To solve the worlds biggest problems invest in women and girls Musimbi Kanyoro

My mother was a philanthropist.

And now I know you’re asking –

let me give you the answer:
yes, a little bit like Melinda Gates –

(Laughter)

but with a lot less money.

(Laughter)

She carried out her philanthropy
in our community

through a practice we call, “isirika.”

She supported the education
of scores of children

and invited many
to live with us in our home

in order to access schools.

She mobilized resources
for building the local health clinic

and the maternity wing
is named in memory of her.

But most important,

she was endeared by the community
for her organizing skills,

because she organized the community,

and specifically women,

to find solutions

to anything that was needed.

She did all of this through isirika.

Let me repeat that word for you again:

isirika.

Now it’s your turn. Say it with me.

(Audience) Isirika.

Musimbi Kanyoro: Thank you.

That word is in my language, Maragoli,

spoken in western Kenya,

and now you speak my language.

(Laughter)

So, isirika is a pragmatic way of life

that embraces charity,

services

and philanthropy all together.

The essence of isirika

is to make it clear to everybody

that you’re your sister’s keeper –

and yes,

you’re your brother’s keeper.

Mutual responsibility
for caring for one another.

A literal, simple English translation
would be equal generosity,

but the deep philosophical meaning

is caring, together, for one another.

So how does isirika really happen?

I grew up in a farming community

in western Kenya.

I remember vividly the many times

that neighbors would go
to a neighbor’s home –

a sick neighbor’s home –

and harvest their crop for them.

I tagged alongside with my mother
to community events

and to women’s events,

and had the conversation
about vaccinations in school,

building the health center

and really big things –

renewing seeds for the next
planting season.

And often, the community
would come together

to contribute money
to send a neighbor’s child to school –

not only in the country

but to universities abroad as well.

And so we have a surgeon.

The first surgeon in my country
came from that rural village.

(Applause)

So …

what isirika did was to be inclusive.

We as children would stand
alongside the adults

and give our contributions of money,

and our names were inscripted
in the community book

just like every adult.

And then I grew up,

went to universities
back at home and abroad,

obtained a few degrees here and there,

became organized

and took up international jobs,

working in development,

humanitarian work

and philanthropy.

And very soon,

isirika began to become small.

It dissipated

and then just disappeared.

In each place,

I gained a new vocabulary.

The vocabulary of donors and recipients.

The vocabulary of measuring impact,

return on investment …

projects and programs.

Communities such as my childhood community

became referred to
as “poor, vulnerable populations.”

Those are the communities
of which literature speaks about

as living on less than a dollar a day,

and they become the targets
for poverty eradication programs.

And by the way,

they are the targets of our first

United Nations'
sustainable development goal.

Now, I’m really interested

that we find solutions to poverty

and to the world’s other many big problems

because they do exist.

I however think
that we could do a better job,

and we could do a better job
by embracing isirika.

So let me tell you how.

First, isirika affirms common humanity.

For whatever that you do,

you begin from the premise
that you’re human together.

When you begin that you’re human together,

you see each other differently.

You don’t see a refugee first

and you don’t see a woman first

and you don’t see
a person with disability first.

You see a human being first.

That is the essence
of seeing a person first.

And when you do that,

you value their ideas,

you value their contribution –

small or big.

And you value what
they bring to the table.

That is the essence of isirika.

I just want to imagine
what it would look like

if everyone in this room –

a medical doctor, a parent,

a lawyer, a philanthropist,

whatever you are –

if you embraced isirika

and made it your default.

What could we achieve for each other?

What could we achieve for humanity?

What could we achieve for peace issues?

What could we achieve for medical science?

Let me give you a couple of hints,

because I’m going to ask you
to accompany me

in this process of rebuilding
and reclaiming isirika with me.

First, you have to have faith

that we are one humanity,

we have one planet

and we don’t have two choices about that.

So there’s not going to be a wall
that is high enough

to separate humanity.

So give up the walls.

Give them up.

(Applause)

And we don’t have a planet B to go to.

So that’s really important.

Make that clear;

move onto the next stage.

The second stage: remember,

in isirika, every idea counts.

Bridges have big posters

and they have nails.

Every idea counts –

small or big counts.

And third,

isirika affirms

that those who have more
really enjoy the privilege of giving more.

It is a privilege to give more.

(Applause)

And this is the time
for women to give more for women.

It is the time to give more for women.

Our parents, when they brought in
other children to live with us,

they didn’t ask our permission.

They made it clear
that they had a responsibility

because they had gone to school

and they had an earning.

And they made it clear
that we should understand

that their prosperity
was not our entitlement,

and I think that’s good
wisdom from isirika.

We could use that wisdom today,
I think, in every culture,

in every place,

passing to the next generation
what we could do together.

I have,

over the years,

encountered isirika in many places,

but what gives me really the passion today

to embrace isirika

is the work that I do
with women all over the world

through the Global Fund for Women,

though women’s funds

and through women’s movements globally.

If you work with women,

you change every day

because you experience them living
isirika together in what they do.

In the work that I do,

we trust women leaders and their ideas.

And we support them with funding
so that they can expand,

they can grow

and they can thrive
within their own communities.

A woman in 1990 came
to the Global Fund with a big idea –

a woman from Mexico
by the name of Lucero González.

She wanted to begin a fund
that would support a movement

that would be rooted
in the communities in Mexico.

And she received a grant
of 7,500 US dollars.

Today, 25 years later,

Semillas, the name of the fund,

has raised and spent,

within the community,

17.8 million dollars.

(Applause)

They have impacted
over two million people,

and they work with a group
of 600,000 women in Mexico.

During the recent earthquake,

they were so well rooted

that they could quickly assess
within the community and with others,

what were the short-term needs
and what were the long-term needs.

And I tell you,

long after the lights
have gone off Mexico,

Semillas will be there

with the communities, with the women,

for a very long time.

And that’s what I’m talking about:

when we are able to support
the ideas of communities

that are rooted within their own setting.

Thirty years ago,

there was very little funding
that went directly to women’s hands

in their communities.

Today we celebrate 168 women’s funds

all over the world,

100 of which are in this country.

And they support –

(Applause)

they support grassroots
women’s organizations –

community organizations
under the leadership of girls and women,

and together we have been able,

collectively,

to give a billion dollars
to women and girls-led organizations.

(Applause)

But the challenge begins today.

The challenge begins today

because we see women everywhere
organizing as isirika,

including women
organizing as isirika in TED.

Because isirika is the evergreen wisdom
that lives in communities.

You find it in indigenous communities,

in rural communities.

And what it really ingrains in people

is that ability to trust

and to move the agenda ahead.

So, three things that I have learned
that I want to share with you

through my work.

One: if you want to solve
the world’s biggest problems,

invest in women and girls.

(Applause)

Not only do they expand the investment,

but they care for everyone
in the community.

Not only their needs
but the needs of their children,

the needs of the rest of the community,

the needs of the elderly,

and most important,

they protect themselves –

which is really important –

and they protect their communities.

Women who know how to protect themselves

know what it means to make a difference.

And the second reason that I’m asking
you to invest in women and girls

is because this is the smartest
thing you could ever do

at this particular time.

And if we are going to have

over 350 trillion dollars

by 2030,

those dollars need to be
in the hands of women.

And so I grew up with isirika.

My mother was isirika.

She was not a project or a program.

And now, I pass that to you.

That you will be able
to share this with your families,

with your friends

and with your community,

and embrace isirika as a way of living –

as a pragmatic way of living.

Thank you.

(Applause)

Thank you.

(Applause)

Thank you.

(Applause)