Two Davids & Goliath | David Matas & David Kilgour | TEDxMünchen
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0:10 - 0:12China, at the beginning of this century
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0:14 - 0:19shot to number one in the world in terms
of transplant volumes after the United States. -
0:19 - 0:2210,000 a year, according to
the Government of China figures. -
0:23 - 0:25From where did all these organs come.
-
0:26 - 0:29Official Chinese explanation was... donations.
-
0:29 - 0:33But China did not then
have an organ donation system. -
0:34 - 0:38In 2006, the Government of
China shifted... its explanation -
0:38 - 0:40and said that the organs were coming...
-
0:40 - 0:44mostly from prisoners sentenced
to death and then executed. -
0:45 - 0:49Well, how many prisoners were there in China
being sentenced to death and then executed? -
0:50 - 0:52The Government of China would not say.
-
0:53 - 0:55Chinese hospitals websites...
-
0:56 - 0:59advertised short waiting times for transplant tourists.
-
1:00 - 1:06Transplant tourism patients going into China
whom we interviewed after the transplantation -
1:06 - 1:10told us that they can choose
their timing for transplants. -
1:10 - 1:12That was true even for vital organs:
-
1:13 - 1:15Heart, liver, and lung.
-
1:16 - 1:17Everywhere else in the world,
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1:17 - 1:20patients waited months and years for organs.
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1:20 - 1:24In China, hospitals and prisons
waited for the arrival of patients -
1:24 - 1:27so that prisoners can be killed for their organs.
-
1:29 - 1:33Now, not every prisoner is available as
a source of organs for every patient. -
1:34 - 1:37Transplants require blood type compatibility
-
1:37 - 1:40and ideally even tissue type compatibility.
-
1:41 - 1:43Organs of donors have to be at least...
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1:44 - 1:47roughly the same size as the
organs that are being replaced. -
1:48 - 1:54There's a high rate of hepatitis B in
the Chinese criminal prison population, -
1:54 - 1:56in the order of 60%.
-
1:57 - 2:01That makes organs of many prisoners
sentenced to death and then executed -
2:01 - 2:03unusable for transplants.
-
2:04 - 2:08China at that time did not have
an organ distribution system. -
2:08 - 2:11That meant that organs were sourced locally,
-
2:11 - 2:15from prisons in the neighborhood
of the hospitals that do transplants. -
2:16 - 2:20Chinese law requires persons
sentenced to death to be executed -
2:20 - 2:22within seven days of sentence.
-
2:23 - 2:26That meant there was no pool
of prisoners sentenced to death -
2:26 - 2:30and waiting for patients
to arrive to be executed. -
2:32 - 2:34Put these factors together in our estimate is that
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2:34 - 2:39China... in order to get 10,000
organs for transplants a year, -
2:40 - 2:46would have had to be executing in the order of
100,000 prisoners sentenced to death every year. -
2:46 - 2:48That is an implausible figure,
-
2:48 - 2:54out by more... than a factor of ten than
even the wildest death penalty estimates. -
2:55 - 2:58Non-governmental organizations estimated that...
-
2:58 - 3:02China, at its height, was
executing maybe 5,000 a year -
3:02 - 3:06which is already... way more than any other country.
-
3:06 - 3:09Over time, death penalty volume decreased.
-
3:10 - 3:15But transplant volumes with minor variations
remained... constant or even increased. -
3:16 - 3:19So, from where were all the organs coming?
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3:19 - 3:21Donations were not the answer.
-
3:22 - 3:24Executed criminals were not the answer.
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3:25 - 3:26What was the answer?
-
3:27 - 3:28Let's step back.
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3:30 - 3:32Let me begin with a... confession.
-
3:33 - 3:36As a student in Paris in the late 60s,
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3:36 - 3:39I was actually an admirer of Mao.
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3:40 - 3:43I even read his little red book.
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3:43 - 3:44He seemed...
-
3:45 - 3:50He seemed so... kind swimming in the
famous photo in the Yangtze River. -
3:51 - 3:54Many historians today
as I'm sure you know -
3:54 - 4:00named Mao one of the worst...
mass murderers of the 20th century. -
4:00 - 4:02Chang and Halliday,
-
4:05 - 4:11noted that "over 70 million
perished under Mao's rule". -
4:13 - 4:17Many governance problems in
China today stem from the fusion -
4:17 - 4:19of Mao's totalitarianism
-
4:20 - 4:23with Deng Xiaoping's
economic reforms after 1978. -
4:25 - 4:26But, ladies and gentlemen,
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4:29 - 4:33violence and corruption are
the system today in China. -
4:35 - 4:37Every 10 years or so,
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4:37 - 4:41the Party starts a persecution of a minority
-
4:41 - 4:46and mainly I think to instill
fear in the general population. -
4:47 - 4:52Consider just three of the persecution
campaigns to have gone on since 1950, -
4:54 - 4:58the... so-called Great Leap Forward,
-
4:59 - 5:03or an estimated 40 million
people starve to death. -
5:06 - 5:12The Cultural Revolution which
you all know I'm sure 1966 to 1976, -
5:12 - 5:14perhaps another 2 million killed.
