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  • In 2009, discontented with my situation,

  • I applied to an aid agency for a long-term mission to Nepal.

  • At such times, one does things such as:

  • applying for missions abroad,

  • walking along a pilgrimage route,

  • retreating to a cloister.

  • There are many possibilities nowadays for getting through or getting around

  • a state of discontent.

  • Anyway, in 2009 I was in such a state of discontent,

  • discontented with my job, and a little with my overall situation,

  • although I might add, it was a first-world problem,

  • it was not a real problem.

  • My problem was: I was 27 and could imagine exactly

  • what my life would be like in 10, 20, 30 years.

  • It was totally predictable.

  • For me, that predictability was frightening -

  • to say the least.

  • Basically, I had a full-blown quarter-life crisis -

  • professionally and personally.

  • I just didn't know: Should I continue along a safe career path,

  • choose the easy way?

  • Or what if I threw the dice of life again

  • and saw what happened.

  • What would then be in store for me?

  • Those were the thoughts I had.

  • At that time, I was an independent travel journalist

  • for a daily newspaper.

  • As I said, more of a first-world problem -

  • travel journalism was, despite my fear of flying,

  • my ultimate dream job.

  • I got to travel around the world for free,

  • stay in good, very good, hotels,

  • and travel around the country in a very privileged way.

  • But from time to time I also traveled to very underprivileged countries,

  • developing countries,

  • where, to be sure, there is more to see and say:

  • idyllic villages with friendly, smiling locals,

  • who - despite their poverty - express so much happiness and joy.

  • However, this is the type of pictures and clichés

  • that characterizes a travelogue.

  • But after a while, this became a sticking point for me.

  • I was doing too little, just scratching the surface.

  • Besides it was a little pretentious of me

  • to write, make judgments, about a country that I really didn't know properly.

  • That was something I wanted to change.

  • I wanted to get to know countries properly

  • in order to write more authentic articles, and to satisfy my personal interests.

  • How does one get to know a country better?

  • By living among the people, with the people, in their homes,

  • not in a hotel,

  • by occupying oneself with the challenges and the problems of the people,

  • and by working with the people.

  • At least this was the answer that I gave myself to these questions.

  • And that was what I wanted to do.

  • Beyond that I wanted to do something meaningful.

  • I wanted to contribute, do something good.

  • And after a trip to Nepal this feeling became even stronger.

  • Although I had been to developing countries before,

  • Nepal touched me the most.

  • Until 2006, there was a 10-year civil war going on,

  • which left behind not only countless orphans,

  • but also numerous economic and social problems.

  • With a per capita income of 550 euros a year,

  • Nepal is the poorest country in South Asia,

  • and one of the 20 poorest countries in the world.

  • A quarter of the population live below the poverty line.

  • Almost a fifth of the population suffer from malnutrition.

  • 40% of the adults cannot read and write.

  • All these facts, in connection with many personal stories and experiences

  • that I experienced on this trip,

  • struck me at a time when I was ready and open to change,

  • when I wanted to change things myself.

  • After my return, my decision was certain.

  • I quit my job, and applied to an aid agency.

  • And I'd like to give you a short excerpt of the reply

  • my application received, because it's an unforgettable one:

  • "We are an internationally operating organization,

  • and very serious in what we do.

  • We are not a rescue center for a fun-seeking globetrotter,

  • who happens to just think she wants to live in Nepal,

  • and is looking for someone to fund her stay."

  • Hello? Are they kidding?

  • My application was quite serious and well-meant,

  • at least I thought so,

  • and this reply was abysmally and brazenly offensive.

  • It knocked me right over,

  • and, of course, I immediately wrote an emotional answer -

  • but, fortunately, never sent it.

  • (Laughter)

  • Instead, I turned that quite intense feeling I had

  • into doing something good.

  • I used it as driving force to start my own company:

  • "Karmalaya, heart work and soul travel" -

  • a company that basically offered exactly what I had been looking for,

  • namely the possibility to travel around a country differently,

  • the possibility to get to know a country well

  • by being able to live and work with the locals,

  • and certainly not just anywhere, but in selected development projects.

  • Karmalaya can be divided into two words.

  • "Karma" and "Laya" -

  • it means a place where one can acquire good karma,

  • where one can do good deeds.

  • It sounds a little esoteric, but it's not.

  • Karmalaya is a "social travel business."

  • We use tourism as a tool for sustainable development,

  • or one might say we use "voluntourism" as a tool

  • for sustainable development -

  • volunteering and tourism combined -

  • because people who travel with us do meaningful volunteer work

  • during their stay.

  • They pay for their trip the way they would with other organizers,

  • but they spend their time differently.

  • They live with local families,

  • and the main goal is not as much relaxation

  • or sightseeing as possible,

  • but real intercultural exchange,

  • social engagement and the broadening of one's horizon.

  • To that end, our participants are engaged, according to qualifications and interests,

  • in varying projects.

  • Through our work,

  • we can promote sustainable tourism in regions

  • which would otherwise have no prospect of classical tourism,

  • simply because the necessary infrastructure is missing.

  • Furthermore, we can promote sustainable projects.

  • We can initiate and fund our own sustainable projects.

  • We also finance ourselves 100%, and are not dependent on donations.

  • This is important to us for our long-term commitment.

  • We started our work in 2010 in Nepal,

  • last year we expanded our commitment to Uganda.

  • And now?

