put their waste into plastic bags
and throw them out the window.
In some places the smell
was just unbearable.
So this was the first important lesson.
We'd return home asking ourselves
how we'd be able to work there
every day for eight weeks
if we already felt sick on the first day.
The first lesson was a paradigm shift
in that humans are extremely adaptable.
After three days we were already at home,
we didn't care about the stench,
we walked everywhere
and knew where to avoid the worst places.
This was already
the first learning experience.
I had originally gone to Nairobi
to teach English and math
in a primary school,
and to help build a school
with money we had fundraised in Brazil.
My first challenge was as a teacher.
I shared a 20m² room
with two other teachers.
Three classes in the same room,
with no partitions.
Sometimes I tried
to do dynamics, or tell a joke,
which was impossible since it distracted
students of the other classes.
It created an awkward situation
with the other teachers.
I also had to adapt myself to the culture,
because teachers there
have strong authority over the students.
Sometimes they'd beat the students,
and I had to keep quiet,
absorb this, and accept the culture,
and I couldn't do anything about it.
This all proved to be
very difficult for me.
I started to teach,
and a week later we demolished the school
to build the new one.
We moved to another building
we had bought, 500 meters away.
The new building had better infrastructure
with a room for each class,
but it presented us with a new problem
that we hadn’t dealt with before.
Inside the classroom,
you couldn't see your own hand.
This slum where I worked called Mathare
had 600 thousand inhabitants,
one of the poorest in the whole of Africa.
The shacks were very close to each other,
which didn't allow the sunlight in
through the windows,
to light up the houses or classrooms.
We already had enough daily problems,
like hungry students
whose only meal of the day was at school,
a lunch made of potatoes or beans,
or peanut butter for breakfast.
Not only did they not have
learning material, trained staff,
but on top of this the student
couldn't even see his own book.
This made me so frustrated.
I talked with an Egyptian friend of mine
who had the same problem at his school,
and we decided to find a solution
to bring light to communities
that didn't have access to electricity.
We googled it and found
a project called "Liter of Light",
but instead of trying
to explain this to you,
I'd rather show you
the video of our first test.
You can see how it works
and I hope you like it.
[Liter of Light Brazil - Kenya]
(Music)
[Before and after results]
(Video) Three.
Two.
One. Go!
(Cheering)
Wonderful, wonderful!
(Applause)
Vitor Belota: Well, just like you,
the school director
seems to have liked it too.
He was saying: "Wonderful, wonderful!"
at the end.
Besides him, several other
school directors came to visit our school
to see how the project was done,
and ask us to install it in their schools.
Unfortunately, my Egyptian friend
was leaving that week
and I had to start
the project without him.
I quit teaching through lack of time.
We'd spend the whole morning
preparing the bottles
and the whole afternoon installing them.
It wasn't an easy project,
we cut and dirtied ourselves a lot.
We cut ourselves because
the aluminum roof was very thin.
Another problem was food.
We'd spend the whole morning working,
and going up on the roofs was complicated.
Being so dirty we had to eat
something practical,
which is difficult, for example,
with chocolate;
because I'm up there on the roof,
a white guy, a "mazungo"
as they say in Swahili,
with all the children staring at me.
How can you eat chocolate on the roof
if they've never seen chocolate before?
That wouldn't be right.
So our diet was basically fruit,
and to give you an idea,
at the end of my eight weeks stay
I had lost 12 kilos.
That wasn't my aim, but if you want
to work for some social cause
or lose weight I highly recommend it.
(Laughter)
Even with all those difficulties
the project kept growing.
One day, I had the satisfaction of seeing
my five best friends beside me
on top of the roof,
and below three more friends helping.
At the end of eight weeks
we had helped over 12 schools
and installed over 140 bottles,
including in the interior of Kenya,
which affected the lives
of approximately 3000 students.
You may be asking,
"OK, Vitor, but how did you do that?
DId you pay for the whole project?
All those problems,
cutting yourselves, and the food;
how did the exchange students
get together to do this?"
I think the reason was about a feeling,
which in order to explain
I'll need to tell what happened
in my last week there.
We were doing the biggest project so far
in a school called “Spurgeons", in Kibera,
in the largest slum complex in the world.
In this school alone,
we installed 48 bottles.
This is the finished school.
