ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sheryl WuDunn - Author, journalist
As a journalist reporting on China, Sheryl WuDunn saw the everyday oppression of women around the world. She and Nick Kristof wrote "Half the Sky," chronicling women's stories of horror and, especially, hope.

Why you should listen

Sheryl WuDunn and her husband, Nick Kristof, won a Pulitzer for their New York Times coverage of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests. Their joint reporting work in China and other developing nations convinced them both that, just as slavery was the moral issue of the 19th century, sex trafficking, gender-based violence and other abuses make women's rights the moral issue of the 21st.

In their book Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide, WuDunn and Kristof make the case for empowering women as a means of development. Women tend to spend more on education, nutrition and business, the economic engines of growth in a community. And if we can find ways to develop the untapped potential of the millions of women who are now left uneducated, denied basic rights, oppressed and threatened -- we'll turn on a firehose of economic power that could transform the developing world.

More profile about the speaker
Sheryl WuDunn | Speaker | TED.com
TEDGlobal 2010

Sheryl WuDunn: Our century's greatest injustice

Filmed:
1,194,863 views

Sheryl WuDunn's book "Half the Sky" investigates the oppression of women globally. Her stories shock. Only when women in developing countries have equal access to education and economic opportunity will we be using all our human resources.
- Author, journalist
As a journalist reporting on China, Sheryl WuDunn saw the everyday oppression of women around the world. She and Nick Kristof wrote "Half the Sky," chronicling women's stories of horror and, especially, hope. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:16
The global challenge that I want to talk to you about today
0
1000
3000
00:19
rarely makes the front pages.
1
4000
2000
00:21
It, however, is enormous
2
6000
3000
00:24
in both scale and importance.
3
9000
3000
00:27
Look, you all are very well traveled;
4
12000
3000
00:30
this is TEDGlobal after all.
5
15000
2000
00:32
But I do hope to take you to some places
6
17000
2000
00:34
you've never been to before.
7
19000
2000
00:36
So, let's start off in China.
8
21000
2000
00:38
This photo was taken two weeks ago.
9
23000
3000
00:41
Actually, one indication is that little boy on my husband's shoulders
10
26000
3000
00:44
has just graduated from high school.
11
29000
2000
00:46
(Laughter)
12
31000
2000
00:48
But this is Tiananmen Square.
13
33000
2000
00:50
Many of you have been there. It's not the real China.
14
35000
3000
00:53
Let me take you to the real China.
15
38000
2000
00:55
This is in the Dabian Mountains
16
40000
2000
00:57
in the remote part of Hubei province in central China.
17
42000
3000
01:01
Dai Manju is 13 years old at the time the story starts.
18
46000
3000
01:04
She lives with her parents,
19
49000
2000
01:06
her two brothers and her great-aunt.
20
51000
3000
01:09
They have a hut that has no electricity,
21
54000
2000
01:11
no running water,
22
56000
2000
01:13
no wristwatch, no bicycle.
23
58000
2000
01:15
And they share this great splendor
24
60000
2000
01:17
with a very large pig.
25
62000
3000
01:20
Dai Manju was in sixth grade when her parents said,
26
65000
3000
01:23
"We're going to pull you out of school
27
68000
2000
01:25
because the 13-dollar school fees are too much for us.
28
70000
3000
01:28
You're going to be spending the rest of your life in the rice paddies.
29
73000
2000
01:30
Why would we waste this money on you?"
30
75000
2000
01:32
This is what happens to girls in remote areas.
31
77000
3000
01:35
Turns out that Dai Manju was
32
80000
2000
01:37
the best pupil in her grade.
33
82000
2000
01:39
She still made the two-hour trek to the schoolhouse
34
84000
3000
01:42
and tried to catch every little bit of information
35
87000
3000
01:45
that seeped out of the doors.
36
90000
2000
01:47
We wrote about her in The New York Times.
37
92000
2000
01:49
We got a flood of donations --
38
94000
3000
01:52
mostly 13-dollar checks
39
97000
3000
01:55
because New York Times readers are very generous
40
100000
2000
01:57
in tiny amounts
41
102000
2000
01:59
(Laughter)
42
104000
2000
02:01
but then, we got a money transfer
43
106000
3000
02:04
for $10,000 --
44
109000
2000
02:06
really nice guy.
