Here you can see a Brazilian baby.
Cute, huh?
And he isn't just a baby.
It's a baby citizen.
Once we are born, voila!
Magically, we are already citizens, right?
Partially right, at least for me.
Yes, we do have rights, duties,
we belong to a nation.
When growing up, we are probably
going to pay taxes and to vote.
And all these are well-known
characteristics for good citizens.
And indeed they are relevant,
they are true.
But thinking just this way,
we are reducing a beautiful
concept of citizenship.
Because citizenship is way more than that,
and I’ll explain why soon.
By the way, I am this baby.
(Laughter)
I mean, I was.
And I was smiling in this picture
because mommy told me
that I would be a great citizen one day.
(Laughter)
And I would do a TED Talk
to share my ideas.
(Laughter)
But unfortunately, this is not true.
My mom never told me that.
How could she?
No one prepared her to be a citizen.
Then she wouldn't know
what is to be a great one, right?
People in my country are mostly
individuals rather than citizens,
like my mom and myself in the past.
And that's the point here.
The unpreparedness for citizenship
is the most democratic behavior
among us Brazilians.
It doesn't matter where you came from,
your gender, your age,
your professional background,
or any other thing.
The probability that you are a prepared
citizen is really low.
And for the context, I am 30 years old
and our constitution is just 35.
So it's really new, right?
We are still figuring out
how to be a democracy.
You probably already got my point here.
We are not baby citizens,
no one is born as a citizen.
We are just individuals.
And citizenship is something
that we might conquer
through life experiences.
Citizenship requires effort.
We need to acquire knowledge.
We need to pass through real life
experiences where we put our hands on.
And maybe we can be called
a citizen one day.
And that's my idea worth spreading here.
The only takeaway I want you
to bring back home
is the reflection about you being
a citizen or just an individual.
And for those who think
that can strengthen your journey
to be a better citizen
or to start being a citizen,
I have here the citizen metamorphosis
process to share with you.
It's just four ingredients,
it's really basic stuff.
You're going to see that there is
nothing mind-blowing there.
What is mind-blowing in my ingredients
is that we are just
not putting them in practice,
and I don't know why.
They are simple, fun and necessary.
But before entering the citizen
metamorphosis process,
I need to align with you
three assumptions.
Citizenship for Gabriel in my conception
is about solving public problems.
So if you're not going toward solving
things that are bothering you in society,
if you're not choosing a problem
that resonates with your heart
and with your mind
and really try to solve it,
you are not a citizen for me.
Secondly, the state is not a hero.
We rely and we expect a lot of things,
that someone is going
to solve our problems,
especially the state, in some countries.
And the state, of course, is important,
but it’s just one actor.
We need to unite all sectors
to solve public problems together.
And finally, we are a complex society.
We can see wicked problems
everywhere, every day.
Just take a look
at the UN agenda for 2030.
Maybe we are just copy and pasting
the SDGs and trying again
because we are failing a lot.
So we need to solve
public problems together.
That's about being a citizen.
So now I have my ingredients
here to share with you.
It's just four.
Nothing mind-blowing there.
Remember, basic stuff.
In Brazil, we like to call basic stuff
as the rice and the beans.
It’s a delicious dish that we eat a lot.
So we need to look forward
for the rice and the beans
to do something as citizens.
First, political knowledge.
We are raised listening to bad things
about politics, right?
It's something that is corrupted,
it's boring, it's difficult to understand,
so we must avoid it.
That's wrong.
Politics is beautiful,
and it's a beauty tool for transformation.
But we need to understand how to use it.
And when you dive into this concept,
you need to acquire the basic knowledge
to understand your country,
how your country is organized,
which institutions are there,
what they do,
what are the political parties,
the ideologies,
why you're paying taxes,
where your money is going.
All these basic answers
you must have to be a citizen.
If you don't have it,
you need to look forward for it.
Especially in a world of misinformation,
this gets quite important.
So political knowledge
as the first ingredient.
The second one is plural dialogue.
It's really comfortable to talk
about people we love and we agree with.
And finding divergency,
people that will make us feel
uncomfortable somehow
is just making us grow.
