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preroll music
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Linus Neumann: My dear community!
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Now the moment you’ve all been waiting for
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without even knowing
what that moment would be.
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As hackers we think a lot
about virtual gates
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and how to overcome them.
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But away from keyboard
our competence and resources
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in overcoming gates
are maybe limited a bit.
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So for this motto we had to find
a very special keynote speaker.
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Somebody with experience
of overcoming physical gates
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or borders, as some people call them.
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Our keynote speaker has overcome
physical borders twice.
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She was born in Somalia and escaped
to Kenya when she was still a child.
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And just recently she escaped Kenya
to search refuge here, in Germany.
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Carina Haupt: She hates the term “refugee”.
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Instead, she prefers the term: “newcomer”.
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She worked with international
humanitarian organizations
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in the Dadaab Refugee Camp in Kenya.
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So not only does she know
these camps as visitor
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but also as an humanitarian aid worker.
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Linus: We’re curious for her unique
perspectives and insights.
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Please welcome Fatuma Musa Afrah!
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applause
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microphone does not work
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Angel: You have to take that microphone, please.
Fatuma: laughing Oh, what’s going on?
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For an hour, this! Okay.
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I’m not used to this anyway,
points at headset mike
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I’m friend more with this!
points at handset mike
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But when I get tired,
I hope I will keep it somewhere.
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Thank you so much, dear Linus
and the beautiful Carina
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for this beautiful introduction.
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I have no words to say. I remember
when Linus wrote me this long email
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and asking me: “We would love
to have you here” and I was like:
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“What is Chaos Computer Club?”
I just gave him a call
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after I received the mail from him.
And he was like: “You will understand,
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for now you don't know, but:
Can we please meet and discuss this?”
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And I was like: “In the field of IT,
that I don’t know anything about?"
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The only thing I know about it
is the basic use of my Laptop,
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which is a compulsory thing to do
because of the world we're at right now.
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And I would like to ask everybody
in the audience to give
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a very heavy round of 'pplause
for the man who succeeded
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in bringing me here because I can’t
say other things because of being
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in front of you. Thank you
so much to Linus and the Angels.
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Can we give a round of applause?
applause
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I told him actually that time:
"You are a damn good business marketer!"
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That’s actually the term I used.
And he told me:
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“Oh yeah, I gotta try what it takes
to bring you here.”
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And I was like: “Thank you so much for
having me here.”
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Before I proceed to dip into – huh huh –
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the one long hour which
I hardly did it, to be honest.
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With other combination, yes,
as a motivational speaker.
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But just one good hour talking by myself?
laughs
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This is a beautiful experience,
and to be honest
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I haven’t been in front of this huge,
larg..., damn big audience.
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I’m used to maybe … heh, is it strange
to say 2000?
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laughs
Ya, I don’t know.
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I’m just so grateful, feel so honored,
humbled to have me here.
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And the majority of you being hackers.
I don’t know what “hacker” means,
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but somehow I understand what
it means after the long discussion
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and several meetings that I had
with my dear Linus.
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I don’t know, sometimes I pronounce the
German names wrongly, don’t get me wrong,
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like I remember Carina telling me:
“The English speaking people and other
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people have a problem with my name
the way it’s pronounced." And I was like:
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“Okay, how do they pronounce it?”
– "Carrrina" (German rolling “r”)
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And I said: “I know that: Carina”
(perfect pronounciation)
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I have the German-typical “r” with me.
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I’m just very shocked here
in Deutschland (Germany), like,
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one year and eight month soon
graduates into two complete years.
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Und, mein Deutsch ist kaputt, aber…
(my German is broken, but…)
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laughter, applause
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Vielen Dank!
(Thank you!)
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Ich spreche ein bisschen Deutsch.
(I speak a little German.)
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Ich bin in die Schule drei Monaten,
(I am in school three months,)
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aber ich verstehe nicht so gut Deutsch.
(but I don’t understand German very well.)
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Warum?
(Why?)
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laughs
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Deutsch ist schwer.
(German is hard.)
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Aber habe hier andere Menschen oder Leute,
(but I’ve got other people here)
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nicht die sprechen Deutsch?
(not who speaks German?)
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laughing Aber ich viel besser auf Englisch!
(But I much better in English!)
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Did you understand my Deutsch (German)
from that practice? applause
-
Thank you.
applause
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I gotta practice my Deutsch whenever
I go in public, otherwise
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I will stay forgotten in my language because
I consider it my language right now
-
because I belong to this community.
I’m a German!
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Some people will ask me: “You are a German?”
shyly: “Aha?”
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You understand, obviously, when you tell somebody
"I'm a German" in THIS! points at her clothing
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You understand what I mean?
I don’t have to explain (laughs) in detail.
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And I remember one guy told me: “Hey,
how are you?” – I met him in an event
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And I said: “Cool.” And he said: “What’s
your name?” And I said: “My name is Fatuma.”
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And he said: “Where do you come from?”
I told him: “From a human world.”
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And he said: “Huh, human world?”
applause
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Thank you!
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"What did you expect me to give you
as an answer?"
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And he said: “Yeah, well, I don’t
know, this is a typical question,
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as Germans we ask everytime.”
And I asked him: “Don’t behave
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like the Germans behave,
behave as who you are!
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Don’t bring me like I’m a dumb and I’m
a
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Somalian this, and... I don’t believe in
that!
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I believe in an individual choice,
an individual decision
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and an individual mind for love.
That’s what I believe in.