-
5:17 - 5:20The Tiananmen Square massacre of 1989,
-
5:23 - 5:26one of my favorite photographs of all time
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5:27 - 5:32where soldiers killed thousands of people
who are seeking openness and democracy. -
5:33 - 5:36So what if David and I told you that...
-
5:36 - 5:40hundreds of thousands of innocent people
have input into slave labor camps across China. -
5:42 - 5:45They are not only making goods for export
-
5:46 - 5:47but they're also tortured,
-
5:48 - 5:49blood tested,
-
5:49 - 5:53and the unlucky ones are
killed on demand for their organs, -
5:53 - 5:54harvested...
-
5:54 - 5:55for profit!
-
5:58 - 6:01So how two of us get involved in this?
-
6:01 - 6:06About ten years ago, we were
invited by a volunteer coalition -
6:07 - 6:12to investigate allegations of
organ harvesting in China. -
6:12 - 6:16I have been a Secretary of
State for Asia-Pacific for Canada -
6:16 - 6:19and David Matas have had a
lifetime of working on human rights -
6:19 - 6:22and also trying to find lessons of the Holocaust.
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6:22 - 6:27So we agreed on a volunteer independent
basis to look into these allegations. -
6:28 - 6:29What follows...
-
6:30 - 6:35the conclusion of our investigator
of reform our report is so disturbing -
6:35 - 6:36we have called what's happening...
-
6:36 - 6:39a new form of evil on the planet!
-
6:41 - 6:43That was our conclusion
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6:43 - 6:45that organs came from prisoners allright.
-
6:45 - 6:49But they were not only criminal prisoners
sentenced to death and then executed, -
6:50 - 6:52they were mostly prisoners of conscience,
-
6:52 - 6:55primarily practitioners of the
spiritually based set of exercises, -
6:55 - 6:56Falun Gong.
-
6:57 - 6:59A Chinese equivalent of yoga.
-
7:01 - 7:04Before the Communist repression of this practice,
-
7:04 - 7:09the number of Falun Gong practitioners
was in the order of 70 to 100 million people, -
7:09 - 7:12according to government of China figures.
-
7:13 - 7:17They had been detained through all
China in the hundreds of thousands -
7:17 - 7:20after the Party decided to repress the practice
-
7:21 - 7:24out of jealousy over the popularity of Falun Gong
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7:24 - 7:28and fear by the Party for its ideological supremacy.
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7:29 - 7:33Falun Gong practitioners who recanted or released
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7:33 - 7:35and some of those got out of China.
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7:35 - 7:37We interviewed them around the world
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7:37 - 7:41and found out that all Falun Gong detainees
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7:41 - 7:44were systematically blood tested and organ examined.
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7:45 - 7:49This was not done for their health since
they were being tortured to recant -
7:50 - 7:52but it is necessary for transplants
-
7:52 - 7:57because of the need for blood type
and ideally tissue type compatibility. -
7:58 - 8:00We had investigators calling into hospitals,
-
8:00 - 8:04pretending to be relatives of
patients who needed transplants, -
8:04 - 8:10and asking the hospital if they had all
organs of Falun Gong practitioners for sale. -
8:11 - 8:15Our callers claim to want these organs
because the organs were healthy, -
8:15 - 8:18healthy because of the Falun Gong exercises.
-
8:19 - 8:22Through out China, we got
doctors and hospitals saying... -
8:22 - 8:26"Yes, we do have organs of
Falun Gong practitioners for sale." -
8:26 - 8:27Come on down.
-
8:28 - 8:29These calls have been taped,
-
8:29 - 8:31translated and transcribed.
-
8:33 - 8:36Although the practice of
Falun Gong is totally innocent, -
8:36 - 8:40the propaganda the Party's
spewed out against practitioners, -
8:40 - 8:44demonized, depersonalized
and dehumanized this population. -
8:45 - 8:48Their jailers thought nothing
of killing them arbitrarily -
8:49 - 8:51because they did not consider them human.