Going outside the bubbles,
the echo chambers and all this.
It’s important, and I promise you,
you’re going to learn something new.
It's not about tolerating everything
and agreeing with everything
people will say,
but it's about trying to understand
how they got to this perspective
and what can you learn from them.
Thirdly, we have civic empathy,
and I bet you've been listening
to the word empathy a lot recently.
But I'm not talking about empathy
with human beings.
That, of course, is something important.
But are we exercising empathy
with our neighborhood,
with our community, with our city?
Trying to see our city
as a human being for a moment
and understand there’s
emotions there, [suffering].
We need to help it to be better
and to identify our city gaps
is our role as citizens
and acknowledge that all problems
that are surrounding us
and that are bothering us, we made them.
Somehow, we contributed
to the existence of these problems.
So this is civic empathy.
And finally, community protagonism.
And I love this, because what
is the point of having knowledge,
knowing how to dialogue,
understanding your city gaps,
if you're not putting your hands
on to do something?
And these beautiful words here
tell us two things:
community first.
You need to look local
and then maybe you can go global.
The big revolution comes
from small revolution.
So look to your community and that's good.
And protagonism
because you have the power.
You can do whatever you want,
you just need to move on for it.
So I've been applying
this recipe for a long time
in two civil society organizations
I cofounded in Brazil with my team.
And I can assure you that it's possible
to mix up these ingredients
and do a good recipe
where you're going to take people
that are just individuals, spectators,
and bring them to a side
where they can find themselves
as change makers, as solvers, as citizens.
And especially we do this better
when we design a journey that is simple,
fun, meaningful and tangible.
Creating safe spaces where people
really feel that they belong
and that we can embrace mistakes
as part of the process.
And here are the kind of things
that you can see possible
after being trained for citizenship.
You can teach other people
about the political knowledge
that you just acquired.
You can put people to dialogue,
facilitating conversations
about tough topics
where people are going to broaden
their tolerance and open their minds.
You can do awareness campaigns
to put emphasis
and spreading messages
that are relevant for you.
You can monitor the government
and work with it as peers
to improve your society.
You can formulate local diagnosis
of public problems
to understand your city gaps,
and put in practice the civic empathy
that I just told you.
You can use these city gaps
to create public policies from scratch
using our methodology, for example,
that is free and available
for everybody online.
Telling people what is the life cycle
of a public policy.
You can take your ideas as public policies
and advocate in your municipality,
doing some kind of lobby
to see your ideas coming through.
And that's precisely the spotlight
that I want to put here,
because we all were taught that the state,
the government has this monopoly
of building these public policies.
And everybody here can be a policymaker,
not just policy takers.
Magda and Vitor, for example,
developed a public policy
where they created a mobile application
to help the elderly to find
their rights really easily
and also access to basic services
in their municipality.
The proposal was approved
by the city council,
and it's just awaiting for the executive
branch to approve the budget.
They did that from scratch.
Secondly, we have Rafael.
That, in the other hand, created
the skateboarding week.
Besides being an Olympic sport now,
it's really important for kids in Brazil
to have better opportunities.
So he presented to the city councilor,
they approved and it's happening
in his town now.
Finally, we have Folashade.
She just presented a public policy
to stimulate the cultural
tourism in her region,
putting the original
and traditional communities
into the center of the process
of creating courses
and experiences to the tourists.
The proposal hasn't been approved yet,
but has been presented.
The first step has been taken.
We must celebrate it.
If all these people,
and baby Gabriel, now a man,
became citizens and are involved
[in] solving public problems,
everyone can be one as well.
But the reason why I brought
my baby image here
is not because I found myself beautiful.
It's because we all need to remember
that the systemic change will only happen
when we start raising our kids
as citizens since the beginning.
Politics, democracy, citizenship
are not concepts that are out there
that we can’t touch.
We need to feel them,
we need to live them.
They are a set of values
that we need to cultivate inside us
since the beginning.
It's a lifetime project.
Remember, citizenship
cannot be taken for granted.
You must deserve it.
You must conquer it.
Citizenship must be earned.
See you on the other side.
Thank you so much.
(Applause)