45
111000
2000
02:08
We turned the money over to that man there, the principal of the school.
46
113000
3000
02:11
He was delighted.
47
116000
2000
02:13
He thought, "Oh, I can renovate the school.
48
118000
2000
02:15
I can give scholarships to all the girls,
49
120000
2000
02:17
you know, if they work hard and stay in school.
50
122000
2000
02:19
So Dai Manju basically
51
124000
2000
02:21
finished out middle school.
52
126000
2000
02:23
She went to high school.
53
128000
2000
02:25
She went to vocational school for accounting.
54
130000
2000
02:27
She scouted for jobs down in Guangdong province in the south.
55
132000
3000
02:30
She found a job, she scouted for jobs
56
135000
2000
02:32
for her classmates and her friends.
57
137000
2000
02:34
She sent money back to her family.
58
139000
3000
02:37
They built a new house,
59
142000
2000
02:39
this time with running water,
60
144000
2000
02:41
electricity, a bicycle,
61
146000
2000
02:43
no pig.
62
148000
2000
02:45
What we saw was a natural experiment.
63
150000
3000
02:48
It is rare to get an exogenous investment
64
153000
2000
02:50
in girls' education.
65
155000
2000
02:52
And over the years, as we followed Dai Manju, we were able to see
66
157000
3000
02:55
that she was able to move out of a vicious cycle
67
160000
3000
02:58
and into a virtuous cycle.
68
163000
2000
03:00
She not only changed her own dynamic,
69
165000
2000
03:02
she changed her household, she changed her family, her village.
70
167000
3000
03:05
The village became a real standout.
71
170000
3000
03:08
Of course, most of China was flourishing at the time,
72
173000
3000
03:11
but they were able to get a road built
73
176000
3000
03:14
to link them up to the rest of China.
74
179000
2000
03:16
And that brings me to my first major
75
181000
3000
03:19
of two tenets of "Half the Sky."
76
184000
2000
03:21
And that is that
77
186000
2000
03:23
the central moral challenge
78
188000
2000
03:25
of this century
79
190000
2000
03:27
is gender inequity.
80
192000
2000
03:29
In the 19th century, it was slavery.
81
194000
2000
03:31
In the 20th century, it was totalitarianism.
82
196000
3000
03:34
The cause of our time
83
199000
2000
03:36
is the brutality that so many people
84
201000
2000
03:38
face around the world because of their gender.
85
203000
3000
03:41
So some of you may be thinking,
86
206000
2000
03:43
"Gosh, that's hyperbole.
87
208000
2000
03:45
She's exaggerating."
88
210000
2000
03:47
Well, let me ask you this question.
89
212000
2000
03:49
How many of you think there are more males or more females in the world?
90
214000
3000
03:52
Let me take a poll. How many of you think there are more males in the world?
91
217000
3000
03:55
Hands up, please.
92
220000
2000
03:57
How many of you think -- a few -- how many of you there are more females in the world?
93
222000
3000
04:00
Okay, most of you.
94
225000
2000
04:02
Well, you know this latter group, you're wrong.
95
227000
2000
04:04
There are, true enough,
96
229000
2000
04:06
in Europe and the West,
97
231000
2000
04:08
when women and men
98
233000
2000
04:10
have equal access to food and health care,
99
235000
2000
04:12
there are more women, we live longer.
100
237000
2000
04:14
But in most of the rest of the world, that's not the case.
101
239000
3000
04:17
In fact, demographers have shown
102
242000
2000
04:19
that there are anywhere between 60 million
103
244000
2000
04:21
and 100 million
104
246000
2000
04:23
missing females in the current population.
105
248000
3000
04:26
And, you know, it happens for several reasons.
106
251000
3000
04:29
For instance, in the last half-century,
107
254000
2000
04:31
more girls were discriminated to death
108
256000
3000
04:34
than all the people killed on all the battlefields
109
259000
2000
04:36
in the 20th century.
110
261000
3000
04:39
Sometimes it's also because of the sonogram.
111
264000
2000
04:41
Girls get aborted before they're even born
112
266000
3000
04:44
when there are scarce resources.
