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SPEECH GIVEN AT HARVARD
UNIVERSITY
6 June 2001
Bono
Thank you for that introduction. But I suppose I should say a few
more words about who I am and what on earth I'm doing up here.
My name is Bono.
My name is Bono, and I'm a rock star.
Now, I tell you this, not as a boast but as a kind of confession.
Because in my view the only thing worse than a rock star is a rock
star with a conscience a celebrity with a cause. OH DEAR.
Worse yet, is a singer with a conscience, a placard-waving, knee-jerking,
fellow-travelling activist with a Lexus, and a swimming pool shaped
like his own head.
I'm a singer. You know what a singer is ? Someone with a hole in
his heart as big as his ego. When you need 20,000 people screaming
your name in order to feel good about your day, you know you re
a singer.
I am a singer and a songwriter but I am also a father, four-times
over; I am a friend to dogs; I am a sworn enemy of the saccharine;
and a believer in grace over karma. I talk too much when I'm drunk
and sometimes even when I'm not.
I am not drunk right now. These are not sunglasses and these are
protection.
But I must tell you. I owe more than my spoiled lifestyle to rock
music. I owe my worldview. Music was like an alarm clock for me
as a teenager and still keeps me from falling asleep in the comfort
of my freedom.
Rock music to me is rebel music. But rebelling against what ? In
the Fifties it was sexual mores and double standards. In the Sixties
it was the Vietnam War and racial and social inequality. What are
we rebelling against now?
If I am honest I'm rebelling against my own indifference. I am
rebelling against the idea that the world is the way the world is
and there's not a damned thing I can do about it. So I'm trying
to do some damned thing.
But fighting my indifference is my own problem. What's your problem
? What's the hole in your heart? I needed the noise, the applause.
You needed the grades. Why are you here in Harvard Square?
Why do you have to listen to me? What have you given up to get
here ? Is success your drug of choice or are you driven by another
curiosity? Your potential, the potential of a given situation ?
Is missing the moment unacceptable to you ? Is wasting inspiration
a crime? It is for a musician.
If this is where we find our lives rhyme; If this is our common
ground, well then I can be inspired as well as humbled, to be on
this great campus. Because that s where I come from - Music.
But I've seen the other side of music - the Business and I've seen
success as a drug of choice and I've seen great minds and prolific
imaginations disappear up their own ass, strung out on their own
self importance and I'm one of them.
The misery of having it all your own way and the loneliness of
sitting at a table where everyone works for you and the emptiness
of arriving at Aspen on a Gulfstream to stay in your winter palace.
...sorry different speech.
You know what I'm talking about and you've got to keep asking yourself
why are you doing this? You've got to keep checking your motives.
Success for my group U2 has been a lot easier to conjure than say,
relevance. RELEVANCE - in the world, in the culture.
And of course, failure is not such a bad thing ... It's not a word
that many of you know. I'm sure it's what you fear the most. But
from an artists point of view, failure is where you get your best
material.
So fighting indifference versus making a difference. Let me tell
you a few things you haven't heard about me, even on the Internet.
Let me tell you how I enrolled at Harvard and slept with an Economics
Professor.
That's right I became a student at Harvard recently, and came to
work with Professor Jeffrey Sachs at CID to study the lack of development
in third-world economies due to the crushing weight of old debts
those economies were carrying for generations.
It turns out that the normal rules of bankruptcy don't apply to
sovereign states. Listen, it would be harder for you to get a student
loan than it was for President Mobutu to stream billions of dollars
into his Swiss bank account while his people starved on the side
of the road. Two generations later, the Congolese are still paying.
The debts of the fathers are now the debts of the sons and the daughters.
So I was here representing a group that believed that all such
debts should be cancelled in the year 2000. We called it Jubilee
2000. A fresh start for a new millennium...
It was headed up by Anne Pettifor, based out of London, huge support
from Africa. With Mohammed Ali, Sir Bob Geldof and myself, acting
at first just as mouthpieces. It was taking off, but we were way
behind in the US.
We had the melody line, so to speak. But in order to get it on
the radio over here, we needed a lot of help. My friend Bobby Shriver
suggested I knock on the good professors door and and a funny thing
happened. Jeffrey Sachs not only let me into his office, he let
me into his Rolodex, his head and his life for the last few years.
So in a sense he let me in to your life here at Harvard.
Then Sachs and I, with my friend Bobby Shriver, hit the road like
some kind of surreal crossover act - a rock star, a Kennedy, and
a Noted Economist crisscrossing the globe like the Partridge Family
on psychotropic drugs.
With the POPE acting as our well &Agent. And the blessing of
various Rabbis, Evangelists, mothers unions, trade unions and PTAs.
It was a new level of unhip for me, but it was really cool. It
was in that capacity that I slept with Jeff Sachs, each of us in
our own seat on an economy flight to somewhere, passed out like
a couple of drunks from sheer exhaustion.
It was confusing for everyone I looked up with one eye to see your
hero's stubble in all the wrong places... His tie looked more like
a headband. An airhostess asked if he were a member of the Grateful
Dead.
I have enormous respect for Jeff Sachs but it's really true what
they say. Students shouldn't sleep with their professors ...