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sternly: Don’t follow what
other says because they say it
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or you found it there. Be creative
and find a way to change things
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And how we do it?
Is within us.
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applause
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Thank you!
Going directly to the concept today,
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Gated Community,
I wanna be honest with you.
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When Linus came to me and asked me:
“We want you to be our keynote speaker,
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do you understand what a Gated
Community means?” And I told him:
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"Obviously, yes.”
And he said: “What is it?”
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And I told him: “Coming together.”
laughs I wanna be honest!
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And today it’s so funny after the long
explanation he gave me
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I gotta be standing here,
in front of this big, beautiful audience,
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listening to me about Gated Community,
a topic connected to Gated Community.
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So, learning is a process.
We don’t know everything
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and I wanna be honest I didn’t know much
about Gated Community until
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he brought up the topic and he said:
“I believe you can do it.”
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Thanks Linus for giving me the belief
to be here
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and make it happen in a possible way.
Thank you so much
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for the deep explanation. And thank you
so much to everybody in the audience
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for taking your beautiful time.
The Angels – I’m part of them,
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you see what I have?
I’m part of them. I didn’t do much,
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I was just feeding myself with my
small belly.
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But I tried, somehow. I want to connect
the concept of Gated Community
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through a simple… and funny story
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while my stay here in Deutschland.
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I’m usually a quick speaker
but today I gotta slow down
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for everybody to understand me
and also to kill the one hour.
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Don’t you think it’s too long to be here
for one good hour?
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I’m already damn thirsty so I gotta have
some water in the process
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before I start my funny–
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I’m not used to gassed water, is this with
gas? Don’t make me vomit on this stage!
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laughter
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louder: Can I have water without gas?
I had already some problem with this.
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Sorry.
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No, I can’t take this, sorry.
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I can’t shake it! Shake it yourself.
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laughter
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So, going to this funny story
about Deutschland;
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what a beautiful children
that I worked with.
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This will be part of my deeper story later.
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I taught a German school as an
English assistant teacher because
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I was not a professional,
annoyedly clears her throat
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I was not a professional English teacher.
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Neither do I have any
experience in teaching.
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But I just wanted to contribute
and give something back
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to the German community
since they where trying their best
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to give us something, you know?
And I went out,
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I remember, to our manager and
asked him how – which I will go back
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to this story later in deep – but the
funny story about it is that the children,
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they saw me in this outfit
– from head to toe –
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and I could not speak German
most of the time.
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I had very nice teachers who were translating
hand-to-hand with me all the time
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because this school had almost three
hundred and sixty-something children
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and all of them were in this Brandenburg
– you know Brandenburg?
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The beautiful Brandenburg? –
...Most of them were blonde.
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And then one of the child told me:
higher pitched: "Frau Fatumo..."
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I said: "Yees, bitte??"
interrupts
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to Angel on stage: Thank you so so much!
I honestly appreciate it!
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Thank you so much!
applause
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You give applause to the man
who feeds the Poor People!
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Thanks! laughs
thanks!
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So this child asked me...
The children were wondering all the time
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– because of how I'm covered –
if I have ears;
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they were doubting if I have hair. You know
that like the normal human functionings.
-
laughs
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And then these children all the time busy
touching me if I'm really a human,
-
everywhere, you know?
Another problem was this: that skin color.
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And one of the children asked me.
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She was so intelligent, she
was so in love with me, that...
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she was so nice and kind, you know?
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Love and kindness doesn't come with
the language, it comes from the heart.
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And this child was all the time
bringing me drawings with love
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from her family and everything...
bringing it to me and say:
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higher pitched: "Ha, da, warte mal,
ich hab' hier DAS, ich hab' hier DAS!
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And I am like "Okay, thank you so much!"
and then I kept piling these stuffs
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from the children, actually I didn't wanna
throw because they were my first family
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when I was just 4-months-old in Deutschland,
when I felt my life is over,
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I have no more family, I'm all alone.
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My life is completely different again,
I got to struggle in this lifestyle.
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So... this lady took me to the wash room.
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And she said: higher pitched: "Yeah, bla bla."
I didn't understand, I asked the teacher
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and the children like: "What... where do
you wanna take her?"
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...to the wash room and then she did
immediately higher-pitched: "feeeee!"
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...to confirm the hair is there
She did peek to confirm I have ears.
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She left me alone. So another child
asked me, because of the skin color
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because it was different from the whole
school: if I become white during night!
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laughter
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And I said: "Come again!"
Honestly!
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If something keeps my day going,
laughs
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Whenever I remember this, whether I'm
alone or whether I'm with somebody,
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I just laugh, because this explains
about the world we live in.
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And the answer I gave the child was:
"I'm black always."
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high pitched: "Was?"
And then they were concerned why here is
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points at inner side of hand
different from here.
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shows outer side of hand
To go to the point this is apparent failure
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and this is the meaning of a
Gated Community. As a parent
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it's upon our responsibility
to educate our childen
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about what kind of world we live in.
Educate them about EVERYTHING!
-
applause
-
Thank you!
Thank you so much.
-
I don't think these children will
be so busy about all of THIS
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if the parent would have given them
the proper education they needed
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by just showing them at least
something about it like we exist
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in a world of diversed communities
in terms of color,
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in terms of eyes appearance in terms
of height, in terms of everything.
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So I hope from there those
children have learnt something
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– I never hold any grudge
against innocent children –
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They are so beautiful, so kind,
they're just curious, you know?
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When they're growing up they're so beautiful.
I'm hoping to have five kids soon,
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and... Hopefully, too, they'll be beautiful.