  • After more than four years we asked ourselves -

  • in the meantime I got married,

  • and my husband and I work professionally as a team as well -

  • the inevitable question at such a time:

  • Do we continue in the same way,

  • or what if we were to think even bigger?

  • What if we took our development ideas further?

  • What if development were not only to mean social commitment and sustainable travel,

  • but development in its entirety, individual personal development included,

  • or, more specifically, individual leadership development.

  • Essentially there would then be a new, an additional, company.

  • A company aiming at companies

  • with a different focus but with the same philosophy as Karmalaya.

  • "Is it something we want," was the next question,

  • "a new company?"

  • Of course, we did.

  • We love business owners and their creative businesses,

  • because we tick the same way, we speak the same language,

  • we dream the same dreams, we understand the challenges.

  • That's why this year we presented Karmalaya along with a second company:

  • "KALiiS."

  • And with KALiiS we foster creative businesses in their development

  • and initiate development projects

  • that we support with the help of outstanding people.

  • We support participants, owners of creative businesses

  • and their workers with individual development coaching.

  • Coaching that includes the personal,

  • social and intercultural development of the participants,

  • and coaching that prepares them for development aid.

  • This is all provided by KALiiS.

  • A commitment that besides a meaningful exchange of knowledge

  • also has another huge advantage.

  • It shows you in a relatively short time where you stand,

  • or where you are,

  • where you perhaps have prejudices you aren't aware of,

  • where you possibly aren't flexible enough, too narrow in your thinking.

  • It also shows you what you are really good at,

  • it shows you your strengths.

  • Perhaps you are much more creative than you thought.

  • Or perhaps you discover greater depths of composure in yourself.

  • The serenity to accept things you can't change,

  • and the strength to change things that you can change.

  • And you can change a lot, even in a short time.

  • We know it's possible. Here is an example.

  • Here are Ruth, Rose, Margaret, Lydia and Sylvia.

  • They are five wonderful women from Uganda -

  • with sad stories and with talent.

  • They make beautiful, handmade necklaces - and they've done that for years.

  • And for years, nothing has happened.

  • Simply because they had no market for them,

  • because they did not know how to improve the quality,

  • because nobody told them which designs they might consider.

  • We wanted to help these women

  • and that's why we founded a product label this year:

  • "KALiARE Empowerment Products" -

  • products that will free the people from their poverty

  • provide them with an income, and allow them a future.

  • Yesterday, our online shop went live.

  • (Applause)

  • And we are starting with a "First Empowerment Edition" -

  • a limited edition of 1,000 necklaces from our ladies.

  • The sale not only provides them with an income for a year,

  • but also makes it possible for us to make the project much bigger.

  • This first edition is sort of social crowdfunding

  • and product start in one.

  • Those who would like to give support can do so by buying a necklace,

  • or you can travel with us directly to the project,

  • travel to the women and become actively engaged.

  • Further ahead, we don't want to give work to just 5 women,

  • but to 50 or 100,

  • and not only in Uganda,

  • but also in Nepal and other project countries

  • in which we will work in the future.

  • But this product area

  • is only one project within the scope of our integrated projects.

  • We work in all core areas,

  • in entrepreneurship, education and health,

  • in infrastructure and environment,

  • because the work in only one area is too little.

  • What happens to the children while the women work?

  • Exactly.

  • This year we founded two childcare centers in Nepal and Uganda.

  • Everything works together perfectly within the scope of our integrated projects,

  • and the whole makes more sense than each project by itself.

  • We place the participants according to qualifications

  • in the various projects.

  • The exact possibilities only emerge when they start working together.

  • To conclude, I would like to take you on a journey.

  • Please, close your eyes.

  • Imagine you are in Africa, in the rural heart of Uganda.

  • You sit at a wooden table, and you are happy and full.

  • You have just had lunch with your guest family.

  • There was plantain puree, "matoke," delicious.

  • The walls are bare.

  • Here inside, it is pleasantly warm.

  • You look out of the window

  • and see children running by on the reddish-brown road.

  • Their nimble feet stir up the sand.

  • You look at your forearms.

  • There is a thin layer of orange dust on them, too.

  • The children laugh and call your name for fun.

  • You are glad they don't call you "mzungu" anymore -

  • white skin.

  • You don't know what time it is.

  • But soon you'll get up

  • and go along the dirt road, where the children still run.

  • At the end of the street is a big tree.

  • Here you'll meet Lydia.

  • Sitting in the meadow, in the shade of the tree,

  • you'll talk about the new designs for her necklaces together.

  • As always, you will talk with your hands and feet.

  • Later the other women arrive too.

  • They smile at you expectantly, until you start an English lesson,

  • outdoors under the tree.

  • Unbelievably, there is Internet here.

  • In the mornings you talk on Skype with your coach.

  • You like doing that. The exchange is always valuable.

  • Moreover, it's nice to speak German again.

  • You hear music and the clink of dishes.

  • In the courtyard, Mama Fiona washes the pots.

  • She sings an African song. You are relaxed and happy.

  • Open your eyes.

  • Each of us can make the basic decision to get involved in something new,

  • or at least for a short while,

  • to throw the dice once again

  • and see what happens.

  • Thank you.

  • (Applause)

In 2009, discontented with my situation,

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TEDx】旅行讓生活更美好|Tina Eckert|TEDxSalzburg - TEDxSalzburg (【TEDx】Travel for the better | Tina Eckert | TEDxSalzburg)

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    彭绮雯 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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