113
269000
2000
04:46
This girl here, for instance,
114
271000
2000
04:48
is in a feeding center in Ethiopia.
115
273000
2000
04:50
The entire center was filled with girls like her.
116
275000
3000
04:53
What's remarkable is that her brothers, in the same family,
117
278000
3000
04:56
were totally fine.
118
281000
2000
04:58
In India, in the first year of life,
119
283000
2000
05:00
from zero to one,
120
285000
2000
05:02
boy and girl babies basically survive at the same rate
121
287000
3000
05:05
because they depend upon the breast,
122
290000
2000
05:07
and the breast shows no son preference.
123
292000
2000
05:09
From one to five,
124
294000
3000
05:12
girls die at a 50 percent higher mortality rate
125
297000
3000
05:15
than boys, in all of India.
126
300000
3000
05:18
The second tenet of "Half the Sky"
127
303000
3000
05:21
is that, let's put aside the morality of all the right and wrong of it all,
128
306000
3000
05:24
and just on a purely practical level,
129
309000
3000
05:27
we think that
130
312000
2000
05:29
one of the best ways to fight poverty and to fight terrorism
131
314000
3000
05:32
is to educate girls
132
317000
2000
05:34
and to bring women into the formal labor force.
133
319000
3000
05:37
Poverty, for instance.
134
322000
2000
05:39
There are three reasons why this is the case.
135
324000
2000
05:41
For one, overpopulation is one of
136
326000
2000
05:43
the persistent causes of poverty.
137
328000
3000
05:46
And you know, when you educate a boy,
138
331000
2000
05:48
his family tends to have fewer kids,
139
333000
2000
05:50
but only slightly.
140
335000
2000
05:52
When you educate a girl,
141
337000
2000
05:54
she tends to have significantly fewer kids.
142
339000
3000
05:57
The second reason is
143
342000
3000
06:00
it has to do with spending.
144
345000
2000
06:02
It's kind of like the dirty, little secret of poverty,
145
347000
2000
06:04
which is that,
146
349000
2000
06:06
not only do poor people
147
351000
2000
06:08
take in very little income,
148
353000
2000
06:10
but also, the income that they take in,
149
355000
2000
06:12
they don't spend it very wisely,
150
357000
3000
06:15
and unfortunately, most of that spending is done by men.
151
360000
3000
06:18
So research has shown,
152
363000
2000
06:20
if you look at people who live under two dollars a day --
153
365000
3000
06:23
one metric of poverty --
154
368000
2000
06:25
two percent of that take-home pay
155
370000
2000
06:27
goes to this basket here, in education.
156
372000
3000
06:30
20 percent goes to a basket that is a combination of
157
375000
3000
06:33
alcohol, tobacco, sugary drinks --
158
378000
2000
06:35
and prostitution and festivals.
159
380000
3000
06:38
If you just take four percentage points
160
383000
2000
06:40
and put it into this basket,
161
385000
2000
06:42
you would have a transformative effect.
162
387000
3000
06:46
The last reason has to do
163
391000
2000
06:48
with women being part of the solution, not the problem.
164
393000
3000
06:51
You need to use scarce resources.
165
396000
2000
06:53
It's a waste of resources if you don't use someone like Dai Manju.
166
398000
3000
06:56
Bill Gates put it very well
167
401000
2000
06:58
when he was traveling through Saudi Arabia.
168
403000
2000
07:00
He was speaking to an audience much like yourselves.
169
405000
3000
07:03
However, two-thirds of the way there was a barrier.
170
408000
3000
07:06
On this side was men,
171
411000
2000
07:08
and then the barrier, and this side was women.
172
413000
2000
07:10
And someone from this side of the room got up and said,
173
415000
2000
07:12
"Mr. Gates, we have here as our goal in Saudi Arabia
174
417000
3000
07:15
to be one of the top 10 countries
175
420000
2000
07:17
when it comes to technology.
176
422000
2000
07:19
Do you think we'll make it?"
177
424000
2000
07:21
So Bill Gates, as he was staring out at the audience, he said,
178
426000
3000
07:24
"If you're not fully utilizing half the resources in your country,
179
429000
3000
07:27
there is no way you will get anywhere near the top 10."