I want to have my own choir,
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my own community in my own house.
But I,... yeah!
-
We'll light for these 5 kids,
hopefully, one day.
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And, that was the story
about the children.
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And now in connection with "Gated
Community" like I said previously -
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I don't wanna do a lot of repetition:
Let us stand up for change!
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Let us stand up for information!
Let us stand up
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for connecting each other to reality!
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Let us inform each other what's there!
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Find a way to communicate!
Find a way to open these gates!
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And how you open these gates
everybody has the key in the own hand,
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in their own mind, however you
describe it. It's a responsibility
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that it is within each and
every individual within us.
-
I remember educating my Mom -
'cause I grew up,
-
as you can see, the description from me,
a religious family.
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And I'm not doing this
because they forced me to
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but this is me what I wanted to.
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Just to have a point of clear understanding
about what I'm explaining.
-
My Mom, I remember
educating her everytime:
-
"Mommy, ... !". Because I had a lot of friends
when I was in the university
-
who were Christians and I used to tell mama
-
"We got to open our arms for everybody!"
She was so kind and generous, definitely.
-
But they're these kind of levels of
helping each other that we need to.
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And failure to do that: nobody else will.
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We have to respect each other,
regardless of who we are.
-
Personally, I don't care about stupid color,
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this plays no role in my world whatsoever.
-
I don't care about THIS,
this is an individual belief.
-
That's up to YOU. I don't discriminate
people against their social status.
-
I believe in a world of respect.
-
I believe in a world belonging to
people with respect and peace.
-
And that's all I go for. No more, no less!
-
Just respect, passion, based on the heart
That's what I go for.
-
As long as you can respect me and we can
understand each other
-
what else do I look for, more?
Absolutely nothing.
-
I just respect you, who you are.
The good respect and connections we have,
-
and that's all I go for. The rest is bullshit.
-
applause
-
They call it "Cheers!". This is my alcohol,
I've never drunk alcohol...
-
and will I ever!
small fraction applauding
-
surprisingly shouting:
Aaah! Applause for my alcohol!
-
Can we have applause for my
alcohol drinking!? laughs
-
This is funny!
laughs
-
And the other funny story
I would like to share
-
– but this has nothing to do
with Gated Community -
-
is, you know, the developed world.
-
It will have something to do with it
in the Gated Community section,
-
depending on how I explain it.
-
When I was new in Deutschland,
-
where I come from there are no trains.
-
I'm not used to trains, honestly.
I'm used to planes! descending whistle
-
They are easy, yes. But trains: NO!
-
So, laughs one of the drama thing
that happened to me when I came to German'
-
the first time I came by flight then the next
I remember I went to Frankfurt the first time.
-
And then I asked. I was told: "Go to the train!"
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Now the problem was: chuckles
I see this LONG train! chuckles again
-
This has nothing to do with education.
No matter, how you're educated.
-
Some things don't need multi education
but needs to be used to that.
-
So I remember going to the train.
-
The first train left me because
I didn't know how to open!
-
And I was a newcomer – don't call us
refugees, a point of correction.
-
Call me by my name!
If that's not enough,
-
call me any other more beautiful name,
choose! I don't restrict, I believe
-
in a world of freedom. But as long as
it's beautiful and not insulting
-
then I give you the freedom.
-
So, the first train left me, so
I had to stand there in this cold.
-
Luckily enough I got the help from a woman
that I even didn't know.
-
But God knows what was going in my head.
I thought like, because I had a bad information
-
about Deutschland until I discovered
slowly by slowly by myself
-
that: don't listen to what others say,
listen to your heart!
-
I went with this woman,
she saved me.
-
We will come back to this
bigger story later.
-
raising voice again:
So, what did I had to do to open the next
-
train
-
which will be coming in 40 minutes?
I stood there trying to calculate,
-
and I didn't want to look ignorant,
you know? This is the worst thing!
-
You better ask than pretending to
know something and you don't know!
-
This is the worst thing a human
being should ever do.
-
So I stood there, I said: "Next time
when the train comes...",
-
because I was in the end and then I came
in the middle, where there're some people,
-
so that I stand next to the people.
When they open I go in with them.
-
I look where they open, and then I stand
behind them and then I get in there.
-
Otherwise I'll end up in a ship, (?)
left again by the second train.
-
So educating yourself in a culture,
-
in a very developed country
that you don't know
-
is a big risk and it's a big challenge.
Anyway,
-
the second train did not leave me
because I folled the followers.
-
And she pressed, she got in another person
– that was an old man –
-
I was so kind to give him a way because
I got to get in anyway.
-
So I got in! I was safe!
-
The next step: using the toilet.
How the hell do I use the toilet?
-
chuckles I wanna be honest,
I don't wanna hide anything.
-
I got in the toilet!
I saw a woman comin' out, I got it,
-
and this toilet were Automatic Toilet!
-
chuckling, losing words by that: And I
got stuck there .. for toilet .. five minute!
-
I tried to open, it doesn't open,
I tried to open.
-
The next time I didn't miss the...
try touching the Alarm.
-
imitates alarm sound:
WEEE OOOO WEEE OOOO WEEEK
-
I was like: "Why the hell is Polizei coming
!?"
-
chuckles
-
Anyway, they're kind they helped
me while I sweated too much
-
thinking "My life is...", "What the hell
is going on?" "Where did I...?"
-
"Where am I?" I didn't know, honestly.
And this was so hard for me.
-
So, in connections that this what
I wanna say is: Please give information
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to the newcomers when they're coming.