One day I was up on the roof
and the sky started to turn gray.
We'd never worked in the rain.
so I climbed down the ladder
and gathered everything.
As soon as I got down,
a teacher who I'd seen a few times there
took me to show me her classroom.
She led me to her table opposite the door,
right under a lamp we'd just installed.
And then she said to me,
"My boy, this is the first time,
in the four years I've been working here,
that I can read or correct
an exam in my classroom.
Thank you, thank you, thank you."
She said it so naturally,
but she had no idea
how those words would affect me.
It took about an hour to get home
and I was thinking a lot
about how such a small thing
as installing a plastic bottle on a roof
could make a person feel so grateful.
You begin to question yourself.
It wasn't just temporary help,
because these bottles last 2-3 years,
so it impacts many people's lives.
I got back home where I lived
with 21 other exchange students.
I like to joke that we didn't have dinner,
we always had a feast.
I asked my housemates,
"Guys, how often in your daily lives
do you feel unconditionally useful,
without wanting anything in return?
How often?"
I thought about my daily life. No.
In my week perhaps? No. Month? No.
And I reached the frightening conclusion,
that at the age of 24
I'd never felt that way before
like that day with the teacher.
This is what united the exchange students
and pupils in this project,
it was this feeling of being useful.
Unfortunately, that was my last week
before going back to Brazil.
I remember being at the airport
in Johannesburg, South Africa,
writing my last blog,
updating my family about the news.
My father who knew about my unease,
which all exchange students
and travelers have,
the idea of going back
to your old routine,
going back to the old life.
So my father called
to reassure me, and said,
“Son, don't worry, human beings
are products of their environment,
you'll quickly get used to it again."
It was exactly what I didn’t want to hear,
that I had to go back to my world.
I had just been through this experience,
I saw how adaptable humans are.
My father with his usual pragmatism
was right.
As soon as I arrived in Brazil
I got in touch with Illac Diaz,
president of the organization
that had spread the Liter of Light idea,
asking him if I could start
the project in Brazil.
He said, "Vitor, did you know
that the person who invented the idea
of the solar bottle
was the Brazilian Alfredo Moser
during the 2002 blackouts?"
He invented it in Sorocaba
and Illac had found it amazing.
He had asked Moser to spread the idea
around the globe.
In the Philippines that year
he installed over 500 thousand bottles
and began to spread the invention
around the world.
He said, "Vitor, of course you can,
but first show me pictures
of your project in Africa."
I sent him the material,
and we got the good news
that, so far, our team had made
the most bottles in Africa.
And then he told me,
"Vitor, there's a girl who contacted me
wanting to take Liter of Light to Brazil.
I'll put you two in touch
and maybe you can work together."
I said, "Of course!"
Then a series of incredible
coincidences started
which brought me where I am today.
I was born in Brasília,
this girl was born in Maranhão,
and both of us, by coincidence, had lived
on an island called Florianópolis.
She got in touch with me,
and the next day we had coffee together.
I was very curious about how
she got to know the project.
And it was another amazing coincidence
that she knew of the project when visiting
an exchange student, who lived in India,
the same student
at the beginning of the talk
who made a speech at the university
and encouraged me
to do this trip to Africa.
When she was visiting Pedro,
he told her that he had been
to an electric power conference
and had met Illac Diaz in person,
and that Illac had given him
a Liter of Light flag and said,
"Pedro, take the project
when you go to Brazil."
So they both went back to Brazil
eager to create the project,
although they'd never been up
on a roof before.
But I had many roofs in my curriculum,
so as soon as I arrived
we put together our team
in a week to begin working.
We saw huge potential
for the project in Brazil.
Approximately 2,7 million people in Brazil
don't have access to electricity,
according to the last national census.
There are also those with access
to electricity, but cannot afford it.
So you might be asking,
"OK Vitor, hold on...
you, Pedro and Alanna,
and this team you mentioned.
Do you all somehow intend
to climb up every roof
in the world to spread this idea?"
No, we don't have that intention.
Our goal is to inspire, motivate
and teach local leaders
to spread this idea
inside their own communities.
The same way that I hope to do
with at least one of you here.
After all, I sincerely want to ask you,
how many times, in your daily lives,
do you feel unconditionally useful?
Thank you.
(Applause)