Clemantine Wamariya: War and what comes after
克萊門坦 · 瓦瑪莉亞: 戰爭和戰爭之後
In her work, Clemantine Wamariya is learning and sharing how remembering our life experiences in story form guides us to make sense and appreciate our present moments. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
we have to keep trying.
我們得要持續嘗試。
being teased by everybody,
and my neighbor's.
和鄰居的花園裡玩。
began to speak in whispers
that I asked a question.
when they woke us.
to our grandparent's,
送到我們的祖父母家,
would blow away.
they were human.
to rest for a little bit
and her family on refugee status.
以難民的身份來到美國。
standing right here.
都還有這種感覺。
knowing that they were dead
American way possible.
there is absolutely nothing,
we lost with each other
應該給彼此的時間,
moved to the United States,
can make sense of what happened to us.
發生在我們身上的事真正化解。
by our own experience.
by the violence of the world
而破碎、麻木,及沉默。
we create every single day.
that we impose on ourselves
the many magnitudes
that goes on in the world,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Clemantine Wamariya - Storyteller, human rights advocateIn her work, Clemantine Wamariya is learning and sharing how remembering our life experiences in story form guides us to make sense and appreciate our present moments.
Why you should listen
Clemantine Wamariya is a human rights advocate, social entrepreneur and public speaker committed to inspiring others through the power of storytelling. Her personal accounts of childhood in Rwanda, displacement throughout war-torn countries and various refugee camps have encouraged myriads of people to persevere despite great odds. With no formal education before the age of 13, Wamariya went on to graduate from Yale University with a BA in Comparative Literature.
Wamariya was recognized for her dedication to improving the lives of others, especially the underserved. In 2011, President Obama appointed her, as the youngest member in history, to the board of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, and she was reappointed in 2016. She continues to share her experiences of adversity and seized opportunities as a way to reframe the way her audiences think, whether it be about their own privilege or basic human rights -- and she strives to catalyze development personally, locally and globally. Though still a nomad, she is based out of San Francisco, where she is writing her first book, due in spring 2018.
Clemantine Wamariya | Speaker | TED.com