Try to sacrifice a little bit of your time.
-
It's similar to you guys when you come
to Africa, we have these beautiful toilets,
-
that inside whatever you put
from behind inside, you will sit!
-
So if you go to these big holes and sit there
you will be shocked, as well!
-
Like: "This might... I might die inside...
The toilet is looking at me!"
-
This is a reality, that's where we are from.
Can we give the beautiful toilets in Africa
-
a big applause?
applause
-
Thank you!
-
Going to the Gated Community issues,
please, if I'm too fast, you don't understand
-
the little English that I've learnt kindly
raise your hand, I give you the freedom
-
to ask me "Please slow down!", or "Please
use very simple terminologies!"
-
It's a gift, I give it to you. So, if I'm
too fast also that will be a nice idea from
-
you
-
because we have to kill the 1 hour together.
Just tell me. It's not a necessary thing.
-
So anyway, the developed world
-
– I don't wanna point any specific country
–
-
not only the developed world, even the
developing world, we have all these different
-
kinds of gated communities.
Whether it's in a profession, whether it's
-
just
-
a small settlement of communities.
In all directions, these exist.
-
It's a fact which is there. And I always
hoped for a perfect world
-
which is never gonna be so soon or it's
gonna be there at all. I don't think so.
-
You'll always dream of this perfect world
which there is no killing, no war,
-
no disrespect, no racism or whatever.
But this will be a long jouney!
-
And the journey belongs to all of us.
How we view it, how we wanna make a change,
-
it's a decision that belongs collectively
to all of us. I don't know how to do IT,
-
but before the... I will be here for 4 good
days, I hope I'll have some basic
-
– I have basic, of course, computer usage,
I have some – but the bigger one, well,
-
everybody: what is wrong with that IT
experts? They're always like this...
-
You're sitting next to them like I was
yesterday, yeah, sitting next to people...
-
People are busy: pop-pop-pop-pop-pop-pop!
And I was like: "These are machines or
-
human beings?"
-
Sorry, I don't meant to disrespect
or insult, sorry.
-
But you got to raise your head a bit up
and see the next person sitting.
-
Some people are looking at me very strangely,
wondering what kind of a hacker is this woman?
-
Honestly, I had a lot of looks like this until
I was asking people next to me what's going
-
on,
-
is there something wrong with me,
check me out!
-
And it was like "You are perfectly fine,
maybe... these are hackers, they have
-
never seen a hacker like you".
And I said: "The world is changing,
-
I got to be one, one day".
applause
-
Vielen Dank, mit Deinen 'pplaus
(Thank you, with your applause)
-
Is that how it's called? Is that correct,
the German way?
-
Vielen Dank, mit Deinen...
(Thank you, with your...)
-
You said this! *thumbs down"
This means wrong! ... He?
-
fuer? für? ...
Oh, that's a typical German...
-
Say "für euren" !!
("for your")
-
That's a complicated German term!
-
Anyway, thank you so much!
Now, I want to go ... next ... is ... coming
-
up...
-
is my personal story in connection with
the gated community.
-
I'm sure you received this surprise!
Well connected, and a newcomer in front of
-
you
-
and explaining how gated community affects
us, and now I hope I will try to figure out
-
everything in a beautiful flowered manner
to fix the context and my story together.
-
Can I go next story I don't know IT?
-
Hey, you got to help me, I'm honest,
I don't know...nothing.
-
What is this?
audience amused
-
Hey, hey-hey-hey-hey.
Linus, come over please!
-
Fix this damage! Now you are ruining
my speech, what is this?
-
audience amused
-
This is bullshit, my Italian friend said,
this
-
is bullshit. Now we... this is, that's the...
-
another problem, they just come here and this
is
-
what they do, this is bullshit...
-
THIS is not bullshit, this is beautiful!!
audience amused
-
Thank you! That's my beautiful Italian friend,
I don't mean to disrespect the language
-
but it looks so interested...
-
No no, don't go too high! Leave it to me!
I can control!
-
Just leave me like "Next, next, next!"
and then I can take care of it,
-
thank you so much! You don't have to do much
work. Free! You're free!
-
Thanks!
-
I 'came two times a newcomer in my life.
-
The first time I was a newcomer
in my own continent.
-
Next... the neighbor, next to
my country, that's Kenya.
-
I grew up in Kenya. I don't know how it feels
-
when my mom went through all this pain.
-
When she took the five of us – one was
inside.
-
When she took us from the war country,
bringing us to Kayner???
-
And the main reason was my father was
killed, I wasn't lucky to see my father.
-
And 'til that nobody knows who killed him
and where his dead body is.
-
Til now we don't know. But I just wanna say:
"I love you, daddy". I don't know much about
-
you,
-
but I love you, whereever you are. And rest
in peace!
-
When my mom came to Kenya, she always
told me how hard it was,
-
but I could not understand! Because I didn't
go
-
through the pain she went through.
-
It's a different story when you have a
feeling about a problem
-
and you're telling me the story. I don't
have... we can have much connections here.
-
Of course the connection will be there,
but how you have felt and how you're feeling
-
is never the way I'm gonna feel! It's just
like
-
"Oh, sorry, you went through this, poor."
-
"I'm sorry, it's so painful, it's so hard."
It's just difficult. And this is how it is.
-
So we grew up in Kenya, my mom
did everything within her power
-
to give us the best she could
including education.
-
And the culture I come from,
cultural education is not a priority.
-
But my mom was a complete
woman that was standing
-
for the true meaning of change.
I had the same benefit
-
and equal respect to my brothers
and thanks to my lovely uncle
-
who also paid my highschool fees and
everything because mom could not raise
-
all of us with all of this money because
where I come from in Kenya
-
is not similar here where education is for
free. You got to pay there highschool.
-
The primary: yes, but highschool you got to
pay. And the schools are not good quality.
-
If you need a good quality school, you got
to
-
pay for it. You have to make an earning
-
to make this. To call your children very
intelligent and then they have this good life.
-
But luckily enough I'm here in
front of you to at least make
-
some languages that I can communicate
with other people. I learned English
-
and hopefully, next time, I will speak in
Deutsch. No more English Drama,
-
and I hope I will be confident in my
Deutsch speech because I am not sure...
-
Deutsch is... I don't know. My Deutsch
somewhat disappeared.
-
But I belive one day – I never lose
my hope – I will come here
-
hopefully, one day. Not here necessarily
but somewhere to speak in Deutsch.
-
And all my speech will be fluent:
"Pa, pa pa pa pa!"
-
No audio 31:19 - 31:56
-
...and what happened? Polizei flies you
into the jail
-
or you pay or give me your documents.
-
And it's not a good easy life when you
end in a different country.
-
You got to accept all the challenges that
you go through. Stand for it,
-
alit, move forward, find a way to
help yourself and others.
-
And then one day you got to be flying
somewhere and be happy at least!
-
Try to be happy.
-
So my mom went through all of
these problems
-
and I went to school there, everything,
and I worked in a place called Dadaab.
-
Can you identify me from those photos?
You can see somewhere...
-
I worked like I said before in introduction,
with
-
different humanitarian international organizations,
-
one of it being "Save the children International",
others being "Terre des hommes".
-
I also worked in Somalia partial time
because I wanted to see what it feels like
-
to go back home and see my own country.
-
But I don't believe in an own country things,
I believe in a world of no border,
-
get that one right.
applause
-
applause
Thank you so much!
-
When I was working in Dadaab, did I ever
knew I will be another newcomer
-
for the second time. I used to feel the
pain that people are going through.
-
All the damages I could see that and
when I was new working there
-
I hardly had lunch because you have
these big UN security staffs
-
and lines and everything is there.
But I could never comfort myself
-
and eat properly because
I could always see mothers
-
who lost their children on the way.
She had 6 children for example,
-
2 or 3 died on the way. And she
has to move on with her life.
-
And that life was so hard, and I chose
-
to work in the field of child protection.
-
The way I say it some people don't understand
louder, pronounced: CHILD PROTECTION.
-
Here, you don't know much about it
because the government takes care of it.
-
But this is one of the biggest refugee
camps in the world, Dadaab refugee camp.
-
And I'm happy, I remember this
memory and I kept it with me
-
because I was not so much into making
the children play with them or this, (?)
-
but I was more of a case manager.
But this was the universal Children's Day.
-
And I was like I just wanted to make them
happy and it happened I have this memory with
-
me still.
-
Can we give applause for these beautiful kids?
applause
-
applause
-
computer "dong" sound
-
I touched in between, sorry sorry, you
told me this. You told me, don't touch.
-
You know, I told them, the first time they
gave
-
me this: "You got to show me how to use this,
-
are you stupid or something?"
And he said: "No, just use it"
-
and then the first time I did it he said:
"You see? You said 'I know it',
-
why did you do the mistake?" And this is
how it goes back to the memory of exams
-
you say this exam was so easy and then you
fail. And the [credit] points you expected
-
is not there because we just take things so
easy.
-
So I will not take next time things for easy,
-
I got to be careful.
And this was still part of Dadaab...
-
audience amused
-
Damn! What's up? Your computer is virus!
-
I have a beautiful laptop there. Get mine!
-
Helper: What for?
-
Fatuma: Okay. Gut! Thank you.
-
And these beautiful ladies there... we were
doing a lot of different
-
work with children. I was more in the case
management and
-
dealing with child abuse, neglect, exploitation
and violence.
-
There are a lot of children who are sexually
abused
-
and you got to stand there for them, take
them through the process
-
because the parents are psychologically
traumatized. They have no energy at
-
all whatsoever. To do anything. And this is
what's called girl child empowerment.
-
I tried for my own level with my colleagues
and everybody. To help the girls
-
speak out and say something. Because
if their voice is not heard,
-
nobody will make them raise their full voice.
(?) Because voice is power.
-
Voice is the key change to everything.
-
And these girls were always shy I remember
them putting... hides face you see her hand
-
was already there.
-
They do this... my cloth is far... (?) They're
so shy and they can't say much.
-
And it's not their fault. It's what's called
culture setup.
-
This is how we were brought up. As a woman.
-
This how we behave. But I disagree.
-
Everybody should be equal. Everybody should
have equal freedom.
-
Of speech, of saying whatever they feel like,
letting it out.
-
Respect it. Be part of their change process.
-
Because these are expected to be the leaders
of tomorrow, today.
-
But if we don't empower them if we don't support
them
-
they're not going to be anything.
-
[In my case] It's hardly to see. From-the-culture-I-come-from-woman
standing in front of
-
the majority-dominance-men here. Hackers,
hehe and women.
-
And speak to them. It's something rare because
-
this is not how we are brought up. You got
to be shy, sitting somewhere.
-
Not speaking here like notorious, this is
not a good woman.
-
Standing in front of men and talking you're
not a good woman. This is what it is.
-
But I say that good women should be standing
in front of people and speaking up.
-
applause
-
Thank you so much. There're a lot of problems.
That I saw.
-
I want to give a comparison between what I
saw in Dadaab and here.
-
But sometimes it's hard to give the comparison
because I was working there
-
earning my own money and doing my own stuffs.
But now here I am
-
and opposite. Somebody has to work for me
and help me.
-
But generally some of the key problems that
were there in Dadaab refugee camp: education.
-
Education was a key problem.
-
Girl child education was a key problem
as well. There were highschools,
-
there were over 40 international
humanitarian organizations
-
and some of them were responsible
for education. But you know they
-
can't do everything, they don't have
support from the government.
-
And there was a lot of... poor
educational infrastructure.
-
There was no clear support in erms of
education. There were no class rooms.
-
There were not enough teachers. The
resources was completely not enough.
-
And these people there was
restrictions of freedom.
-
People could not cross the normal way to
go to the cities or other part of Kenya.
-
They were restricted in that Dadaab
zone. If you wanna go out of Dadaab
-
you gotta ask for permission.
Go to the UNHCR,
-
ask for permission to go out and
state why you wanna go there,
-
outside of this camp. So it was not easy.
-
It's similar to here some months
ago, in our country here.
-
We were not allowed to travel out of – like
I come from the beautiful Brandenburg.
-
You're not allowed to travel
outside Brandenburg.
-
But then so much to the leaders now
they're making a change.
-
And they're trying something at least.
It's not perfect. But they're trying.
-
Can we give a round of applause to
our leaders who're at least trying,
-
I like to appeciate those who are even
trying. Can we give applause, please?
-
applause
-
helper approaching speaker's desk
-
Sorry, Linus! I'm so sorry.
-
I think the mistake comes from here!
Just to stand there...
-
No, this is not the mistake. Okay, cool.
-
I know, in every country there
are a lot of newcomers
-
and similar problems are there. But one
good things I discovered from Dadaab
-
is that the people are still within their
culture. At least they are within a language
-
they can understand. Basically
things they're used to.
-
But here you come – it's completely
the opposite. So what leads
-
to these big refugee camps? It's poor
management of responsibility.
-
If the developed world would
support the developing world
-
and the problems they went through I don't
think we would have been in the direction
-
we are right now.
I just wanna go back a little bit to History.
-
When colonisation was happening
in this developing world
-
no person was asked why they
came to those countries.
-
Nobody asked them [about their] permission
to
-
get in. They didn't ask anybody permissions
-
to get in. Now my big question is: Now that
we need the help of the developed world
-
why are we called "Illegals" – number one.
Why are we called
-
you need to come in with a permission.
Why?? The permission on us
-
and YOU never asked for permissions before!
Ever! Why?
-
applause
-
Thank you.
-
These are the good examples
of gated community.
-
Sorry.
-
If leaders would forget about the
past because what your parents or
-
your leaders did in the past you don't
have to do and repeat the same mistake.
-
You need to correct that mistake.
And make a difference.
-
applause
-
We are not perfect in any way. And I
always call politics is a dirty game.
-
But I want to send a message to all the
politicians and leaders in the world.
-
Please... stand... for human rights
-
and respect it!
Don't put your political interest first,
-
put the human life first! Then the
rest becomes number two!
-
applause
-
Thank you.
-
I love this woman called Claudia Roth.
I had a panel discussions
-
once with her in re:publica.
And I loved her approach.
-
She's at least a very mentoring woman.
She's a role model to me.
-
And I remember her telling me one time,
I said thanks to the German government,
-
"at least they're trying to do something".
And she told me: "No no no no no no no no!"
-
And I was like: "What?" – "Don't say
'Thank you'! What for? Haa?"
-
And I was like: "Yeah, at least they did
something! At least they give us a shelter,
-
somewhere to sleep, something to eat!" For
me, I would grate that. When if everything's
-
not perfect, I will say to that little thing
"thank you". And something very imoportant.
-
But thanks to Claudia Roth and her team,
they're really trying to do a beautiful job.
-
And the rest of the leaders whatever they
are,
-
not only them, everyone who's doing nice job.
-
So that was the life in Dadaab.
It's very tough and hard.
-
I came to German'. And I was in
Eisenhuttenstadt first time.
-
And life is so hard and horrible.
-
I can tell you here all of this in
words. But believe me,
-
you can never understand unless
you're in that situation yourself.
-
You can not understand.
The rest is just a story.
-
You will just say: "OK, oh sorry it's
a painful pro... oh sorry, yeah,
-
I understand." – No, you're lying, you're
not understanding. Be in that condition
-
and then you got to tell me what it is.
-
There's a lot of health problems.
The people are overcrowded,
-
There're a lot of outbreak of
diseases at different times.
-
And people are congested in
containers and in other
-
not-deserving human shelter areas.
I understand them on one side
-
but on one side I refuse
to understand them.
-
I mean this is a very well developed
countries. Not only I don't point fingers
-
only,
-
because I wanna avoid pointing fingers on
specific countries because this problem
-
is a global concerned problem. Gated
communities everywhere in the world
-
and it's not only here in
German', it's everywhere!
-
So this message I'm sending
is going to everywhere.
-
And I remember, in Eisenhüttenstadt,
-
you're put in 5..10 people... 20 people
– not 20, I don't wanna lie –
-
but at least 10 people could be in one room.
-
And you can't say anything about ist.
You're from different country. We don't
-
understand each other culture-wise, language-
wise, everything. But you still are forced
-
to live together. There is no freedom
of education like I wanted,
-
to further my education. There is nothing
like
-
that. The bureaucratic is another story.
-
Leave it aside. But so complicated that
you can't be who you wanna be!
-
And my question was all the time: When this
difficult condition where you're not allowed
-
to work, you're not allowed to go to school,
you're not allowed to function like a
-
normal human being! You're not even
allowed to go out and visit Berlin,
-
the first time you are...
I asked myself is this a perfect Welcome
-
in German'? Keep in isolated, damage,
and not giving us
-
the freedom to move out and see
people. Everybody is like this:
-
tired, sad: "You go to the office, you ask..."
Not everybody! Some people.
-
I remember the first time I visited
there, I went to a woman and I said:
-
"Is this true? Is this where I am? Is this
really true? Is this happening to me?"
-
I was like: "In a moment I don't
know where the hell I was!"
-
I thought my life was over!
– No, it wasn't over,
-
it was the beginning.
-
And I asked her – Thank you –
and I asked her
-
"What's going on? Can I go out?" And she
said: "Was??" – "Do you speak English?"
-
–
-
"Was?? Deutsch, bitte!" And I was
like: "I can't speak Deutsch!" -
-
"Was?? Raus, bitte, nächst'..."
– "Can I please have a permission
-
to go out at least see the city or
something, because I'm not having
-
a contact with my family, no relation
whatsoever, I'm really dying
-
of trauma here!" – "Was?? Raus, bitte!
Nächst', nächst' bitte! Nächst'!"
-
You have no choice! You have
no voice! You got to leave!
-
That was some of the difficult
moments I remember.
-
But there were also nice people in the same
Eisenhüttenstadt. Working as a social worker.
-
Very kind generous and very supporting.
-
But all of a sudden life wasn't easy
basically. I remember there was
-
this small internet area I don't think
it's their fault that's the only space
-
they were given. Refugee inspection (?)
where you can just go and google something.
-
And I would like to ask everybody in the
audience to give them a big 'pplause
-
because they're doing
a beautiful job there.
-
applause
-
Thanks. So the life in Eisenhüttenstadt
was completely a very...
-
problem with slides projection
-
helper approaching again
-
Yes, so out of my transfer
in Brandenburg,
-
still in Brandenburg I went to...
Life wasn't easy and blabla...
-
everybody knows how hard it is and
not everybody can understand this.
-
I went transfered after 2 months or 3 months
of... When you are new in German'
-
you're transfered to another refugee camp.
Then I was in Bestensee.
-
And I was asking myself: Back
home I was somebody,
-
I had my own dog, I had my own little
money, I had my own life beautiful.
-
Here you come you're nothing! I wanted
to find a way I could help myself
-
get out of this terrible situation. Put myself
at least somehow at distance (?) out of it,
-
then help others get out of it.
And then I asked the manager
-
how I can help the community and I was
an English assistant teacher in this area.
-
The beautiful teachers were very supportive,
many of them could not speak English.
-
But the beautiful heart was there. So
kind, so generous. Very supporting
-
and loving! I could not ask more.
They were so kind and nice.
-
Can we give them a big round of applause,
to my beautiful teachers!?
-
applause
If you don't mind!
-
And I encountered a lot of problems while
I was working in the school because
-
if you work there they said the socials said
(?)
-
the school wanted to pay me
-
but the socials said "No, we can't."
And the socials said,
-
I can only work 1 hour 1 Euro.
-
A whole hour you are paid 1 Euro,
Schilling...
-
Do you understand the meaning of 1 Euro!?
Can somebody give me 1 Euro?
-
Each one of you give me 1 Euro.
And then we see how much it is.
-
Smiling amused
-
So this was... But they made it a difference
and they said: "We wanna have you
-
and do everything possible within our power
to
-
support you. Because you are supporting us."
-
Because, I wanted to do something useful
with my life because in the refugee camps
-
all that we do is either drink, fight...
It's not our choice.
-
That's where we are put in. We're so much
isolated and outside of the community.
-
The community is completely gated.
And then we are put in a very complete
-
isolation situation. We need to stand up
together and make a difference
-
by breaking these gated community. Each and
every individual of us, we have to.
-
And find a way to.
applause
-
Thank you, Vielen Dank!
-
And then, well I was in Bestensee.
This place is called Bestensee,
-
some of you might come from here
I don't know. I was also part of a...
-
a sport club because I love sports.
And I remember them giving me...
-
Nee... Nooo!
-
I'm sometimes Clown so that's why
sometimes I behave like this. chuckles
-
This was a beautiful picture from
their T-Shirt and the sports club,
-
they bought me. And... "you are nobody you
have nobody but somebody's there for you
-
loving you supporting you and doing
everything for you." I was so lucky.
-
And I wanted to do something for
the community. And I was like:
-
"What can I do to help people?" And the
children I used to love wherever they're
-
in the world. And these are some of the things...
10 minutes left sign – Thank you –
-
...these are some of the things I was
trying to do just to escape from stress.
-
I didn't wanna drink, I didn't wanna do bad
things. I just wanted progress with my life.
-
And these are some of the things I tried to
do.
-
chuckles on next slide
-
So please let us get used to
the name newcomers,
-
not refugees. And these were my
beautiful communities I was doing twice
-
in the whole of German'. And if you want
to invite me in some of the cities
-
I have never seen, do that
and give me one bread and
-
I was... I'm basically an international speaker
and I have been going to different places
-
talking to the people and trying to give
them some hope together with the support
-
as there are a lot of nice people in Deutschland,
for example. I can talk about German',
-
not elsewhere. There are a lot of nice people
who wanna do something but they don't know
-
how.
