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◎ Jody Williams 其人及其事迹 作为反地雷组织首席策略士的Williams,她密集地以写作和演说来让世人更了解地雷的问题和禁雷之必要。她游说的主要对象包括联合国、欧盟议会以及非洲统一联盟等大型国际组织。为了能够让ICBL的禁雷理念能够更具说服力、更能引起世人的共鸣,Williams花了两年的时间,对四个遭受地雷影响的国家作绵密的田野调查,并和Shawn Roberts合着了一本书“在枪声沉寂之后”(After the Guns Fall Silent: The Enduring Legacy1 of Landmines3),这本书论述了地雷所带来的社会经济影响,除了控诉地雷受害者负担过高的医疗费用之外,同时分析地雷对于一个社群的长期影响,包括工作机会的减少,以及土地可使用性的剧减,因为这些遭受地雷污染的土地无法拿来供农业或是放牧使用,更不用说拿来买卖了.... 节目简介: I believe that a generation of ... I believe in the impossible I believe that everyone wants to love and be loved. I believe in people. This I believe. For our Monday series, This I Believe we have an essay from Jody Williams. She shared the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize for her work as founding coordinator4 of the International campaign to ban landmines. Here is our series curator , independent producer, Jay Alision. In the early 1980s, Jody Williams was not on track to a Nobel Peace Prize. In fact she was working for a temperary employment agency. Leaving a subway station one day, she was handed a leaflet about global activism which provoked her to change the direction of her life. That descion , that affirmation of the potential of individual action still guides her. Here is Jody Williams with her essay for this I believe. Official Transcript5: I believe it is possible for ordinary people to achieve extraordinary things. For me, the difference between an "ordinary" and an "extraordinary" person is not the title that person might have, but what they do to make the world a better place for us all. I have no idea why people choose to do what they do. When I was a kid I didn't know what I wanted to be when I grew up, but I did know what I didn't want to do. I didn't want to grow up, have 2.2 kids, get married, the whole white picket6 fence thing. And I certainly didn't think about being an activist7. I didn't even really know what one was. My older brother was born deaf. Growing up, I ended up defending him and I often think that is what started me on my path to whatever it is I am today. When I was approached with the idea of trying to create a landmine2 campaign, we were just three people in a small office in Washington, DC in late 1991. I certainly had more than a few ideas about how to begin a campaign, but what if nobody cared? What if nobody responded? But I knew the only way to answer those questions was to accept the challenge. If I have any power as an individual, it's because I work with other individuals in countries all over the world. We are ordinary people: My friend Jemma from Armenia; Paul from Canada; Kosal, a landmine survivor8 from Cambodia; Haboubba from Lebanon; Christian9 from Norway; Diana from Colombia; Margaret, another landmine survivor from Uganda; and thousands more. We've all worked together to bring about extraordinary change. The landmine campaign is not just about landmines -- it's about the power of individuals to work with governments in a different way. I believe in both my right and my responsibility to work to create a world that doesn't glorify10 violence and war, but where we seek different solutions to our common problems. I believe that these days, daring to voice your opinion, daring to find out information from a variety of sources, can be an act of courage. I know that holding such beliefs and speaking them publicly is not always easy or comfortable or popular, particularly in the post-9/11 world. But I believe that life isn't a popularity contest. I really don’t care what people say about me -- and believe me, they’ve said plenty. For me, it’s about trying to do the right thing even when nobody else is looking. I believe that worrying about the problems plaguing our planet without taking steps to confront them is absolutely irrelevant11. The only thing that changes this world is taking action. I believe that words are easy. I believe the truth is told in the actions we take. And I believe that if enough ordinary people back up our desire for a better world with action, I believe we can, in fact, accomplish absolutely extraordinary things. Jody Williams, with her essay for This I Believe. Williams almost always speaks extemporaneously12 but she obliged this by writing down her beliefs for our series. We hope you might do the same. To find out about submitting in an essay, please visit our website npr. org, or call 202-408-0300. Incidentally this weekend you can find an essay from Maria Hosey Perez as for Lauderdale Florida in USA Weekend Magzine, our print partner. For This I Believe, I'm Jay Alison. And next Monday on Morning Edition an essay from position pious13 come out of a rural Colorado. This I Believe is made possible by a grant from Farmers Insurance. This is NPR. National Public Radio.
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