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Dreams from endangered cultures

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    You know, one of the intense pleasures of travel
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    and one of the delights of ethnographic research
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    is the opportunity to live amongst those
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    who have not forgotten the old ways,
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    who still feel their past in the wind,
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    touch it in stones polished by rain,
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    taste it in the bitter leaves of plants.
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    Just to know that Jaguar shamans still journey beyond the Milky Way,
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    or the myths of the Inuit elders still resonate with meaning,
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    or that in the Himalaya,
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    the Buddhists still pursue the breath of the Dharma,
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    is to really remember the central revelation of anthropology,
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    and that is the idea that the world in which we live
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    does not exist in some absolute sense,
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    but is just one model of reality,
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    the consequence of one particular set of adaptive choices
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    that our lineage made, albeit successfully, many generations ago.
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    And of course, we all share the same adaptive imperatives.
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    We're all born. We all bring our children into the world.
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    We go through initiation rites.
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    We have to deal with the inexorable separation of death,
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    so it shouldn't surprise us that we all sing, we all dance,
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    we all have art.
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    But what's interesting is the unique cadence of the song,
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    the rhythm of the dance in every culture.
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    And whether it is the Penan in the forests of Borneo,
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    or the Voodoo acolytes in Haiti,
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    or the warriors in the Kaisut desert of Northern Kenya,
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    the Curandero in the mountains of the Andes,
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    or a caravanserai in the middle of the Sahara --
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    this is incidentally the fellow that I traveled into the desert with
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    a month ago --
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    or indeed a yak herder in the slopes of Qomolangma,
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    Everest, the goddess mother of the world.
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    All of these peoples teach us that there are other ways of being,
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    other ways of thinking,
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    other ways of orienting yourself in the Earth.
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    And this is an idea, if you think about it,
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    can only fill you with hope.
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    Now, together the myriad cultures of the world
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    make up a web of spiritual life and cultural life
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    that envelops the planet,
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    and is as important to the well-being of the planet
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    as indeed is the biological web of life that you know as a biosphere.
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    And you might think of this cultural web of life
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    as being an ethnosphere,
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    and you might define the ethnosphere
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    as being the sum total of all thoughts and dreams, myths,
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    ideas, inspirations, intuitions brought into being
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    by the human imagination since the dawn of consciousness.
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    The ethnosphere is humanity's great legacy.
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    It's the symbol of all that we are
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    and all that we can be as an astonishingly inquisitive species.
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    And just as the biosphere has been severely eroded,
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    so too is the ethnosphere
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    -- and, if anything, at a far greater rate.
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    No biologists, for example, would dare suggest
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    that 50 percent of all species or more have been or are
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    on the brink of extinction because it simply is not true,
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    and yet that -- the most apocalyptic scenario
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    in the realm of biological diversity --
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    scarcely approaches what we know to be the most optimistic scenario
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    in the realm of cultural diversity.
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    And the great indicator of that, of course, is language loss.
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    When each of you in this room were born,
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    there were 6,000 languages spoken on the planet.
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    Now, a language is not just a body of vocabulary
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    or a set of grammatical rules.
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    A language is a flash of the human spirit.
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    It's a vehicle through which the soul of each particular culture
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    comes into the material world.
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    Every language is an old-growth forest of the mind,
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    a watershed, a thought, an ecosystem of spiritual possibilities.
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    And of those 6,000 languages, as we sit here today in Monterey,
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    fully half are no longer being whispered into the ears of children.
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    They're no longer being taught to babies,
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    which means, effectively, unless something changes,
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    they're already dead.
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    What could be more lonely than to be enveloped in silence,
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    to be the last of your people to speak your language,
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    to have no way to pass on the wisdom of the ancestors
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    or anticipate the promise of the children?
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    And yet, that dreadful fate is indeed the plight of somebody
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    somewhere on Earth roughly every two weeks,
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    because every two weeks, some elder dies
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    and carries with him into the grave the last syllables
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    of an ancient tongue.