180
432000
3000
07:30
So here is Bill of Arabia.
181
435000
3000
07:33
(Laughter)
182
438000
2000
07:35
So what would some of the specific challenges
183
440000
2000
07:37
look like?
184
442000
2000
07:40
I would say, on the top of the agenda
185
445000
3000
07:43
is sex trafficking.
186
448000
2000
07:45
And I'll just say two things about this.
187
450000
2000
07:47
The slavery at the peak of the slave trade
188
452000
3000
07:50
in the 1780s:
189
455000
3000
07:53
there were about 80,000 slaves
190
458000
2000
07:55
transported from Africa to the New World.
191
460000
3000
07:58
Now, modern slavery:
192
463000
3000
08:01
according to State Department rough statistics,
193
466000
3000
08:04
there are about 800,000 -- 10 times the number --
194
469000
3000
08:07
that are trafficked across international borders.
195
472000
3000
08:10
And that does not even include those
196
475000
2000
08:12
that are trafficked within country borders,
197
477000
2000
08:14
which is a substantial portion.
198
479000
3000
08:17
And if you look at
199
482000
2000
08:19
another factor, another contrast,
200
484000
3000
08:22
a slave back then is worth
201
487000
2000
08:24
about $40,000
202
489000
2000
08:26
in today's money.
203
491000
2000
08:28
Today, you can buy a girl trafficked
204
493000
3000
08:31
for a few hundred dollars,
205
496000
2000
08:33
which means she's actually more disposable.
206
498000
3000
08:36
But you know, there is progress being made
207
501000
3000
08:39
in places like Cambodia and Thailand.
208
504000
2000
08:41
We don't have to expect a world
209
506000
2000
08:43
where girls are bought and sold or killed.
210
508000
3000
08:46
The second item on the agenda
211
511000
2000
08:48
is maternal mortality.
212
513000
3000
08:51
You know, childbirth in this part of the world
213
516000
3000
08:54
is a wonderful event.
214
519000
2000
08:56
In Niger, one in seven women
215
521000
3000
08:59
can expect to die during childbirth.
216
524000
3000
09:02
Around the world,
217
527000
2000
09:04
one woman dies every minute and a half from childbirth.
218
529000
4000
09:08
You know, it's not as though
219
533000
2000
09:10
we don't have the technological solution,
220
535000
3000
09:13
but these women have three strikes against them:
221
538000
3000
09:16
they are poor, they are rural
222
541000
2000
09:18
and they are female.
223
543000
3000
09:21
You know, for every woman who does die,
224
546000
2000
09:23
there are 20 who survive
225
548000
2000
09:25
but end up with an injury.
226
550000
2000
09:27
And the most devastating injury
227
552000
2000
09:29
is obstetric fistula.
228
554000
2000
09:31
It's a tearing during obstructed labor
229
556000
2000
09:33
that leaves a woman incontinent.
230
558000
3000
09:36
Let me tell you about Mahabuba.
231
561000
2000
09:38
She lives in Ethiopia.
232
563000
2000
09:40
She was married against her will at age 13.
233
565000
3000
09:43
She got pregnant, ran to the bush to have the baby,
234
568000
3000
09:46
but you know, her body was very immature,
235
571000
3000
09:49
and she ended up having obstructed labor.
236
574000
3000
09:52
The baby died, and she ended up with a fistula.
237
577000
3000
09:55
So that meant she was incontinent;
238
580000
2000
09:57
she couldn't control her wastes.
239
582000
3000
10:00
In a word, she stank.
240
585000
2000
10:02
The villagers thought she was cursed; they didn't know what to do with her.
241
587000
3000
10:05
So finally, they put her at the edge of the village in a hut.
242
590000
3000
10:08
They ripped off the door
243
593000
2000
10:10
so that the hyenas would get her at night.
244
595000
3000
10:13
That night, there was a stick in the hut.
245
598000
3000
10:16
She fought off the hyenas with that stick.
246
601000
3000
10:19
And the next morning,
247
604000
2000
10:21
she knew if she could get to a nearby village where there was a foreign missionary,
248
606000
3000
10:24
she would be saved.
