Trevor Noah

Born a Crime

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  • Pame Cedeñoцитує6 років тому
    The Zulu went to war with the white man. The Xhosa played chess with the white man. For a long time neither was particularly successful, and each blamed the other for a problem neither had created. Bitterness festered. For decades those feelings were held in check by a common enemy. Then apartheid fell, Mandela walked free, and black South Africa went to war with itself.
  • b0386587688цитує4 роки тому
    In America the dream is to make it out of the ghetto. In Soweto, because there was no leaving the ghetto, the dream was to transform the ghetto.
  • Firaцитує4 роки тому
    “Learn from your past and

    be better because of your past,”
  • Chio Gonzálezцитує5 років тому
    Imagine being thrown out of an airplane. You hit the ground and break all your bones, you go to the hospital and you heal and you move on and finally put the whole thing behind you—and then one day somebody tells you about parachutes. That’s how I felt.
  • b5814272295цитує6 років тому
    Women held the community together. “Wathint’Abafazi Wathint’imbokodo!” was the chant they would rally to during the freedom struggle. “When you strike a woman, you strike a rock.” As a nation, we recognized the power of women, but in the home they were expected to submit and obey.
  • Banny Carolinaцитує7 років тому
    Nelson Mandela once said, “If you talk to a man in a language he understands, that goes to his head. If you talk to him in his language, that goes to his heart.” He was so right. When you make the effort to speak someone else’s language, even if it’s just basic phrases here and there, you are saying to them, “I understand that you have a culture and identity that exists beyond me. I see you as a human being.”
  • Banny Carolinaцитує7 років тому
    The more common your tongue, the less likely you are to learn others.
  • Konstantin Perepelinцитує8 років тому
    A shared language says “We’re the same.” A language barrier says “We’re different.”
  • Елизавета Петровацитує2 роки тому
    People say all the time that they’d do anything for the people they love. But would you really? Would you do anything? Would you give everything? I don’t know that a child knows that kind of selfless love. A mother, yes. A mother will clutch her children and jump from a moving car to keep them from harm. She will do it without thinking. But I don’t think the child knows how to do that, not instinctively. It’s something the child has to learn.
  • Елизавета Петровацитує2 роки тому
    that’s the problem with the world. We have people who cannot police themselves, so they want to police everyone else around them.”
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