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    And I know there's some of you who say, "Well, wouldn't it be better,
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    wouldn't the world be a better place
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    if we all just spoke one language?" And I say, "Great,
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    let's make that language Yoruba. Let's make it Cantonese.
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    Let's make it Kogi."
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    And you'll suddenly discover what it would be like
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    to be unable to speak your own language.
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    And so, what I'd like to do with you today
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    is sort of take you on a journey through the ethnosphere,
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    a brief journey through the ethnosphere,
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    to try to begin to give you a sense of what in fact is being lost.
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    Now, there are many of us who sort of forget
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    that when I say "different ways of being,"
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    I really do mean different ways of being.
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    Take, for example, this child of a Barasana in the Northwest Amazon,
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    the people of the anaconda
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    who believe that mythologically they came up the milk river
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    from the east in the belly of sacred snakes.
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    Now, this is a people who cognitively
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    do not distinguish the color blue from the color green
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    because the canopy of the heavens
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    is equated to the canopy of the forest
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    upon which the people depend.
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    They have a curious language and marriage rule
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    which is called "linguistic exogamy:"
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    you must marry someone who speaks a different language.
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    And this is all rooted in the mythological past,
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    yet the curious thing is in these long houses,
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    where there are six or seven languages spoken
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    because of intermarriage,
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    you never hear anyone practicing a language.
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    They simply listen and then begin to speak.
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    Or, one of the most fascinating tribes I ever lived with,
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    the Waorani of northeastern Ecuador,
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    an astonishing people first contacted peacefully in 1958.
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    In 1957, five missionaries attempted contact
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    and made a critical mistake.
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    They dropped from the air
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    8 x 10 glossy photographs of themselves
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    in what we would say to be friendly gestures,
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    forgetting that these people of the rainforest
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    had never seen anything two-dimensional in their lives.
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    They picked up these photographs from the forest floor,
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    tried to look behind the face to find the form or the figure,
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    found nothing, and concluded that these were calling cards
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    from the devil, so they speared the five missionaries to death.
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    But the Waorani didn't just spear outsiders.
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    They speared each other.
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    54 percent of their mortality was due to them spearing each other.
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    We traced genealogies back eight generations,
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    and we found two instances of natural death
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    and when we pressured the people a little bit about it,
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    they admitted that one of the fellows had gotten so old
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    that he died getting old, so we speared him anyway. (Laughter)
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    But at the same time they had a perspicacious knowledge
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    of the forest that was astonishing.
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    Their hunters could smell animal urine at 40 paces
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    and tell you what species left it behind.
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    In the early '80s, I had a really astonishing assignment
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    when I was asked by my professor at Harvard
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    if I was interested in going down to Haiti,
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    infiltrating the secret societies
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    which were the foundation of Duvalier's strength
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    and Tonton Macoutes,
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    and securing the poison used to make zombies.
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    In order to make sense out of sensation, of course,
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    I had to understand something about this remarkable faith
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    of Vodoun. And Voodoo is not a black magic cult.
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    On the contrary, it's a complex metaphysical worldview.
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    It's interesting.
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    If I asked you to name the great religions of the world,
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    what would you say?
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    Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Judaism, whatever.
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    There's always one continent left out,
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    the assumption being that sub-Saharan Africa
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    had no religious beliefs. Well, of course, they did
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    and Voodoo is simply the distillation
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    of these very profound religious ideas
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    that came over during the tragic Diaspora of the slavery era.
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    But, what makes Voodoo so interesting
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    is that it's this living relationship
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    between the living and the dead.
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    So, the living give birth to the spirits.
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    The spirits can be invoked from beneath the Great Water,
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    responding to the rhythm of the dance
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    to momentarily displace the soul of the living,
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    so that for that brief shining moment, the acolyte becomes the god.
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    That's why the Voodooists like to say
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    that "You white people go to church and speak about God.
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    We dance in the temple and become God."
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    And because you are possessed, you are taken by the spirit --
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    how can you be harmed?