249
609000
2000
10:26
Because she had some damage to her nerves,
250
611000
2000
10:28
she crawled all the way -- 30 miles --
251
613000
3000
10:31
to that doorstep, half dead.
252
616000
3000
10:34
The foreign missionary opened the door,
253
619000
2000
10:36
knew exactly what had happened,
254
621000
2000
10:38
took her to a nearby fistula hospital in Addis Ababa,
255
623000
3000
10:41
and she was repaired
256
626000
2000
10:43
with a 350-dollar operation.
257
628000
3000
10:46
The doctors and nurses there noticed
258
631000
2000
10:48
that she was not only a survivor,
259
633000
2000
10:50
she was really clever, and they made her a nurse.
260
635000
3000
10:53
So now, Mahabuba,
261
638000
2000
10:55
she is saving the lives
262
640000
2000
10:57
of hundreds, thousands, of women.
263
642000
2000
10:59
She has become part of the solution, not the problem.
264
644000
2000
11:01
She's moved out of a vicious cycle
265
646000
2000
11:03
and into a virtuous cycle.
266
648000
2000
11:05
I've talked about some of the challenges,
267
650000
3000
11:08
let me talk about some of the solutions,
268
653000
2000
11:10
and there are predictable solutions.
269
655000
3000
11:13
I've hinted at them: education
270
658000
2000
11:15
and also economic opportunity.
271
660000
3000
11:18
So of course, when you educate a girl,
272
663000
3000
11:21
she tends to get married later on in life,
273
666000
3000
11:24
she tends to have kids later on in life, she tends to have fewer kids,
274
669000
3000
11:27
and those kids that she does have,
275
672000
2000
11:29
she educates them in a more enlightened fashion.
276
674000
2000
11:31
With economic opportunity,
277
676000
2000
11:33
it can be transformative.
278
678000
2000
11:35
Let me tell you about Saima.
279
680000
2000
11:37
She lives in a small village outside Lahore, Pakistan.
280
682000
3000
11:41
And at the time, she was miserable.
281
686000
2000
11:43
She was beaten every single day
282
688000
2000
11:45
by her husband, who was unemployed.
283
690000
2000
11:47
He was kind of a gambler type -- and unemployable, therefore --
284
692000
3000
11:50
and took his frustrations out on her.
285
695000
2000
11:52
Well, when she had her second daughter,
286
697000
2000
11:54
her mother in-law told her son,
287
699000
3000
11:57
"I think you'd better get a second wife.
288
702000
2000
11:59
Saima's not going to produce you a son."
289
704000
3000
12:03
This is when she had her second daughter.
290
708000
2000
12:05
At the time, there was
291
710000
2000
12:07
a microlending group in the village
292
712000
2000
12:09
that gave her a 65-dollar loan.
293
714000
3000
12:12
Saima took that money,
294
717000
3000
12:15
and she started an embroidery business.
295
720000
3000
12:18
The merchants liked her embroidery; it sold very well,
296
723000
2000
12:20
and they kept asking for more.
297
725000
2000
12:22
And when she couldn't produce enough,
298
727000
2000
12:24
she hired other women in the village.
299
729000
2000
12:26
Pretty soon she had 30 women in the village
300
731000
3000
12:29
working for her embroidery business.
301
734000
2000
12:31
And then,
302
736000
2000
12:33
when she had to transport all of the embroidery goods
303
738000
3000
12:36
from the village to the marketplace,
304
741000
2000
12:38
she needed someone to help her do the transport,
305
743000
2000
12:40
so she hired her husband.
306
745000
2000
12:42
So now they're in it together.
307
747000
2000
12:44
He does the transportation and distribution,
308
749000
2000
12:46
and she does the production and sourcing.
309
751000
2000
12:48
And now they have a third daughter,
310
753000
3000
12:51
and the daughters, all of them, are being tutored in education
311
756000
3000
12:54
because Saima knows what's really important.
312
759000
3000
12:57
Which brings me to the final element, which is education.
313
762000
3000
13:01
Larry Summers, when he was chief economist at the World Bank,
314
766000
3000
13:04
once said that, "It may well be
315
769000
3000
13:07
that the highest return on investment
316
772000
2000
13:09
in the developing world
317
774000
2000
13:11
is in girls' education."