-
8:52 - 8:56This population provides an explanation
for the numbers of transplants -
8:56 - 8:59that prisoners sentenced to
death and executed could not. -
9:01 - 9:04When the persecution of Falun Gong began,
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9:05 - 9:09the former head of the Party Jiang Zemin vowed
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9:09 - 9:12"Ruin... their reputation,
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9:12 - 9:14bankrupt them financially,
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9:15 - 9:16and destroy them physically."
-
9:19 - 9:20Falun Gong practitioners...
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9:20 - 9:24in China come from all walks of life,
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9:24 - 9:28from scientists, to soldiers, to Party officials
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9:29 - 9:31It is a grassroots spiritual movement
-
9:31 - 9:35as we mentioned that grew
exponentially in the 1990s. -
9:36 - 9:38So, let's put some faces to the faceless.
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9:39 - 9:41We'd like to show you a short excerpt
-
9:41 - 9:43from the award-winning film "Free China",
-
9:44 - 9:49an Oscar contender for the
2014 for the best documentary -
9:49 - 9:53that featured two... inspirational
survivors of the persecution. -
9:55 - 9:57The main subject of the film, Jennifer
-
9:58 - 10:00a Falun Gong practitioner.
-
10:01 - 10:02She's a mother,
-
10:02 - 10:06she has a Master's degree in Science and
she's a former Communist Party member. -
10:08 - 10:09After her escape from China,
-
10:09 - 10:13she became a best-selling author
in writing about her experiences. -
10:14 - 10:17Not only was she jailed and tortured,
-
10:18 - 10:21in her testimony, she recounted
how she was blood tested -
10:22 - 10:23during her detention.
-
10:23 - 10:27Luckily for her perhaps,
she also had hepatitis -
10:27 - 10:33during the birth of a child and this perhaps
saved her from being a so-called organ donor. -
10:34 - 10:35The second person you'll see...
-
10:36 - 10:39is a Chinese - American, Dr. Charles Lee
-
10:39 - 10:42who was jailed for three years
after he went back to China -
10:42 - 10:45to try to explain the truth
of what was happening. -
10:46 - 10:51He was... sentenced without
anything approaching a fair trial -
10:55 - 10:57and send to a slave labour camp.
-
10:57 - 10:57Let's take a look.
-
10:58 - 11:01Every time they apply the baton on me,
-
11:01 - 11:03I just couldn't help shaking
-
11:04 - 11:06and the anticipating
-
11:06 - 11:08of the next round of shocks
-
11:08 - 11:14just... was too terrible to... describe.
-
11:14 - 11:16This is exactly what I was forced to make
-
11:16 - 11:17in Nanjing prison.
-
11:18 - 11:20Homer Simpson slippers.
-
11:20 - 11:22I saw this label
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11:23 - 11:25inside the prison when I was making it.
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11:25 - 11:27"SG Footwear, Hackensack, New Jersey."
-
11:27 - 11:29When I was in America
-
11:29 - 11:31I watched Homer Simpson shows,
-
11:31 - 11:33you know, pretty often
-
11:33 - 11:34during the 90s.
-
11:34 - 11:35You know, very funny.
-
11:35 - 11:36But when I was
-
11:37 - 11:39forced to make these shoes
-
11:39 - 11:40in prison,
-
11:40 - 11:42you don't feel it's funny at all.
-
11:42 - 11:44The Government of China...
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11:44 - 11:46was not prepared to acknowledge
-
11:46 - 11:50that their organs for transplants were
coming from prisoners of conscience. -
11:51 - 11:54But their acknowledgement that the
organs were coming from prisoners -
11:54 - 11:58sentenced to death and executed was bad enough.
-
11:58 - 12:01That admission met with global revulsion.
-
12:01 - 12:04The Chinese transplant profession was ostracized
-
12:04 - 12:08on different occasions denied training abroad,
-
12:08 - 12:11publication of papers exchanges,
-
12:11 - 12:15and presentation platform at international
congresses of their colleagues. -
12:16 - 12:19Chinese health officials reacted by saying that,
-
12:20 - 12:21as January this year,
-
12:21 - 12:26they had ceased sourcing organs from
prisoners and renounce sourcing organs -
12:26 - 12:28entirely from donors.
-
12:29 - 12:34China created both an organ donor registry
and an organ donor distribution system. -
12:34 - 12:38The government enacted a policy
giving priority to local patients -
12:38 - 12:42and a law forbidding sourcing
of organs without consent. -
12:45 - 12:49Are these changes...
real or just pretense? -
12:49 - 12:51The answer is a bit of both.
-
12:52 - 12:54Officials in China have said that,
-
12:55 - 12:58prisoners can donate organs still.