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    So you see these astonishing demonstrations:
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    Voodoo acolytes in a state of trance
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    handling burning embers with impunity,
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    a rather astonishing demonstration of the ability of the mind
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    to affect the body that bears it
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    when catalyzed in the state of extreme excitation.
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    Now, of all the peoples that I've ever been with,
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    the most extraordinary are the Kogi
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    of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta in northern Colombia.
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    Descendants of the ancient Tairona civilization
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    which once carpeted the Caribbean coastal plain of Colombia,
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    in the wake of the conquest,
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    these people retreated into an isolated volcanic massif
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    that soars above the Caribbean coastal plain.
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    In a bloodstained continent,
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    these people alone were never conquered by the Spanish.
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    To this day, they remain ruled by a ritual priesthood
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    but the training for the priesthood is rather extraordinary.
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    The young acolytes are taken away from their families
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    at the age of three and four,
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    sequestered in a shadowy world of darkness
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    in stone huts at the base of glaciers for 18 years:
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    two nine-year periods
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    deliberately chosen to mimic the nine months of gestation
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    they spend in their natural mother's womb;
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    now they are metaphorically in the womb of the great mother.
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    And for this entire time,
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    they are inculturated into the values of their society,
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    values that maintain the proposition that their prayers
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    and their prayers alone maintain the cosmic --
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    or we might say the ecological -- balance.
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    And at the end of this amazing initiation,
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    one day they're suddenly taken out
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    and for the first time in their lives, at the age of 18,
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    they see a sunrise. And in that crystal moment of awareness
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    of first light as the Sun begins to bathe the slopes
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    of the stunningly beautiful landscape,
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    suddenly everything they have learned in the abstract
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    is affirmed in stunning glory. And the priest steps back
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    and says, "You see? It's really as I've told you.
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    It is that beautiful. It is yours to protect."
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    They call themselves the "elder brothers"
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    and they say we, who are the younger brothers,
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    are the ones responsible for destroying the world.
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    Now, this level of intuition becomes very important.
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    Whenever we think of indigenous people and landscape,
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    we either invoke Rousseau
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    and the old canard of the "noble savage,"
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    which is an idea racist in its simplicity,
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    or alternatively, we invoke Thoreau
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    and say these people are closer to the Earth than we are.
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    Well, indigenous people are neither sentimental
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    nor weakened by nostalgia.
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    There's not a lot of room for either
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    in the malarial swamps of the Asmat
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    or in the chilling winds of Tibet, but they have, nevertheless,
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    through time and ritual, forged a traditional mystique of the Earth
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    that is based not on the idea of being self-consciously close to it,
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    but on a far subtler intuition:
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    the idea that the Earth itself can only exist
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    because it is breathed into being by human consciousness.
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    Now, what does that mean?
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    It means that a young kid from the Andes
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    who's raised to believe that that mountain is an Apu spirit
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    that will direct his or her destiny
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    will be a profoundly different human being
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    and have a different relationship to that resource
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    or that place than a young kid from Montana
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    raised to believe that a mountain is a pile of rock
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    ready to be mined.
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    Whether it's the abode of a spirit or a pile of ore is irrelevant.
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    What's interesting is the metaphor that defines the relationship
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    between the individual and the natural world.
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    I was raised in the forests of British Columbia
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    to believe those forests existed to be cut.
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    That made me a different human being
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    than my friends amongst the Kwagiulth
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    who believe that those forests were the abode of Huxwhukw
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    and the Crooked Beak of Heaven
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    and the cannibal spirits that dwelled at the north end of the world,
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    spirits they would have to engage during their Hamatsa initiation.
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    Now, if you begin to look at the idea
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    that these cultures could create different realities,
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    you could begin to understand
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    some of their extraordinary discoveries. Take this plant here.
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    It's a photograph I took in the Northwest Amazon just last April.
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    This is ayahuasca, which many of you have heard about,
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    the most powerful psychoactive preparation
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    of the shaman's repertoire.