318
776000
3000
13:14
Let me tell you about Beatrice Biira.
319
779000
2000
13:16
Beatrice was living in Uganda
320
781000
3000
13:19
near the Congo border,
321
784000
2000
13:21
and like Dai Manju, she didn't go to school.
322
786000
2000
13:23
Actually, she had never been to school,
323
788000
3000
13:26
not to a lick, one day.
324
791000
2000
13:28
Her parents, again, said,
325
793000
2000
13:30
"Why should we spend the money on her?
326
795000
2000
13:32
She's going to spend most of her life lugging water back and forth."
327
797000
3000
13:35
Well, it just so happens, at that time,
328
800000
3000
13:38
there was a group in Connecticut
329
803000
3000
13:41
called the Niantic Community Church Group in Connecticut.
330
806000
3000
13:44
They made a donation to an organization
331
809000
2000
13:46
based in Arkansas
332
811000
2000
13:48
called Heifer International.
333
813000
2000
13:50
Heifer sent two goats to Africa.
334
815000
3000
13:53
One of them ended up with Beatrice's parents,
335
818000
3000
13:56
and that goat had twins.
336
821000
2000
13:58
The twins started producing milk.
337
823000
2000
14:00
They sold the milk for cash.
338
825000
2000
14:02
The cash started accumulating,
339
827000
2000
14:04
and pretty soon the parents said,
340
829000
2000
14:06
"You know, we've got enough money. Let's send Beatrice to school."
341
831000
3000
14:09
So at nine years of age,
342
834000
2000
14:11
Beatrice started in first grade --
343
836000
2000
14:13
after all, she'd never been to a lick of school --
344
838000
2000
14:15
with a six year-old.
345
840000
2000
14:17
No matter, she was just delighted to be in school.
346
842000
2000
14:19
She rocketed to the top of her class.
347
844000
2000
14:21
She stayed at the top of her class
348
846000
3000
14:24
through elementary school, middle school,
349
849000
2000
14:26
and then in high school,
350
851000
2000
14:28
she scored brilliantly on the national examinations
351
853000
3000
14:31
so that she became the first person in her village,
352
856000
3000
14:34
ever, to come to the United States
353
859000
2000
14:36
on scholarship.
354
861000
2000
14:38
Two years ago,
355
863000
2000
14:40
she graduated from Connecticut College.
356
865000
3000
14:43
On the day of her graduation,
357
868000
2000
14:45
she said, "I am the luckiest girl alive
358
870000
3000
14:48
because of a goat."
359
873000
2000
14:50
(Laughter)
360
875000
2000
14:52
And that goat was $120.
361
877000
2000
14:54
So you see how transformative
362
879000
3000
14:57
little bits of help can be.
363
882000
2000
14:59
But I want to give you a reality check.
364
884000
2000
15:02
Look: U.S. aid, helping people is not easy,
365
887000
3000
15:05
and there have been books that have criticized U.S. aid.
366
890000
3000
15:08
There's Bill Easterly's book.
367
893000
2000
15:10
There's a book called "Dead Aid."
368
895000
2000
15:12
You know, the criticism is fair;
369
897000
2000
15:14
it isn't easy.
370
899000
2000
15:16
You know, people say how
371
901000
2000
15:18
half of all water well projects, a year later, are failed.
372
903000
2000
15:20
When I was in Zimbabwe,
373
905000
2000
15:22
we were touring a place with the village chief --
374
907000
2000
15:24
he wanted to raise money for a secondary school --
375
909000
3000
15:27
and there was some construction a few yards away,
376
912000
2000
15:29
and I said, "What's that?"
377
914000
2000
15:31
He sort of mumbled.
378
916000
2000
15:33
Turns out that it's a failed irrigation project.
379
918000
2000
15:35
A few yards away was a failed chicken coop.
380
920000
3000
15:38
One year, all the chickens died, and no one wanted to put the chickens in there.
381
923000
3000
15:41
It's true, but we think that you don't through the baby out with the bathwater;
382
926000
3000
15:44
you actually improve.
383
929000
2000
15:46
You learn from your mistakes, and you continuously improve.
