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Conservation: A Love Story | Elsaphan Njora | TED
Conservation: A Love Story | Elsaphan Njora | TED
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Phụ đề (145)
0:08
(Music)
0:14
(Singing in Swahili) Hii safari ni ya mapenzi
0:20
Nina haja ya kuenzi
0:26
(Singing in English) Here’s my hand. Take me now.
0:32
Don't resist. Don't ask me how.
0:38
For the last three and a half years,
0:40
I have travelled more than I have ever done in all my years.
0:44
I have interacted with cultures, landscapes and legends across the land.
0:49
And I've been enriched by these vast experiences
0:52
that I'm so fortunate to have.
0:54
So much so that some of my songs
0:56
are starting to sound like travel journals.
0:59
“Hii safari ni ya mapenzi” means “this journey is of love.”
1:03
From the crater in Silali to the springs at Mzima.
1:07
The cool blue waters of Lake Challa to the sandy beaches of Robinson Island.
1:13
The waterfalls at Ruskebe to the island of Sumba.
1:17
The small elephants of Aberdares to the giants in Amboseli.
1:22
The sometimes feisty buffaloes of Mount Kilimambogo
1:26
to the lilac-breasted roller in the plains.
1:28
The rivers, the valleys, the people.
1:31
I am in awe of what this country has to offer.
1:35
This wealth, this beauty is meant to be shared.
1:38
It is meant to be passed on.
1:40
After all, we too found it here.
1:43
And we are direct beneficiaries
1:45
of the intentional or accidental conservation efforts of the past.
1:50
The question is: What shall we leave for those who are coming after us?
1:54
Allow me to take you on a journey.
1:57
Let us start in a county called Nyahururu,
2:00
in a peculiar water body called Lake Ol' Bolossat,
2:03
which is both a salty and fresh water lake.
2:07
It is possible that one day we might not have it anymore.
2:12
Delaying to take measures to curb cultivation
2:14
around riparian land near the lake
2:17
will most certainly lead to its destruction.
2:20
And in a few years time, it might as well never have existed.
2:24
But a lake is not just a lake.
2:27
Now let's go to Machakos County.
2:31
The land of the long-distance traders.
2:34
The flat landscape of enchantment and the crescendo music lovers.
2:39
(Singing in Swahili)
2:47
The home of the great seer who prophesied the coming of the British.
2:52
And once home to a vast indigenous forest
2:54
whose remnants can be found at Kiima Kimwe,
2:57
which means "one hill."
2:59
There, at the sacred hill of the Akamba,
3:02
you'll see there was evidence that this was a vast forest.
3:05
However, Machakos today stands in contrast
3:09
to what our ancestors once called home.
3:12
Massive deforestation has transformed a large section of it
3:16
into a semi-arid expanse where water is scarce.
3:19
Now the forest and the legends, and the stories
3:22
might as well never have existed.
3:24
But the forest is not just a forest.
3:27
These are ecosystems that support a great number of species
3:31
from birds, land animals, fish, insects, plants,
3:35
some of which are endemic to the area
3:37
and serve as nature's order in the great equation of balance.
3:41
The very same balance that we are here to discuss.
3:44
But our farmers need land to till.
3:47
And when we need wood, don't we?
3:50
But pause.
3:52
This is not a piece to patronize.
3:55
Instead, it's to paint a picture
3:57
of perhaps what could be possible if we took action,
4:01
and to bear the news of the efforts that have been taken so far.
4:05
The proverbial what if,
4:07
but now with a motive to reconsider, reconfigure and recruit.
4:12
What if there is another way to go about it?
4:15
What if there's another way to coexist with nature,
4:18
make a living and leave an inheritance for those who are coming after us?
4:24
Let us go to Kilifi County, right next to the Indian Ocean.
4:29
Somewhere at the shores of Watamu
4:32
stands a testament of what could be if we reimagined conservation.
4:38
A group called Dabaso, through research and collaboration,
4:42
began planting mangroves 20 years ago
4:45
in an effort to conserve.
4:46
20 years of insults and ridicule, doubts and second thoughts.
4:52
But now the shores breathe more life into the world
4:56
and give better sanctuary for sea life.
4:58
And an establishment called Crab Shack Hotel
5:02
stands as a tourist attraction,
5:04
a pillar of conservation and commerce,
5:08
merging nature, community and profit in an eco-friendly existence.
5:15
And back in Machakos,
5:17
they are making better use of the land,
5:19
and they are repopulating the indigenous seedlings.
5:23
With the efforts of conservationists,
5:24
we might just see the return of the trees of old.
5:27
And at Lake Ol’ Bolossat they are resettling the farmers,
5:30
and they are saving the lake.
5:32
It is no longer a thing of what if.
5:35
It's a possibility.
5:37
We can save our ecosystems, our species and our futures.
5:42
We can. The evidence is clear across the world.
5:46
So what is taking us so long?
5:49
I've never understood why it takes so much effort
5:52
to do what we know we need to do.
5:56
Maybe it is a human condition
5:57
to procrastinate until it is too late
6:00
in order to catch that edge,
6:02
that elusive high of uncertainty, thinking we have some kind of control.
6:06
Only problem is, there is no control.
6:10
However, I believe that if we search deep inside for something bigger,
6:14
something bigger than ourselves,
6:17
then we light a fire that can take us all the way to a better world.
6:23
Now I'm no expert,
6:25
but I believe at the core of conservation is love.
6:30
Love for the land,
6:32
love for the people of the land
6:33
and most importantly, love for those who will come after us.
6:39
And with this, I think we can find a way
6:41
to work together in a manner that will benefit nature and community,
6:45
in a manner that will give honor and dignity.
6:48
And so this journey has to be a journey of love.
6:53
And while that may take longer,
6:55
the effects are profound and far-reaching enough
6:58
to keep the world breathing.
7:01
Finally, let me complete this journey with imagination.
7:05
I will ask you to indulge me.
7:07
Close your eyes.
7:09
I'm talking to you guys.
7:11
Close your eyes.
7:12
I want you to envision that place that you want transformed.
7:17
Do you have it?
7:19
You have it?
7:20
So I want us to take this journey together.
7:23
On the count of three, I want you to say it out loud.
7:27
One.
7:28
Two. Three.
7:30
(Audience speaks)
7:36
(Singing in Swahili) Hii safari ni ya mapenzi
7:41
Nina haja ya kuenzi
7:47
(Singing in English) Here’s my hand. Take me now.
7:53
Don't resist. Don't ask me how.
7:58
Ooh!
8:03
I'm on fire for you.
8:08
I'm on fire.
8:10
Ooh!
8:14
I'm on fire for you.
8:20
I'm on fire.
8:22
Ooh!
8:26
I'm on fire for you.
8:32
I'm on fire.
8:36
(Applause)
Conservation: A Love Story | Elsaphan Njora | TED - Video học tiếng Anh