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    What makes ayahuasca fascinating
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    is not the sheer pharmacological potential of this preparation,
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    but the elaboration of it. It's made really of two different sources:
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    on the one hand, this woody liana
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    which has in it a series of beta-carbolines,
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    harmine, harmaline, mildly hallucinogenic --
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    to take the vine alone
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    is rather to have sort of blue hazy smoke
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    drift across your consciousness --
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    but it's mixed with the leaves of a shrub in the coffee family
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    called Psychotria viridis.
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    This plant had in it some very powerful tryptamines,
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    very close to brain serotonin, dimethyltryptamine,
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    5-methoxydimethyltryptamine.
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    If you've ever seen the Yanomami
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    blowing that snuff up their noses,
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    that substance they make from a different set of species
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    also contains methoxydimethyltryptamine.
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    To have that powder blown up your nose
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    is rather like being shot out of a rifle barrel
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    lined with baroque paintings and landing on a sea of electricity. (Laughter)
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    It doesn't create the distortion of reality;
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    it creates the dissolution of reality.
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    In fact, I used to argue with my professor, Richard Evan Shultes --
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    who is a man who sparked the psychedelic era
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    with his discovery of the magic mushrooms
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    in Mexico in the 1930s --
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    I used to argue that you couldn't classify these tryptamines
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    as hallucinogenic because by the time you're under the effects
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    there's no one home anymore to experience a hallucination. (Laughter)
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    But the thing about tryptamines is they cannot be taken orally
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    because they're denatured by an enzyme
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    found naturally in the human gut called monoamine oxidase.
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    They can only be taken orally if taken in conjunction
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    with some other chemical that denatures the MAO.
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    Now, the fascinating things
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    are that the beta-carbolines found within that liana
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    are MAO inhibitors of the precise sort necessary
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    to potentiate the tryptamine. So you ask yourself a question.
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    How, in a flora of 80,000 species of vascular plants,
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    do these people find these two morphologically unrelated plants
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    that when combined in this way,
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    created a kind of biochemical version
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    of the whole being greater than the sum of the parts?
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    Well, we use that great euphemism, "trial and error,"
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    which is exposed to be meaningless.
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    But you ask the Indians, and they say, "The plants talk to us."
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    Well, what does that mean?
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    This tribe, the Cofan, has 17 varieties of ayahuasca,
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    all of which they distinguish a great distance in the forest,
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    all of which are referable to our eye as one species.
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    And then you ask them how they establish their taxonomy
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    and they say, "I thought you knew something about plants.
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    I mean, don't you know anything?" And I said, "No."
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    Well, it turns out you take each of the 17 varieties
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    in the night of a full moon, and it sings to you in a different key.
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    Now, that's not going to get you a Ph.D. at Harvard,
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    but it's a lot more interesting than counting stamens. (Laughter)
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    Now --
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    (Applause) --
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    the problem -- the problem is that even those of us
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    sympathetic with the plight of indigenous people
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    view them as quaint and colorful
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    but somehow reduced to the margins of history
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    as the real world, meaning our world, moves on.
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    Well, the truth is the 20th century, 300 years from now,
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    is not going to be remembered for its wars
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    or its technological innovations,
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    but rather as the era in which we stood by
  • 14:24 - 14:26
    and either actively endorsed or passively accepted
  • 14:26 - 14:29
    the massive destruction of both biological and cultural diversity
  • 14:29 - 14:32
    on the planet. Now, the problem isn't change.
  • 14:32 - 14:34
    All cultures through all time
  • 14:34 - 14:37
    have constantly been engaged in a dance
  • 14:37 - 14:38
    with new possibilities of life.
  • 14:39 - 14:41
    And the problem is not technology itself.
  • 14:42 - 14:44
    The Sioux Indians did not stop being Sioux
  • 14:44 - 14:45
    when they gave up the bow and arrow
  • 14:45 - 14:47
    any more than an American stopped being an American
  • 14:47 - 14:49
    when he gave up the horse and buggy.
