One is greater than a million.

[Music]

hi

my name is anj i’m a documentary

filmmaker and i have been for the last

seven years

for the purpose of this talk though i’d

like to take you back a year

the month was may 2020 roughly three

months after covert 19 was declared a

pandemic

what began as complete and utter

disbelief about the situation we found

ourselves in and the devastating effect

it was having on the world

was starting to transform into something

that resembles a mind-numbing hum

we’d spent night after night after night

consuming numbers the number of people

who were infected

the number of people who were dying the

number of people

who were losing their jobs the number of

migrants unable to return home

the numbers kept coming for us every

time we turned on the television

opened a newspaper or logged into

twitter

it was like one harrowing statistic

after another until it all just sort of

became white noise

it’s like when you’re living on a quiet

street and a single car passes by and

that’s enough to wake you up but if

you’re living next to the highway the

sound of a million cars sort of

transforms into a low consistent hum

that you can peacefully sleep through

and you don’t even notice

not noticing is a dangerous place to be

in and not noticing is

is a privilege this phenomena according

to psychologists

is called psychic numbing the effects of

this have been felt across some of the

world’s

biggest natural disasters wars

atrocities genocides

as the numbers of victims increased in

all of these cases

our willingness to help has usually

decreased

which led psychologists to this

unsettling realization that the value of

a single human life

diminishes against the backdrop of a

larger tragedy

when you’re a documentary filmmaker or a

journalist or an activist

or a member of a not-for-profit

organization like i

am right now and the sole focus of your

work is to drive change to drive action

in the face of a crisis

how do you cut through this tension the

flip side of this phenomena is called

the singularity effect which

is that an individual life in and of

itself is very valued

the plight of an individual affects us a

great deal and we usually go to great

lengths to protect a single person

or to rescue them from distress but as

the numbers increase

our ability to empathize doesn’t quite

heap up in fact mother teresa herself at

some point said

if i look at the mass i will never write

if i look at the one

i will in may 2020 as the united states

approached 100 000 pandemic deaths

simone landon assistant graphics editor

at the new york times grappled with a

similar problem

by this time the authorities as well as

the people had begun to get desensitized

to all of these horrifying statistics

and

were starting to settle into what we can

call a bit of an apathy slumber

so she came up with the idea of

compiling obituaries of

corvid 19 victims from across the

country big cities and small

each name was accompanied by one line

about the victim

fred walter gray 75 washington

liked his bacon and hash browns crispy

minnett golf cooper 79 louisiana

loved big and told people she loved them

all the time

kyra schwartz 33 new york volunteered

for pet rescue organizations

philip thomas 48 chicago his walmart

co-workers were like his family

these names and several others filled up

the front page of the new york times

each one a reminder that behind every

number is to the real human being

that was lost to this pandemic the front

page wasn’t even news anymore it was a

statement it was a call to action

this phenomena isn’t unique to our times

though

estimates say we lost 20 million people

in the first world war

close to 80 million in the second six

million jewish lives were lost during

the holocaust

and over a million people were reported

to have died during the india-pakistan

partition

and yet these numbers by themselves have

historically failed to spark meaningful

action

my first emotional response to the

partition of india despite having

studied about it in school early in my

life was actually after my grandmother

narrated her story to me

one summer vacation back when i was a

kid

my grandmother my nani is easily one of

the best storytellers i know and

she’s had a significant impact in not

just shaping my most intrinsic personal

values but also my approach to

filmmaking

i didn’t know it yet but as my 10 year

old self lay next to her on a warm

summer night

listening to stories of her 10 year old

self separated from her family

walking on foot from a village in

pakistan to her new home in india

the seeds of a lifelong obsession with

storytelling were being sown

the narrative of the partition is often

told through the monumental violence

appreciated chiefly for its magnitude

yet the true story of the subcontinent

is very often the story of its people

ordinary people living in

extraordinarily difficult times

experiencing unimaginable personal loss

hurt

and pain that runs far deeper than a

number can truly capture

when years later i became a filmmaker

and it was time for me to fill in the

blanks and write the story more fully

i knew i had to look away from these

news debates and political rallies

i knew that it was to the memory keepers

that i must turn

like the people of hunderman a tiny

village along the border of india and

pakistan

following the indo-pak war of 1971

hunderman changed hands overnight

as the borders began to shift residents

ran for cover and several families were

separated from their loved ones

in 2017 members of the village embarked

on an unlikely enterprise

to assemble a museum of memories in an

attempt to safeguard their past

and leave a legacy behind for those who

come after them

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[Music]

foreign

but i am by no means a pioneer in this

art form

several have come before me the first

day project an archive of immigrant

voices narrating their first day in

america

the 1947 archive a rich library of

stories from the partition

and of course the humans of new york

each of these examples utilizing

powerful individual stories set against

the backdrop of a larger issue

to raise awareness and spark action

but what is it about stories that

compels us to respond to them

in such a meaningful way while it’s

impossible to point at a particular time

and place in the history of human

evolution

at which we first began telling stories

i think it’s fair to assume that we’ve

been practicing some form of it

since we developed the ability to

express ourselves through art or through

speech or even through action

thousands of years stories have

performed two primary functions

to connect and to inform the urge to

tell stories and to listen to them

is driven by first and foremost a very

basic desire to connect with those

around us

to find unique overlaps in decidedly

distinct personal experiences

and use them as the basis of forming

deep emotional connections

it’s the social glue that holds us

together an inference by the way

supported by

evolutionary psychologist robin dunbar

according to whom about 65 percent of

all human conversation

held in public places is usually gossip

but stories also serve a second even

more important function

long before we gained access to any form

of formal education

fables taught us the consequences of our

actions good and bad

they taught us how to survive in the

world how to avoid danger how to avoid

pain how to prosper

an instruction manual of sorts disguised

as fairy tales

a combination of these two functions to

connect and to inform

when used effectively can activate what

are called mirror neurons in our brain

responsible for mimicking activities or

emotions we watch unfold in front of our

eyes

scientists believe that these neurons

are responsible for enhancing empathy

and consequently

encouraging generous behavior and

sparking action

today i’m working for a cause that faces

some of the same challenges i mentioned

early on we have a youth mental health

crisis upon us

and systems of support have not been

able to keep up

young people are struggling across the

world right now and we must act

to inspire action i am once again

looking to rely

[Music]

they might seem like an old-fashioned

tool to us and that’s because they are

but that’s also why they’re so effective

stories are

and have been woven within the very

fabric of our existence for as long as

we can remember

and so they can sneak into rooms that

numbers are not allowed to enter

data may be able to wake people up from

a slumber but to pull them out of bed

it is to stories that we must earn thank

you