While I'm handing out trade secrets, I also want to tell you that
Larry Summers, your incoming President, the man whose signature
is on every American dollar - is a nutcase and a freak.
Look, U2 made it big out of Boston, not New York or LA, so I thought
if anyone would know about our existence it would be a Treasury
Secretary from Harvard [and MIT]. Alas, no. When I said I was from
U2 he had a flashback from Cuba 1962.
How can I put this? And don't hold it against him - Mr. Summers
is, as former President Clinton confirmed to me last week in Dublin,
culturally challenged .
But when I asked him to look up from the numbers to see what we
were talking about he did more than that. He did the hardest thing
of all for an Economist - he saw through the numbers.
And if it was hard for me to enlist Larry Summers in our efforts,
imagine how hard it was for Larry Summers to get the rest of Washington
to cough up the cash. To really make a difference for the third
of the world that lives on less than a dollar a day.
He more than tried. He was passionate. He turned up in the offices
of his adversaries. He turned up in restaurants with me to meet
the concerns of his Republican counterparts. There is a posh restaurant
in Washington they won't let us in now. Such was the heat of his
debate, blood on the walls wine in the vinegar.
If you're called up before the new President of Harvard and he
gives you the hairy eyeball, drums his fingers and generally acts
disinterested it could be the beginning of a great adventure.
Well, it's at this point that I have to ask - if your family don't
do it first - why am I telling you these stories? It's certainly
not because I m running for role model.
I'm telling you these stories because all that fun I had with Jeff
Sachs and Larry Summers was in the service of something deadly serious.
When people around the world heard about the burden of debt that
crushes the poorest countries, when they heard that for every dollar
of government aid we sent to developing nations, nine dollars came
back in debt service payments - when they heard all that, people
got angry.
They took to the streets in what was without doubt the largest
grassroots movement since the campaign to end apartheid. Politics
is, as you know, normally the art of the possible but this was something
more interesting. This was becoming the art of the impossible. We
had Priests going into pulpits, pop stars into parliaments. The
Pope put on my sunglasses.
The religious right started acting like student protesters. And
finally, after a floor fight in the House of Representatives, we
got the money - four three five million. That four three five, which
is starting to be a lot of money, and more importantly leveraged
billions more from other rich countries.
So where does that money go? Well, so far 23 of the poorest countries
have managed to meet the sometimes over-stringent conditions to
get their debt payments reduced and to spend the money on the people
who need it most. In Uganda, twice as many kids are now going to
school. That's good. In Mozambique, debt payments are down 42 per
cent, allowing health spending to increase by $14 million. That's
good, too. $14 million goes a long way in Mozambique.
If I could tell you about one remarkable man in rural Uganda named
Dr. Kabira. In 1999, measles, a disease that s almost unheard of
in the U.S. killed hundreds of kids in Dr. Kabira's district. Now,
thanks to debt relief, he s got an additional $6,000 from the state,
enough for him to employ two new nurses and buy two new bicycles
so they can get around the district and immunize children. Last
year, measles was a killer. This year, Dr. Kabira saw less than
ten cases.
I just wanted you to know what we pulled off with the help of Harvard
with the help of people like Jeffrey Sachs.
But I'm not here to brag, or to take credit, or even to share it.
Why am I here? Well, again I think to just say thanks. But also,
I think I've come here to ask you for your help. This is a big problem.
We need some smart people working on it. I think this will be the
defining moment of our age. When the history books (that some of
you will write) make a record of our times, this moment will be
remembered for two things: the Internet and the everyday holocaust
that is Africa. Twenty five million HIV positives who will leave
behind 40 million AIDS orphans by 2010. This is the biggest health
threat since the Bubonic Plague wiped out a third of Europe.
It s an unsustainable problem for Africa and, unless we hermetically
seal the continent and close our conscience, it's an unsustainable
problem for the world but it's hard to make this a popular cause
because it's hard to make it pop, you know? That I guess, is what
I m trying to do. Pop is often the oxygen of politics.
Didn't John and Robert Kennedy come to Harvard? Isn't equality
a son of a bitch to follow through on. Isn't Love thy neighbour
in the global village so inconvenient? GOD writes us these lines
but we have to sing them. Take them to the top of the charts but
its not what the radio is playing. Is it ? I know.
But we ve got to follow through on our ideals or we betray something
at the heart of who we are. Outside these gates, and even within
them, the culture of idealism is under siege beset by materialism
and narcissism and all the other isms of indifference and their
defense mechanism knowingness, the smirk, the joke. Worse still,
it s a marketing tool. They've got Martin Luther King selling phones
now. Have you seen that?
Civil Rights in America and Europe are bound to human rights in
the rest of the world. The right to live like a human. But these
thoughts are expensive, they re going to cost us. Are we ready to
pay the price? Is America still a great idea as well as a great
country?
When I was a kid in Dublin, I watched in awe as America put a man
on the moon and I thought, wow this is mad! Nothing is impossible
in America! America - they can do anything over there!
Is that still true? Tell me it s true. It is true isn t it? And
if it isn't, you of all people can make it true again.
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