  • 14:49 - 14:50
    It's not change or technology
  • 14:50 - 14:54
    that threatens the integrity of the ethnosphere. It is power,
  • 14:54 - 14:56
    the crude face of domination.
  • 14:56 - 14:58
    Wherever you look around the world,
  • 14:58 - 15:01
    you discover that these are not cultures destined to fade away;
  • 15:01 - 15:03
    these are dynamic living peoples
  • 15:03 - 15:06
    being driven out of existence by identifiable forces
  • 15:06 - 15:08
    that are beyond their capacity to adapt to:
  • 15:08 - 15:10
    whether it's the egregious deforestation
  • 15:11 - 15:13
    in the homeland of the Penan --
  • 15:13 - 15:16
    a nomadic people from Southeast Asia, from Sarawak --
  • 15:16 - 15:20
    a people who lived free in the forest until a generation ago,
  • 15:20 - 15:23
    and now have all been reduced to servitude and prostitution
  • 15:23 - 15:25
    on the banks of the rivers,
  • 15:25 - 15:29
    where you can see the river itself is soiled with the silt
  • 15:29 - 15:31
    that seems to be carrying half of Borneo away
  • 15:31 - 15:32
    to the South China Sea,
  • 15:32 - 15:34
    where the Japanese freighters hang light in the horizon
  • 15:34 - 15:38
    ready to fill their holds with raw logs ripped from the forest --
  • 15:38 - 15:39
    or, in the case of the Yanomami,
  • 15:39 - 15:41
    it's the disease entities that have come in,
  • 15:41 - 15:43
    in the wake of the discovery of gold.
  • 15:43 - 15:45
    Or if we go into the mountains of Tibet,
  • 15:45 - 15:47
    where I'm doing a lot of research recently,
  • 15:48 - 15:51
    you'll see it's a crude face of political domination.
  • 15:51 - 15:53
    You know, genocide, the physical extinction of a people
  • 15:53 - 15:55
    is universally condemned, but ethnocide,
  • 15:56 - 15:59
    the destruction of people's way of life, is not only not condemned,
  • 15:59 - 16:02
    it's universally, in many quarters, celebrated
  • 16:02 - 16:04
    as part of a development strategy.
  • 16:04 - 16:07
    And you cannot understand the pain of Tibet
  • 16:07 - 16:09
    until you move through it at the ground level.
  • 16:09 - 16:13
    I once travelled 6,000 miles from Chengdu in Western China
  • 16:13 - 16:16
    overland through southeastern Tibet to Lhasa
  • 16:16 - 16:20
    with a young colleague, and it was only when I got to Lhasa
  • 16:20 - 16:23
    that I understood the face behind the statistics
  • 16:23 - 16:24
    you hear about:
  • 16:24 - 16:28
    6,000 sacred monuments torn apart to dust and ashes,
  • 16:28 - 16:31
    1.2 million people killed by the cadres
  • 16:31 - 16:32
    during the Cultural Revolution.
  • 16:33 - 16:35
    This young man's father had been ascribed to the Panchen Lama.
  • 16:35 - 16:37
    That meant he was instantly killed
  • 16:37 - 16:39
    at the time of the Chinese invasion.
  • 16:39 - 16:41
    His uncle fled with His Holiness in the Diaspora
  • 16:41 - 16:44
    that took the people to Nepal.
  • 16:44 - 16:46
    His mother was incarcerated
  • 16:46 - 16:48
    for the crime of being wealthy.
  • 16:49 - 16:51
    He was smuggled into the jail at the age of two
  • 16:51 - 16:53
    to hide beneath her skirt tails
  • 16:53 - 16:55
    because she couldn't bear to be without him.
  • 16:55 - 16:57
    The sister who had done that brave deed
  • 16:57 - 16:58
    was put into an education camp.
  • 16:58 - 17:00
    One day she inadvertently stepped on an armband
  • 17:01 - 17:03
    of Mao, and for that transgression,
  • 17:03 - 17:06
    she was given seven years of hard labor.