384
931000
3000
15:49
We also think that individuals
385
934000
2000
15:51
can make a difference, and they should,
386
936000
3000
15:54
because individuals, together,
387
939000
2000
15:56
we can all help create a movement.
388
941000
3000
15:59
And a movement of men and women
389
944000
2000
16:01
is what's needed to bring about social change,
390
946000
2000
16:03
change that will address
391
948000
3000
16:06
this great moral challenge.
392
951000
2000
16:08
So then, I ask,
393
953000
3000
16:11
what's in it for you?
394
956000
2000
16:13
You're probably asking that. Why should you care?
395
958000
3000
16:16
I will just leave you with two things.
396
961000
2000
16:18
One is that research shows
397
963000
3000
16:21
that once you have
398
966000
2000
16:23
all of your material needs taken care of --
399
968000
3000
16:26
which most of us, all of us, here in this room do --
400
971000
3000
16:29
research shows that
401
974000
2000
16:31
there are very few things in life
402
976000
2000
16:33
that can actually elevate your level of happiness.
403
978000
3000
16:36
One of those things
404
981000
2000
16:38
is contributing to a cause larger than yourself.
405
983000
3000
16:43
And the second thing,
406
988000
2000
16:45
it's an anecdote that I'll leave you with.
407
990000
2000
16:47
And that is the story
408
992000
2000
16:49
of an aid worker in Darfur.
409
994000
3000
16:52
Here was a woman
410
997000
2000
16:54
who had worked in Darfur,
411
999000
2000
16:56
seeing things that no human being should see.
412
1001000
3000
17:00
Throughout her time there,
413
1005000
2000
17:02
she was strong, she was steadfast.
414
1007000
3000
17:05
She never broke down.
415
1010000
3000
17:08
And then she came back to the United States
416
1013000
2000
17:10
and was on break, Christmas break.
417
1015000
2000
17:12
She was in her grandmother's backyard,
418
1017000
3000
17:15
and she saw something that made her break down in tears.
419
1020000
3000
17:19
What that was
420
1024000
2000
17:21
was a bird feeder.
421
1026000
3000
17:24
And she realized that she had the great fortune
422
1029000
3000
17:27
to be born in a country
423
1032000
2000
17:29
where we take security for granted,
424
1034000
3000
17:32
where we not only can feed, clothe
425
1037000
2000
17:34
and house ourselves,
426
1039000
3000
17:37
but also provide for wild birds
427
1042000
3000
17:40
so they don't go hungry in the winter.
428
1045000
3000
17:44
And she realized that with that great fortune
429
1049000
3000
17:47
comes great responsibility.
430
1052000
3000
17:50
And so, like her,
431
1055000
3000
17:53
you, me,
432
1058000
2000
17:55
we have all won the lottery of life.
433
1060000
3000
17:58
And so the question becomes:
434
1063000
2000
18:00
how do we discharge that responsibility?
435
1065000
3000
18:03
So, here's the cause.
436
1068000
2000
18:05
Join the movement.
437
1070000
2000
18:07
Feel happier and help save the world.
438
1072000
3000
18:10
Thank you very much.
439
1075000
2000
18:12
(Applause)
440
1077000
3000

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sheryl WuDunn - Author, journalist
As a journalist reporting on China, Sheryl WuDunn saw the everyday oppression of women around the world. She and Nick Kristof wrote "Half the Sky," chronicling women's stories of horror and, especially, hope.

Why you should listen

Sheryl WuDunn and her husband, Nick Kristof, won a Pulitzer for their New York Times coverage of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests. Their joint reporting work in China and other developing nations convinced them both that, just as slavery was the moral issue of the 19th century, sex trafficking, gender-based violence and other abuses make women's rights the moral issue of the 21st.

In their book Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide, WuDunn and Kristof make the case for empowering women as a means of development. Women tend to spend more on education, nutrition and business, the economic engines of growth in a community. And if we can find ways to develop the untapped potential of the millions of women who are now left uneducated, denied basic rights, oppressed and threatened -- we'll turn on a firehose of economic power that could transform the developing world.

More profile about the speaker
Sheryl WuDunn | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee