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The ancient, earth-friendly wisdom of Mongolian nomads

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    It's funny how foreigners
    ask me the same questions
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    when they first meet me,
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    questions like,
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    "Wow, you're from Mongolia?
    So do you ride horses to go to work?"
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    "Do you know what Coke is?"
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    Or, "Do you have chocolates in Mongolia?"
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    And if I want to have fun with it,
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    I say things like,
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    "Oh my God,
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    I've never heard any of those before.
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    What are Coke and chocolates?
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    Can you tell me more about them?"
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    It always works,
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    and we have a good laugh about it too.
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    In reality, our capital city,
    Ulaanbaatar, is very urban.
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    We have commercial buildings,
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    brand name hotels,
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    and beautiful art spaces too.
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    But all too often
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    foreigners fixate on what Mongolia lacks.
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    They look at our massive,
    untouched landscape,
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    traditional nomadic lifestyles,
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    and see it as a sign of poverty.
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    I disagree.
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    In fact, I think there's
    a lot we can learn
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    from ancient Mongolian nomads
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    that will help us survive
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    in the years and decades to come.
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    This is a picture of me playing Mongolia's
    most celebrated traditional instrument,
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    morin khuur,
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    or "horse head fiddle."
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    I started playing the instrument
    when I was only nine,
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    and by 11 I was traveling the world
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    representing Mongolia
    at international festivals,
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    living and studying in places like Japan,
    China, Finland, Germany and Sweden.
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    But then suddenly,
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    when I was 21,
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    I lost my loving mother,
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    and jsut two years later
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    I lost my father.
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    As an only child,
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    I was devastated and lonely.
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    At the time, the only thing
    I had left was my country,
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    so I decided to move home.
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    When I was lost with sorrow,
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    my country gave me a feeling
    of safety and belonging.
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    I imagined eternal the blue sky
    of Mongolia as my father
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    and the untouched, gorgeous
    landscape as my mother.
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    Having lived in developed countries
    for over a decade,
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    I became very distant
    from the nomadic lifestyles,
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    so I wanted to reconnect
    and experience it for myself.
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    I often journeyed away from the city
    towards my grandparents' provinces
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    in rural Mongolia
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    to see where my parents and I came from
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    and better understand my own identity.
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    Growing up, I'd always heard stories
    about how Mongolian nomads
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    were the most hospitable people on earth,
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    and I wanted to see with my own eyes
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    whether they really feed
    and give shelter to a stranger.
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    So I set off to the countryside,
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    driving along dirt roads for hours.
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    What's incredible about Mongolian nomads
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    is that the neighbors are often
    40 kilometers apart,
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    and there's no private land ownership
    of pasture land in Mongolia.
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    In a way,
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    Mongolian nomads
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    have the complete freedom,
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    moving about the gorgeous
    landscape as they wish.
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    Eventually, I spotted to humble yurts
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    and I pulled over.
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    Yurts, or ??,
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    are a traditional Mongolian dwelling.
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    They're made from one hundred
    percent natural material,
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    a wooden frame and floor,
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    leather rope,
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    and thick blankets made
    from felted sheep's wool.
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    And it takes about only three to four hours
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    to assemble or disassemble,
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    and keeps them warm
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    through the minus 50 degree
    Celsius winters.
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    Outside the yurt,
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    the kids were playing
    with sheeps and goats,
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    and as I greeted them,
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    their parents welcomed me inside.
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    The wife poured me nice warm milk tea,
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    and the husband offered me food that
    they had already prepared on the table.
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    After some casual chitchat,
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    the husband politely asked my purpose,
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    so I replied bluntly
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    that I was just traveling
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    and exploring my grandparents' roots
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    and that I needed a place to stay
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    as the sun was setting.
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    And guess what?
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    He said I could stay
    as long as I needed to,
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    on one condition.
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    He asked if I would play the morin khuur,
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    our traditional Mongolian
    horse head fiddle.
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    In my head, I couldn't believe
    it was coming true.
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    And the horse head fiddle
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    was like a ticket.
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    When Mongolians find out
    that you can play morin khuur,
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    you're instantly respected.
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    They say its two strings
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    express all the events of the world.
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    I ended up staying
    with them for nine days,
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    and they didn't even ask me to leave.
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    I think if I tried
    to stay there for two months,
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    they would have let me.
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    And here's the thing:
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    before I met them,
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    I assumed that Mongolian nomads
    were hospitable out of kindness
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    like anybody else.
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    But then I realized it was more than that.
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    It was about surviving as a community.
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    Because nomads live
    in extremely remote areas,
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    they are completely
    at the mercy of nature.
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    Heavy snowfall,
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    a sudden flood,