-
12:59 - 13:02If that is so then organ sourcing
from prisoners continues. -
13:04 - 13:08There has been no abatement in the
demonization of persecution of Falun Gong. -
13:09 - 13:11Those remain in full force
-
13:11 - 13:14as well even blood testing
of Falun Gong practitioners -
13:14 - 13:15continues.
-
13:16 - 13:23Official statements do not consistently say
organs sourcing from... prisoners has ended. -
13:23 - 13:25Some say only that it will end
-
13:25 - 13:30and that China is now in a
transition period leading to its ending. -
13:32 - 13:34There are in reality two systems running in China now.
-
13:34 - 13:37A donation system and
a non donation system. -
13:37 - 13:40Some hospitals still carry on as they always did,
-
13:41 - 13:43albeit less blatantly than before.
-
13:45 - 13:48The question we asked to China remains,
-
13:48 - 13:50"From where do you get your organs for transplants?"
-
13:52 - 13:54Chinese officials say now that all is good.
-
13:55 - 13:58But, the records are not
open to independent scrutiny. -
14:00 - 14:02International standards do not require
-
14:02 - 14:06that we establish that China is doing
something wrong in organ sources. -
14:07 - 14:11International standards rather
impose a duty on China -
14:11 - 14:14to explain where it gets
its organs for transplants. -
14:15 - 14:22That duty is not met just by bold assertions by
Chinese authorities that everything is alright. -
14:22 - 14:24It is met by... transparency,
-
14:25 - 14:27accountability and openness to scrutiny.
-
14:28 - 14:30We say to China,
-
14:30 - 14:32don't just tell us...
-
14:32 - 14:34where you get your organs for transplants.
-
14:35 - 14:35Show us!
-
14:38 - 14:39Over the past ten years,
-
14:40 - 14:42the evidence... has become overwhelming.
-
14:42 - 14:45We have... 32 kinds of evidence
that's happening in China. -
14:47 - 14:49A surgeon, Enver Tohti
-
14:50 - 14:52has testified that he was
forced to remove the organs -
14:52 - 14:54from a live Uyghur,
-
14:55 - 14:57political prisoner in the mid-90s.
-
14:59 - 15:02Organ pillaging most likely then moved to the...
-
15:03 - 15:04...the Tibetans,
-
15:04 - 15:05then to the Uyghurs,
-
15:05 - 15:07and finally... to the House Christians,
-
15:07 - 15:09and then massively to the
Falun Gong community. -
15:10 - 15:12In 2013,
-
15:13 - 15:15EU Parliament, to its credit,
-
15:15 - 15:17passed a resolution where...
-
15:17 - 15:22"expresses its deep concern over
the persistent and credible reports -
15:22 - 15:28of systematic, state-sanctioned organ harvesting
from large numbers of Falun Gong practitioners" -
15:29 - 15:30In...
-
15:32 - 15:332014,
-
15:34 - 15:36Ethan Gutmann published a book:
-
15:36 - 15:37The Slaughter,
-
15:38 - 15:40where he interviewed over a hundred people
-
15:40 - 15:43and collected new evidence over eight years.
-
15:44 - 15:46He estimates that at any given time,
-
15:46 - 15:52between 450,000 to a million Falun Gong
practitioners are languishing in prisons -
15:52 - 15:54and slave labor camps.
-
15:55 - 16:01He concludes, that approximately
65,000 Falun Gong practitioners -
16:01 - 16:03and 2,000 to 4,000 Uyghurs,
-
16:03 - 16:05Tibetans and Christians
-
16:05 - 16:09were killed for their organs
in the 2000 to 2008 period. -
16:10 - 16:13His estimates regarding Falun Gong practitioners
-
16:13 - 16:14are similar to the ones that...
-
16:14 - 16:18David Matas and I have come up, calculated.
-
16:19 - 16:20When you follow the money,
-
16:21 - 16:24you partly began to understand why this is happening.
-
16:25 - 16:28Hospitals as it shows,
-
16:28 - 16:31can... get 62,000 for kidneys,
-
16:32 - 16:35and heart too are worth up to 160,000.
-
16:35 - 16:39We're talking about... billions of dollars in profits!
-
16:40 - 16:44So all of mainstream media has paid
minimal attention to these atrocities. -
16:45 - 16:47The truth is gradually getting out.
-
16:48 - 16:49We want to show you in this final clip.
-
16:50 - 16:53It's an excerpt from the
documentary "Human Harvest", -
16:53 - 16:57which won the prestigious
Peabody Award earlier this year. -
16:59 - 17:01The least the EU can do to stop it
-
17:01 - 17:03is to condemn publicly
-
17:03 - 17:05organ transplantation abuses in China,
-
17:05 - 17:07and to inform those European citizens
-
17:07 - 17:10who travel to China for organ transplants.
