ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Asali DeVan Ecclesiastes - Community servant
Asali DeVan Ecclesiastes imagines equitable solutions to community and societal problems and works with her community to implement those solutions.

Why you should listen

Asali DeVan Ecclesiastes is a mother, daughter, wife, educator, author, event producer and community developer. Most know her by her many pursuits, but the way she knows herself and the world around her is through her exploration of “the word.” Rooted in the cultural soil of New Orleans and watered by the writings of her literary idols, including Kalamu ya Salaam and Toni Morrison, DeVan Ecclesiastes has grown to bask in the sun of her heritage -- from sages who transformed pharaoh into God in Ancient Khemet, to spy boys who chant the way clear for Big Chiefs on Carnival day.

As Director of Strategic Neighborhood Development at New Orleans Business Alliance, DeVan Ecclesiastes leads the place-based development of indigenous African-American neighborhoods, building partnerships, empowering community leaders and advancing work within the priority areas of economic opportunity, cultural preservation, affordable housing, transportation access and environmental sustainability -- realized in the New Orleans's new Cultural Innovation District. With a belief in making bold commitments to address entrenched disparities, no matter her endeavor, DeVan Ecclesiastes continually seeks opportunities to forward her mission of creating a platform for equitable societal change and her vision of social justice for all humanity.

More profile about the speaker
Asali DeVan Ecclesiastes | Speaker | TED.com
TEDWomen 2017

Asali DeVan Ecclesiastes: "Chasms"

