Natalie Warne: Being young and making an impact
Natalie Warne did not let being too young stop her from running a successful campaign for the Invisible Children project In this talk, she calls on young people everywhere not to let age stop them from changing the world. Full bio
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the same sense of strength and pride.
by a single wall
on the South Side of Chicago.
of my siblings and I
of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
I used to stand on my tippy-toes,
and just pretend that it was me
the Civil Rights Movement,
and who transformed a generation
most iconic speeches.
important moment for me as a kid,
that I realized
who led this revolution,
made up of anonymous extraordinaries.
who work selflessly and vigorously
and not recognition.
the significance of this moment,
the most incredible family in the world.
struggle with a lot
and pancreatitis,
for me to watch my hero
I had an identity crisis.
during high school,
to an extremely racist high school.
they would tell me,
You have to choose, black or white."
I just resented being either.
my senior year rolls around, 2008,
ambiguous is this new cool fad,
for you to like you. You're pretty now."
about what other people thought
whatever school I was going to be at next,
called "Invisible Children"
given AK-47s and forced to kill,
forced to kill their own parents,
for no political or religious reason,
five years older than me.
kind of stirring inside of me,
if it was pity,
because this was the first time
and I started asking questions.
at Invisible Children told me
just get this bill passed,
one, it would apprehend Joseph Kony
for the recovery of these regions
by 25 years of war.
to make this happen.
idealistic 18- to 20-year-olds
in San Diego with Invisible Children.
We weren't getting paid for this
or crazy -- my parents did.
insane not to go.
and we would do whatever it took
the Rescue of Joseph Kony's Child Soldiers
in a hundred cities worldwide
on behalf of these child soldiers,
leaving the cities until we were rescued.
why not go for the queen bee? Right?
but I mean, we were trying to think big.
more impossible things?
to April to get this done.
that I spent on logistics,
to rallying participants
that I was rejected
or politicians' secretaries.
that I spent personally
to stay awake during this movement.
from the kidney infection I got
due to this event.
of the ridiculous things that we did
and the event begins.
They were beautiful.
were rescued but one:
from all over the world,
called "Together We Are Free"
and my attempt to get Oprah.
When I drove into the office,
was there a group outside?
asking if I would talk to them
called "Invisible Children,"
to state their case.
so much for having us.
have seen the story of 30,000 children
named Joseph Kony.
the profile of this issue
war in Africa and rescue those kids
still in East Africa.
this girl Natalie here,
is to get Oprah."
hundreds started coming.
Together we are free!
that this is the moment in my life,
made me an extraordinary.
watched the "Oprah Winfrey Show."
on Facebook for a week.
my story was featured in this film,
to make this happen.
on his shoulders,
from day one in Chicago,
just as many sleepless nights as I did.
her name's Bethany Bylsma.
the most beautiful events that we held.
the day before the events
get to come to the rescue.
a hundred boxes of pizza for us,
of Michigan and Randolph
doing whatever they could,
from their shoulders,
on the way to that bill.
our eyes set on from day one.
end Africa's longest-running war.
a hundred thousand people
from around the world.
cheesing in the background.
is what made all of it worth it.
anonymous extraordinaries
impossible can be done.
They boost our confidence.
strung together don't fuel a movement.
the anonymous extraordinaries behind it.
pushing on through the rescue
I was able to go to Africa at one point.
living in this conflict their entire life,
what drives you.
to be the next Shepard Fairey
with everything that you have --
that's what you believe in,
to define our generation,
after the things that we love
about what people thought about me.
about this conference,
that you love, and just chase after it.
is going to change this world
my being on TED, doesn't define me,
to follow me home to LA,
and nannying to pay the bills
of becoming a filmmaker.
to be extraordinary.
is closed and the cameras are off,
that I want to drive home to you,
not just to you but to myself,
that make us extraordinary,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Natalie Warne - ActivistNatalie Warne did not let being too young stop her from running a successful campaign for the Invisible Children project In this talk, she calls on young people everywhere not to let age stop them from changing the world.
Why you should listen
When she was 17, Natalie Warne learned about the Invisible Children Project -- a campaign to rescue Ugandan children from Joseph Kony’s child armies. As an intern for Invisible Children, she led a nation-wide campaign for the project. She successfully got the campaign featured on the Oprah Winfrey show, a victory that dramatically raised the profile of the movement. Natalie now works as a film editor in Los Angeles.
Natalie Warne | Speaker | TED.com