-
17:10 - 17:15This is a crime against humanity.
-
17:16 - 17:19We should do our best... to identify
-
17:19 - 17:23those specific individuals who are engaged in this.
-
17:24 - 17:25and put them on the list
-
17:26 - 17:29of people who deserve to be brought to justice.
-
17:29 - 17:32America must stand with the Falun Gong,
-
17:32 - 17:34and indeed with all of the oppressed.
-
17:34 - 17:38Beijing must release Falun Gong practitioners
-
17:38 - 17:41and other prisoners of conscience immediately.
-
17:41 - 17:43They theme is hidden treasures.
-
17:45 - 17:47I think that the Hidden Treasure in all of us...
-
17:48 - 17:50is the courage to overcome our fears
-
17:51 - 17:53to stand for what's right
no matter what the cost. -
17:55 - 17:57David and I are just two Davids...
-
17:58 - 18:01and the Goliath that we face
as you know is so huge. -
18:01 - 18:03It is indeed a daunting challenge.
-
18:03 - 18:05This is where we need your help.
-
18:07 - 18:09There are at least three
things that all of you can do. -
18:10 - 18:14First, simply Google "organ harvesting in China".
-
18:16 - 18:18Second, tell friends which you've learned.
-
18:21 - 18:25Third, please share this information
on Facebook and other social media. -
18:26 - 18:29Today's Internet connected world,
-
18:29 - 18:31I believe the key is awareness...
-
18:32 - 18:35and fundamentally, we all deserve to be free,
-
18:35 - 18:37and we all are truly connected.
-
18:38 - 18:41If we can reach millions to the
power of community such as Ted, -
18:43 - 18:45we can hopefully inspire enough people...
-
18:45 - 18:51to take action to save lives and to
stop this trafficking in human organs -
18:52 - 18:56and which of course is also
a crime against humanity. -
18:57 - 18:57Thank you!
- Title:
- Two Davids & Goliath | David Matas & David Kilgour | TEDxMünchen
- Description:
-
David Matas & David Kilgour on "Two Davids & Goliath" at TEDxMünchen 2015 (http://www.tedxmuenchen.de)
David Kilgour is co-chair of the Canadian Friends of a Democratic Iran, past chair of the Latin America and Caribbean policy working group of the Ottawa branch of the Canadian International Council, a director of the Washington-based Council for a Community of Democracies (CCD), a Fellow of the Queen's University Centre for the Study of Democracy, a director of the New York-based NGO Advancing Human Rights and a director of the Ottawa Mission Foundation.
David Matas is an international human rights lawyer based in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. He is also an author who has produced eleven books. One of those books, titled "Bloody Harvest: The Killing of Falun Gong for their Organs", he co-authored with David Kilgour. As a result of the work he and David Kilgour did on that issue, an America based German doctor Torsten Trey founded the NGO Doctors against Forced Organ Harvesting (DAFOH).
This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx
- Video Language:
- English
- Duration:
- 19:04
Olivier lutzwiller edited English subtitles for Two Davids & Goliath | David Matas & David Kilgour | TEDxMünchen | ||
Olivier lutzwiller commented on English subtitles for Two Davids & Goliath | David Matas & David Kilgour | TEDxMünchen | ||
Claude Almansi commented on English subtitles for Two Davids & Goliath | David Matas & David Kilgour | TEDxMünchen | ||
dafoh europe edited English subtitles for Two Davids & Goliath | David Matas & David Kilgour | TEDxMünchen | ||
Olivier lutzwiller edited English subtitles for Two Davids & Goliath | David Matas & David Kilgour | TEDxMünchen | ||
Olivier lutzwiller edited English subtitles for Two Davids & Goliath | David Matas & David Kilgour | TEDxMünchen | ||
Tinh Quang edited English subtitles for Two Davids & Goliath | David Matas & David Kilgour | TEDxMünchen | ||
Tinh Quang edited English subtitles for Two Davids & Goliath | David Matas & David Kilgour | TEDxMünchen |
Claude Almansi
Thank you for these captions!
There are just 3 points where I don't quite hear the same way you do:
7:46.74
You write: "since they were being tortured during camp" I hear: "since they were being tortured to recant"
13:03.61
You write: "in the demonization of persecution"
I hear: "in the demonization and persecution"
18:37.59
You write: "If we can reach millions to the
power of community such as Ted,->
I hear: "... through the power of community..."
Olivier lutzwiller
I agree for the first one, the other one are correct imho. Thanks for this remarks.
Updates and view result on http://www.sos-productions.com/2davidsandgoliath_en/