TEDxKinnaird - Rethinking Us

Around 250 people from Lahore and its enviorns assembled at Kinnaird College to 'rethink'. TEDxKinnaird, curated by Areej Mehdi, held its second successful TEDx event on February 19. The theme was chosen keeping in mind the following fable:

 

"A man found an eagle's egg and put it in a nest of a barnyard hen. The eaglet hatched with the brood of chicks and grew up with them. All his life the eagle did what the barnyard chicks did, thinking he was a barnyard chicken. Years passed and the eagle grew old. One day he saw a magnificent bird above him in the cloudless sky. The old eagle looked up in awe. 'Who's that?' he asked. 

"'That's the eagle, the king of the birds,' said his neighbor. 'He belongs to the sky. We belong to the earth; we're chickens.'

So the eagle lived and died as a chicken, for that's what he thought he was."

This story is so much more than a mere fable. It’s a story about human life. It’s about breaking out of comfort zones. It’s about the endless possibilities that reveal themselves to you when you let yourself believe. Imagine what we could do if we really looked at those ideas. Seemingly simple but at a second glance; profound.

 

With TEDxKinnaird, we wanted to give our attendees a chance to take the step in the direction of 'rethinking us'. The conference featured young speakers, passionate about their work and ideas. Jazib Zahir, a Stanford graduate, shared his vision of a world where games are a part of regular curriculums. Natasha Noorani, explained why she thought photography could be used to change stereotypes. Sonya Rehman, talked about the need for citizen journalism and cited recent examples that are shaping our world. Younas Chowdhry, shared his idea of the common man rising above his daily, petty worries through an immersive experience of street theatre. Younas' crew performed a street play "Machine" for the audience which earned them a round of applause. Other speakers who shared their ideas on stage included Elaine Alam, from FACES Pakistan; Mehreen Kasana, a prominent blogger and doodler; GIKI student Faisal Mehmood, who has three patents to his name already in the field of engineering; and Zubair Khan, CEO of Tranchulas.  

Attendees were especially happy with the way the networking break was conducted. A human scavanger hunt allowed attendees to approach each other easily and establish a basis for funny Q&A back and forth. Those who successfully completed the questions provided to them had the opportunity to participate in a lucky draw. One lucky winner was the recepient of a digital camera. 

TEDxKinnaird was all the more effective not only because of its live speakers but also the selection of TEDTalks. Maz Jobrani had the audience laughing with his quirky humor and The LXD elicited awed applause with its breath taking performance. 

On the whole, the event has received great positive feedback from the attendees. Here's to ideas worth spreading!

#hugcampaign on Valentine's Day

[More preliminary photos on our Facebook album: http://on.fb.me/hugonfacebook]

It started as a late lunch conversation on Feb 13th, 2011 about the idea of spending time with friends from TEDxJakarta on Valentine's Day. Lalitia (tw: @lalitia), our co-curator, twitted that friends should come and we would hug one another.

The twit was retwitted, and someone put a hashtag #hugcampaign. Hundreds of twits and retwits later, in the span of four hours, it was officially a trending topic. One major radio channel (Cosmopolitan 90.4 FM) suddenly called in asking for a 7:45am interview the following day on this hug campaign. The law of unintended consequences and the power of twitter in Indonesia had spoken: we were going to give hugs to ALOT of people and it psyched the living day out of us. 

In the span of less than twenty-four hours, we managed to get the top management of Pacific Place Mall (the mall caught in action) to agree (into taking risk) with our rather non-conventional activity. In a relatively conservative and religious country like Indonesia, any form of public display of affection is a sensitive issue. We engaged @America (venue at the mall) to allow us use their space for pre-gathering and our "Board of Compassion". We brought in the videographers and the volunteers.

So on Valentine's day - we held a FREE HUG campaign to share warmth and compassion with others , especially strangers. 

TEDxJakarta believes compassion, toward loved ones, friends, acquaintances and strangers, is an idea worth spreading. Recently, we've been bombarded with domestic news of violence related to religion. This has left the country as a whole feeling unsettled and tired. This year, TEDxJakarta plans to incorporate the Charter of Compassion in our agenda and promote the charter's initiatives proactively. The viral video from this #hugcampaign will kickstart our initiative. 

In the few hours we were there putting our arms out, we were surprised by the response. A girl came and hugged saying "I am alone on Valentine's day". An elderly gentleman walked up with teary eyes, hugged, said "Thank you", and walked away quietly. A little boy ran up to us happy and of course we had plenty of group hugs.

We did it to share compassion, warmth and presence with others. However, we also did it for ourselves. We were reminded of what's possible and the humanism that still exists strong if we bothered to look. 

At the end of the night, we were literally High on Hugs. It was the most amazing experience. 
Thank you @pacificplace @atamerica and @TEDxJKT team for making it possible. 

Happy Valentine's Day TEDx Community. 

Contributed by: 

Benson Engelbert

Co-curator, TEDxJakarta (www.tedxjkt.org)
tw: @bensonengelbert 

"Where do ideas come from?" TEDx Talk

Milton Tan:  How we humans fish, hunt and farm for ideas

TEDxYouthDay on Saturday 20 November featured our inaugural screening of this TEDx Talk by the late Dr. Milton Tan.

Milton was a huge TED fan and joined the TED community within hours of the launch of TEDx.  Our first large-scale gathering of the TED Community in November 2009 happened because of his support.  In August 2010, we invited Milton to give his first TEDx Talk  at our 5th TEDx event called [ i ].   He was deeply passionate and dedicated: He delivered this Talk right after his medical treatment at hospital that same morning.  Milton passed away on 8 November 2010. As tribute and thanks, on 20 November 2010, we dedicated our 7th idea event, global TEDxYouthDay to him.  

We miss you.  Your ideas will live on through your TEDx Talk and continue to spread to curious souls in the world. Thank you, Milton, for sharing your imagination with us, for giving us laughter, for opening wondrous windows in our minds and hearts...


About Milton...http://miltontan.wordpress.com