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    or a raging storm
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    can devastate a nomadic family.
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    Today, it's a stranger who needs help,
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    but tomorrow it could be you.
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    That's why they look out for each other
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    and welcome anyone in need of help.
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    This really touched my heart,
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    because I feel like we humans
    are becoming more and more selfish.
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    Staying with a truly nomadic family
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    awakened me.
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    It was nothing like I've ever seen
    in developed countries.
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    The wife of the family
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    showed me how they produce
    organic dairy products from scratch,
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    like white cheese, yogurt, ??,
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    and even a traditional vodka
    made from cow milk.
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    And every tool they use
    is made from natural material by hand.
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    And inside the yurt,
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    we burned dried cow dung to stay warm
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    instead of using fuel.
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    Everything stood in sharp contrast
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    to my city life
    filled with plastic and steel.
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    And this was a five senses
    experience to me,
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    a completely different
    form of sophistication.
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    The more I traveled across remote
    and rural destinations in Mongolia,
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    the more I understood
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    how ancient nomadic lifestyle
    was powered by Mother Nature.
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    Nomadic life is truly zero waste.
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    Over the course of six years,
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    I visited more than 20 families,
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    and my experience was always the same.
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    They invited me in, offered me food,
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    and gave me a place to stay
    if I needed it.
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    I was surprised by how little they owned.
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    At first, I thought it was because
    they moved about four times a year.
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    OK, that's a very simple
    logic to understand.
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    You only carry what you need.
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    But then I learned
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    there's a deeper philosophy behind it.
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    Historically, nomads believed
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    that we are only
    passing through this life,
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    that people come and leave naked,
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    so they believe that there's no point
    in building anything that destroys nature
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    or in being greedy
    for materialistic things
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    when your life expectancy
    is only less than 100 years.
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    Instead, they invest in tradition,
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    heritage, history,
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    and pass it from generation to generation.
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    This ancient nomadic philosophy
    made me realize that I should think bigger
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    and further than my own convenience
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    and comfort.
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    In the Mongolian countryside,
    I felt a true form of freedom,
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    and every time I came back to the city,
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    I looked for ways to live more minimally.
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    I digitalized all of my company's
    paper procedures.
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    What once took 20 packs of A4 paper
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    now takes just one.
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    I downsized my apartment,
    reduced my carbon footprint,
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    and picked up a habit
    to rethink my actions,
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    like purchasing,
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    choosing transportation,
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    and many other lifestyle choices
    at home and work.
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    And most importantly,
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    I stopped working on fast-moving
    consumer goods marketing projects
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    and now work with organizations
    that promote sustainability.
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    But by far the biggest change
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    is that I've started to see development
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    with fresh eyes.
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    In cities,
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    living in a traditional yurt as a nomad
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    and having less
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    is often interpreted as a sign of poverty,
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    not just abroad
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    but at home in Mongolia too.
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    We think that the end goal
    for every developing country
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    is to become the next Tokyo
    or New York City,
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    with their skyscrapers,
    big shopping malls, and toll roads.
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    Communities around the world are
    abandoning their traditional lifestyles
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    in pursuit of material wealth,
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    but let's not forget
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    the developed countries
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    are the ones most responsible
    for climate change.
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    So we have to ask ourselves,
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    why do we keep on following
    the same blueprint
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    when we know it causes harm to the world?
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    We've all experienced
    the consequences of our choices
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    over the past eight months.
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    So doing right by Mother Nature
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    and focusing on earth-friendly,
    zero-waste habits
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    is not an option anymore.
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    And who knows the key ingredients
    better than our ancestors,
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    the ones who survived without the media
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    or technology
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    but with wisdom alone?
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    As a citizen of Mongolia,
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    I grew up hearing
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    that developing countries
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    are inferior,
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    and I really took it to heart.
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    But today, I want to say loud and clear
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    that I don't see disadvantages
    from developing countries anymore.
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    On the contrary,
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    I see countries that have
    the biggest opportunity
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    to do things in the right way,
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    countries that can define
    their own kind of development
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    and have the most advantage
    to build a better and safer environment
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    for everyone.
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    What worked for our ancestors
    for thousands of years
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    can work for us now,
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    and in the future,
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    when combined with the latest innovations.
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    After all, we're all guests in this world,
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    so let's do right
    by the earth and each other
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    just like the ancient
    Mongolian nomads did.
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    Thank you.
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Title:
The ancient, earth-friendly wisdom of Mongolian nomads
Speaker:
Khulan Batkhuyag
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
11:30

English subtitles

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