  • 17:06 - 17:09
    The pain of Tibet can be impossible to bear,
  • 17:09 - 17:12
    but the redemptive spirit of the people is something to behold.
  • 17:13 - 17:16
    And in the end, then, it really comes down to a choice:
  • 17:16 - 17:19
    do we want to live in a monochromatic world of monotony
  • 17:19 - 17:22
    or do we want to embrace a polychromatic world of diversity?
  • 17:22 - 17:25
    Margaret Mead, the great anthropologist, said, before she died,
  • 17:25 - 17:28
    that her greatest fear was that as we drifted towards
  • 17:28 - 17:30
    this blandly amorphous generic world view
  • 17:30 - 17:35
    not only would we see the entire range of the human imagination
  • 17:35 - 17:39
    reduced to a more narrow modality of thought,
  • 17:39 - 17:40
    but that we would wake from a dream one day
  • 17:40 - 17:43
    having forgotten there were even other possibilities.
  • 17:44 - 17:47
    And it's humbling to remember that our species has, perhaps,
  • 17:47 - 17:49
    been around for [150,000] years.
  • 17:49 - 17:52
    The Neolithic Revolution -- which gave us agriculture,
  • 17:52 - 17:54
    at which time we succumbed to the cult of the seed;
  • 17:54 - 17:56
    the poetry of the shaman was displaced
  • 17:56 - 17:57
    by the prose of the priesthood;
  • 17:57 - 18:00
    we created hierarchy specialization surplus --
  • 18:00 - 18:02
    is only 10,000 years ago.
  • 18:02 - 18:04
    The modern industrial world as we know it
  • 18:04 - 18:06
    is barely 300 years old.
  • 18:06 - 18:08
    Now, that shallow history doesn't suggest to me
  • 18:08 - 18:11
    that we have all the answers for all of the challenges
  • 18:11 - 18:13
    that will confront us in the ensuing millennia.
  • 18:13 - 18:15
    When these myriad cultures of the world
  • 18:15 - 18:18
    are asked the meaning of being human,
  • 18:18 - 18:20
    they respond with 10,000 different voices.
  • 18:20 - 18:26
    And it's within that song that we will all rediscover the possibility
  • 18:26 - 18:29
    of being what we are: a fully conscious species,
  • 18:29 - 18:32
    fully aware of ensuring that all peoples and all gardens
  • 18:32 - 18:38
    find a way to flourish. And there are great moments of optimism.
  • 18:38 - 18:41
    This is a photograph I took at the northern tip of Baffin Island
  • 18:41 - 18:43
    when I went narwhal hunting with some Inuit people,
  • 18:44 - 18:47
    and this man, Olayuk, told me a marvelous story of his grandfather.
  • 18:48 - 18:50
    The Canadian government has not always been kind
  • 18:50 - 18:52
    to the Inuit people, and during the 1950s,
  • 18:52 - 18:55
    to establish our sovereignty, we forced them into settlements.
  • 18:55 - 18:59
    This old man's grandfather refused to go.
  • 18:59 - 19:03
    The family, fearful for his life, took away all of his weapons,
  • 19:03 - 19:04
    all of his tools.
  • 19:05 - 19:07
    Now, you must understand that the Inuit did not fear the cold;
  • 19:07 - 19:08
    they took advantage of it.
  • 19:08 - 19:11
    The runners of their sleds were originally made of fish
  • 19:11 - 19:12
    wrapped in caribou hide.
  • 19:12 - 19:17
    So, this man's grandfather was not intimidated by the Arctic night
  • 19:17 - 19:19
    or the blizzard that was blowing.
  • 19:19 - 19:22
    He simply slipped outside, pulled down his sealskin trousers
  • 19:23 - 19:26
    and defecated into his hand. And as the feces began to freeze,
  • 19:26 - 19:29
    he shaped it into the form of a blade.