-
So I don't like to generalize. And for those
of
-
us who are defined as racists I don't belive
-
in the word racism. I think it's about lack
of
-
information. When people understand
-
who we are where we come from and
what problems we went through
-
I think they will be kind, nice and generous.
To understand us and support us.
-
So if we continued that those people
who discriminate us and that then
-
we discriminate them I don't think we
are going anywhere. The best way...
-
If a killer kills and then you kill this is
not the best way to move forward.
-
It's about trying to figure out how best
can we try to make both sides together
-
and I'm doing a project called, a program
called "United Action". And the idea behind
-
is
-
visiting refugee camps, creating events,
bringing the community
-
and the newcomers together because
I don't wanna only say: "Support us,
-
newcomers, newcomers." There are
people in the community who are vulnerable,
-
who are poor and they need help. And
that's the reason why they don't want us.
-
They feel jealous and it's their right. I
mean
-
they're human beings, they're not perfect.
-
So we got to find a way to fit both
sides together, to come together.
-
And support each other. And that's my
idea behind "United Action". I believe
-
when we all of us come together,
do things together, eat together,
-
the rest of the bridge will just slowly
fall down, like the "Berliner" Wall.
-
applause
-
Thank you!
applause
-
This one of the photos when I was in
Neuhardenberg. And these are
-
part of the friends that were helping
me going there taking food and drinks
-
and stuffs and just having a good time
with the people. And trying to figure out
-
what we could do together. I have a
Facebook page called... I don't want this
-
keynote speech to be my
own advertising thing,
-
but I just wanna give you more information
about myself so that you know
-
who you're talking to and if you
need more questions or you have
-
anything to tell me you better
meet me outside later with 1 Euro.
-
audience chuckling
-
Joking, don't give me any Cent!
-
And these are still some of the events
and I love being happy. I mean
-
happiness is my family. And hope
is my family. Without losing hope
-
and happiness we can be somewhere.
-
And this was still Neuhardenberg with
the team and we were doing a wonderful
-
amazing thing. This was a group I've been
supporting and they won some awards.
-
And this is my beautiful visit to
the beautiful German parliament
-
with my Coca Cola.
-
Please! Stand for Change! Please
-
call us our names or any other beautiful
name or our personal names!
-
And we got to find a way to figure
out how best we can call each other.
-
We don't have to call ourselves Refugees
anymore. Because this word
-
has been used in the wrong way. We
are meant to be very vulnerable.
-
We are meant to be nothing! We are
somebody just like anyone of you!
-
We only lost our home and family.
We are human beings
-
just like anyone of you! We can do
something. Don't look at the word!
-
Look at us as a human being. As a person,
as somebody in a capable position
-
to do something. Don't you believe we
are human beings? Then get rid of this name!
-
applause
-
Thank you!
Situations should never define us.
-
What should define us is
the name "human being".
-
And the respect we label to each other.
-
And I would like to send a message to the
world: These Gated Community issues
-
is a global issue.
Please let us try to promote
-
Peace, Love, Unity. Break
the isolation. Come together!
-
Support each other! Love each other!
Love each other! Love each other
-
and love each other again!
And be there whatever possible.
-
I can't say more words than
this, I just wanna say:
-
Thank you so much to everyone of
you. And I want you to go home...
-
Not you, you are the wrong audience,
I think. You know what's you doing already.
-
Thank you so much to that! But for those of
us who don't know what Gated Community
-
means and how we can break the
silence: take the responsibility,
-
go out, do a lot of awareness campaign
and find a way to kill and delete
-
this gate. Let us open the gate
with open arms for everybody
-
regardless of who you are. Let us stand
with one name as human beings.
-
Don't believe in the name of a nationality.
Don't believe in the name of stupid colors,
-
always respect the human dignity.
"Don't lose hope in the name of humanity!"
-
This was a word Linus [Neumann] told me
several times and I loved it and that's why
-
I wanna say it right now with you all.
And...
-
the first question says: "If you
were me what would you do?"
-
Imagine, you are this.
pointing at her face and clothing
-
Pointing at someone in audience front row
What would you do?
-
I don't know, it's a decision you're making,
answer belongs to you.
-
"What would you wish from the Hacker community?"
-
What I wish from the Hacker community
is that you're doing a great job.
-
Keep the good work. Give us more internet,
in the Heims, we don't have this.
-
Do this for us everywhere
in Germany, everywhere!
-
applause
-
Please visit all the refugee camps
next to you, whereever you live!
-
Find a way you can make a difference
by helping these camps and
-
some of the excuses that politicians
use why they don't give internet
-
to us is: They said we
might watch Porno.
-
shouting:
Whoo hooo!
-
What a stupid excuse!! Shame!!
Shame Shame Shame Shame Shame!!
-
Thank you so much, everybody! I will be here
for 4 days, I will be having 2 workshops
-
and if you're interested more,
kindly let us make together and
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love you so much!! And I hope
everybody enjoyed the speech
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and no more words to say! Just say again
Thank you and Thank you to the Angels
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Thanks to all the people who are trying
to do this beautiful congress as successful.
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Stay Peace and I wanna be the first person
– I don't know if I'm the first person –
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I wanna say "Happy New Year!". Maybe we don't
know each other and we hopefully will meet
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again.
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Happy New Year to all of you.
Big love! Be Peace and Unity!
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I salute to you all!
Thank you so much, everybody!
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huge applause
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postroll music
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