Filmed:
222,988 views

Writer and activist Asali DeVan Ecclesiastes lights up the stage with a powerful poem about hope, truth and the space between who we are and who we want to be.
- Community servant
Asali DeVan Ecclesiastes imagines equitable solutions to community and societal problems and works with her community to implement those solutions. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
There are some chasms so deep and so wide,
0
760
3720
00:17
we find it hard to imagine
how we'll ever make it to the other side.
1
5280
3760
00:22
That space between who we are
and who we want to be,
2
10520
3840
00:27
the gaps between our high ideals
3
15480
3256
00:30
and our base realities.
4
18760
1880
00:34
The distance between what we say
5
22080
3816
00:37
and what we really mean.
6
25920
1440
00:40
The raging river that flows
between what actually happened
7
28560
4096
00:44
and our convenient memories.
8
32680
2776
00:47
The lies we tell ourselves are lakes,
9
35480
2856
00:50
overflowing their banks,
10
38360
1376
00:51
flooding our speech with waters,
caustic and rank.
11
39760
3480
00:56
The only bridge is the truth,
12
44400
3016
00:59
passing through me and you,
as we look one another eye to eye.
13
47440
3640
01:04
But so often, that look
is filled with our hesitations,
14
52320
3336
01:07
and we can't help but glance to the side.
15
55680
2400
01:12
See, we've long ago let go of the language
16
60400
2496
01:14
with which we describe our softer parts.
17
62920
3216
01:18
We learn early that those
with softer hearts suffer.
18
66160
3136
01:21
So we allow lean emotion to reign,
19
69320
2656
01:24
never noticing that only strain
has been the fruit of our restraints.
20
72000
3416
01:27
We haven't escaped pain.
21
75440
1896
01:29
And our battle scars are far from faint.
22
77360
2296
01:31
Yet and still, despite our desire
and willingness to heal,
23
79680
4496
01:36
we often find ourselves
fighting hard in the paint,
24
84200
3216
01:39
holding onto false images
of everything we ain't.
25
87440
3600
01:44
So while our dream coincide,
our fears collide.
26
92120
4696
01:48
And we want to know one another,
but think we can't.
27
96840
3320
01:53
The gulf between empathy and equity
28
101680
3576
01:57
is as unfathomable as the fissures
that line our collective integrity.
29
105280
5656
02:02
And we spend eternal eternities
30
110960
3256
02:06
trying to translate that into virtue.
31
114240
2840
02:10
Perhaps you have met one or two
of the virtuous on your path.
32
118160
2960
02:14
They are only very few,
33
122200
1536
02:15
and I know that I have, from time to time,
34
123760
2176
02:17
mistaken pretenders for real,
35
125960
1656
02:19
yet still make room for the possibility
that it's I who's been pretending.
36
127640
4840
02:25
Please, bear with me, I'm still mending,
37
133400
1936
02:27
but I'm no longer bending
to the will of my injuries,
38
135360
3336
02:30
nor my injurers.
39
138720
2096
02:32
I much prefer to stretch my arms
like Nüt until I become the sky.
40
140840
5016
02:37
I'd rather stretch my tongue with truth,
41
145880
2376
02:40
our bridge to cross
when we look one another in the eye.
42
148280
3080
02:44
But the tongue,
like the heart, gets tired.
43
152720
2760
02:48
The weak make it hard
for the strong to stay inspired,
44
156480
3096
02:51
like the lost prevent the found
from escaping the mire,
45
159600
3496
02:55
and the degraded stop the enlightened
from taking us higher.
46
163120
2896
02:58
But no matter what you hear
from the mouths of these liars,
47
166040
3536
03:01
we are one people
48
169600
1976
03:03
with one destiny and the common enemy,
49
171600
2816
03:06
that's why it really stresses me
to see our hearts so tattered,
50
174440
4016
03:10
our minds so scattered,
51
178480
1376
03:11
our egos so easily flattered.
52
179880
2216
03:14
We're enslaved, yet think
of our shackles as gifts.
53
182120
3216
03:17
Rather than resist our masters,
we let them widen our rifts,
54
185360
3376
03:20
like mindless, material junkies,
55
188760
2256
03:23
we seek that which lowers, not lifts.
56
191040
2680
03:26
But somewhere in our midst,
57
194840
2136
03:29
there's been a paradigm shift.
58
197000
1880
03:31
Justice is getting restless in its chains.
59
199880
3336
03:35
Our youth find it useless
to separate their souls from their brains,
60
203240
3936
03:39
their truth is ingrained,
their integrity insustained.
61
207200
3376
03:42
Let me call your attention
to those who serve as examples.
62
210600
3616
03:46
Those who daily give their all,
63
214240
1896
03:48
but their reserves are still ample.
64
216160
2096
03:50
Those who battle friend and foe,
65
218280
1976
03:52
yet their hope is never trampled,
66
220280
1696
03:54
they make music, never sample,
67
222000
2096
03:56
and the world's ugly could never cancel
68
224120
2416
03:58
the fullness and the sweetness
of their composition.
69
226560
2840
04:01
Nor the unadulterated truth
of their mission.
70
229960
2400
04:05
It's time we shut our mouths and listen.
71
233080
2680
04:08
Close our eyes and pray
72
236600
2376
04:11
for the humility and the guidance
73
239000
2856
04:13
to follow them to the way.
74
241880
1960
04:16
Thank you.
75
244600
1216
04:17
(Applause)
76
245840
1576
04:19
(Cheers)
77
247440
1696
04:21
Thank you.
78
249160
1216
04:22
(Applause)
79
250400
5080
04:29
(Cheers)
80
257720
1655
04:31
Thank you.
81
259399
1297
04:32
(Applause)
82
260720
3240
04:36
Thank you all so much,
83
264680
1256
04:37
you have no idea how fulfilling
and energizing that is.
84
265960
3680
04:42
For the past three years,
85
270680
1256
04:43
I've had the privilege
of codesigning with my neighbors
86
271960
4536
04:48
a space in New Orleans
known as Under the Bridge.
87
276520
2920
04:52
In 1966, Interstate 10
landed on the Tremé neighborhood,
88
280400
5496
04:57
displacing 326 black-owned businesses,
89
285920
4256
05:02
over 300 live oak trees,
90
290200
3496
05:05
effectively destroying the region's
most successful black commercial district,
91
293720
4736
05:10
disrupting intergenerational wealth
92
298480
2496
05:13
and truly unraveling the fabric
93
301000
2056
05:15
of the nation's oldest
African American neighborhood.
94
303080
2920
05:19
Today, after 45 years
of community advocacy,
95
307000
5776
05:24
after 500 hours of community engagement
96
312800
3416
05:28
and 80 hours of community design,
97
316240
3336
05:31
we are so excited that in 2018,
98
319600
3656
05:35
after capturing the voices
of thousands of residents
99
323280
2576
05:37
and the support of our local,
federal and philanthropic partners,
100
325880
4416
05:42
as the city celebrates 300 years
of transforming the world,
101
330320
3976
05:46
we will get to transform 19 blocks
under the Interstate into community space,
102
334320
6496
05:52
into black-owned businesses,
103
340840
1736
05:54
in the form of the Claiborne Corridor
Cultural Innovation District.
104
342600
4056
05:58
(Cheers)
105
346680
1816
06:00
(Applause)
106
348520
5416
06:05
We will be bridging time,
we will bridge memory,
107
353960
4176
06:10
we will bridge disparity and injustice,
108
358160
2976
06:13
and we can't wait to see you all
on the other side.
109
361160
3816
06:17
Thank you.
110
365000
1216
06:18
(Applause)
111
366240
3840

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Asali DeVan Ecclesiastes - Community servant
Asali DeVan Ecclesiastes imagines equitable solutions to community and societal problems and works with her community to implement those solutions.

Why you should listen

Asali DeVan Ecclesiastes is a mother, daughter, wife, educator, author, event producer and community developer. Most know her by her many pursuits, but the way she knows herself and the world around her is through her exploration of “the word.” Rooted in the cultural soil of New Orleans and watered by the writings of her literary idols, including Kalamu ya Salaam and Toni Morrison, DeVan Ecclesiastes has grown to bask in the sun of her heritage -- from sages who transformed pharaoh into God in Ancient Khemet, to spy boys who chant the way clear for Big Chiefs on Carnival day.

As Director of Strategic Neighborhood Development at New Orleans Business Alliance, DeVan Ecclesiastes leads the place-based development of indigenous African-American neighborhoods, building partnerships, empowering community leaders and advancing work within the priority areas of economic opportunity, cultural preservation, affordable housing, transportation access and environmental sustainability -- realized in the New Orleans's new Cultural Innovation District. With a belief in making bold commitments to address entrenched disparities, no matter her endeavor, DeVan Ecclesiastes continually seeks opportunities to forward her mission of creating a platform for equitable societal change and her vision of social justice for all humanity.

More profile about the speaker
Asali DeVan Ecclesiastes | Speaker | TED.com