  • 19:29 - 19:31
    He put a spray of saliva on the edge of the shit knife
  • 19:31 - 19:34
    and as it finally froze solid, he butchered a dog with it.
  • 19:34 - 19:37
    He skinned the dog and improvised a harness,
  • 19:37 - 19:40
    took the ribcage of the dog and improvised a sled,
  • 19:41 - 19:42
    harnessed up an adjacent dog,
  • 19:42 - 19:46
    and disappeared over the ice floes, shit knife in belt.
  • 19:46 - 19:50
    Talk about getting by with nothing. (Laughter)
  • 19:50 - 19:51
    And this, in many ways --
  • 19:51 - 19:53
    (Applause) --
  • 19:53 - 19:55
    is a symbol of the resilience of the Inuit people
  • 19:55 - 19:58
    and of all indigenous people around the world.
  • 19:58 - 20:00
    The Canadian government in April of 1999
  • 20:00 - 20:03
    gave back to total control of the Inuit
  • 20:03 - 20:06
    an area of land larger than California and Texas put together.
  • 20:06 - 20:08
    It's our new homeland. It's called Nunavut.
  • 20:09 - 20:12
    It's an independent territory. They control all mineral resources.
  • 20:12 - 20:14
    An amazing example of how a nation-state
  • 20:14 - 20:18
    can seek restitution with its people.
  • 20:19 - 20:22
    And finally, in the end, I think it's pretty obvious
  • 20:22 - 20:23
    at least to all of all us who've traveled
  • 20:23 - 20:25
    in these remote reaches of the planet,
  • 20:27 - 20:28
    to realize that they're not remote at all.
  • 20:28 - 20:30
    They're homelands of somebody.
  • 20:30 - 20:32
    They represent branches of the human imagination
  • 20:32 - 20:36
    that go back to the dawn of time. And for all of us,
  • 20:36 - 20:39
    the dreams of these children, like the dreams of our own children,
  • 20:39 - 20:42
    become part of the naked geography of hope.
  • 20:42 - 20:46
    So, what we're trying to do at the National Geographic, finally,
  • 20:46 - 20:50
    is, we believe that politicians will never accomplish anything.
  • 20:50 - 20:51
    We think that polemics --
  • 20:51 - 20:53
    (Applause) --
  • 20:53 - 20:55
    we think that polemics are not persuasive,
  • 20:55 - 20:58
    but we think that storytelling can change the world,
  • 20:58 - 21:01
    and so we are probably the best storytelling institution
  • 21:01 - 21:04
    in the world. We get 35 million hits on our website every month.
  • 21:04 - 21:07
    156 nations carry our television channel.
  • 21:08 - 21:10
    Our magazines are read by millions.
  • 21:10 - 21:13
    And what we're doing is a series of journeys
  • 21:13 - 21:15
    to the ethnosphere where we're going to take our audience
  • 21:15 - 21:17
    to places of such cultural wonder
  • 21:18 - 21:20
    that they cannot help but come away dazzled
  • 21:20 - 21:22
    by what they have seen, and hopefully, therefore,
  • 21:22 - 21:25
    embrace gradually, one by one,
  • 21:25 - 21:27
    the central revelation of anthropology:
  • 21:27 - 21:31
    that this world deserves to exist in a diverse way,
  • 21:31 - 21:32
    that we can find a way to live
  • 21:32 - 21:35
    in a truly multicultural, pluralistic world
  • 21:35 - 21:37
    where all of the wisdom of all peoples
  • 21:37 - 21:40
    can contribute to our collective well-being.
  • 21:40 - 21:41
    Thank you very much.
  • 21:41 - 21:43
    (Applause)
Title:
Dreams from endangered cultures
Speaker:
Wade Davis
Description:

With stunning photos and stories, National Geographic Explorer Wade Davis celebrates the extraordinary diversity of the world's indigenous cultures, which are disappearing from the planet at an alarming rate.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
21:44
TED edited English subtitles for Dreams from endangered cultures
TED added a translation

English subtitles

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