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TED演讲 | 我的父亲是恐怖分子,但我选择了和平

On November 5th, 1990, a man named El-Sayyid Nosair walked into a hotel in Manhattan and assassinated Rabbi Meir Kahane, the leader of the Jewish Defense League. Nosair was initially found not guilty of the murder, but while serving time on lesser charges, he and other men began planning attacks on a dozen New York City landmarks, including tunnels, synagogues and the United Nations headquarters. Thankfully, those plans were foiled by an FBI informant. Sadly, the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center was not. Nosair would eventually be convicted for his involvement in the plot. El-Sayyid Nosair is my father.

1990 年 11 月 5 日,一位名叫埃尔·塞伊德·诺塞尔的男子走入曼哈顿的一间宾馆刺杀了拉比梅厄?卡赫纳,犹太防卫联盟的首领。诺塞尔一开始并未被指认参与谋杀, 但当他因小事入狱服刑期间, 他和一些人开始计划袭击 纽约市的一些地标,包括隧道,犹太教会堂和联合国总部。谢天谢地,这些计划被 美国联邦调查局的线人挫败了。不幸的是,1993 年 世贸中心的那场爆炸袭击却发生了。 诺塞尔最终被指控 参与这场犯罪谋划。埃尔·塞伊德·诺塞尔是我的父亲。

I was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1983 to him, an Egyptian engineer, and a loving American mother and grade school teacher, who together tried their best to create a happy childhood for me. It wasn't until I was seven years old that our family dynamic started to change. My father exposed me to a side of Islam that few people, including the majority of Muslims, get to see. It's been my experience that when people take the time to interact with one another, it doesn't take long to realize that for the most part, we all want the same things out of life. However, in every religion, in every population, you'll find a small percentage of people who hold so fervently to their beliefs that they feel they must use any means necessary to make others live as they do.

我 1983 年出生在 宾夕法尼亚州的匹兹堡, 我的父亲是一位 埃及裔工程师, 我有个爱我的美国母亲, 她是一名小学老师, 他们尽最大的努力 为给我创造出欢乐的童年。 直到我 7 岁的时候 家庭氛围开始出现了变化。 我的父亲让我接触伊斯兰的一支 很少人见过,包括大部分的穆斯林, 都没见过的一个派别。 我的人生经验告诉我 人们与彼此相处, 很快就意识到,很大程度上 人们对生活有着相同的追求。 然而,所有宗教,所有群体, 你总能看到一小部分人 对他们的信仰太过狂热 以至于认为他们应该用各种方法 让其他人和他们过同样的生活。

A few months prior to his arrest, he sat me down and explained that for the past few weekends, he and some friends had been going to a shooting range on Long Island for target practice. He told me I'd be going with him the next morning. We arrived at Calverton Shooting Range, which unbeknownst to our group was being watched by the FBI. When it was my turn to shoot, my father helped me hold the rifle to my shoulder and explained how to aim at the target about 30 yards off. That day, the last bullet I shot hit the small orange light that sat on top of the target and to everyone's surprise, especially mine, the entire target burst into flames. My uncle turned to the other men, and in Arabic said, \laugh out of that comment, but it wasn't until a few years later that I fully understood what they thought was so funny. They thought they saw in me the same destruction my father was capable of. Those men would eventually be convicted of placing a van filled with 1,500 pounds of explosives into the sub-level parking lot of the World Trade Center's North Tower, causing an explosion that killed six people and injured over 1,000 others. These were the men I looked up to. These were the men I called ammu, which means uncle.

在他被捕前的几个月, 他和我坐着聊天解释到 在过去的几个周末, 他和他的一些朋友 在长岛(美国纽约州东南部岛屿) 进行目标射击训练。 他让我第二天一早和他一起去。 我们来到凯佛顿射击场, 我们并不知道自己已经 被联邦调查局监视了。 轮到我射击的时候, 我的父亲帮我扶住 肩膀上的来福枪, 并

教导我如何瞄准 30 码处的目标。 那天,我射出的最后一颗子弹 打中了目标顶上的橙色亮光, 所有人都惊呆了,尤其是我, 整个目标版燃烧了。 我的叔叔转向旁边的人, 用阿拉伯语说到,“Ibn abuh”—— 虎父无犬子。 他们当场开怀大笑起来, 几年后 我才了解他们大笑的原因, 他们以为我和我的父亲有着 同样的摧毁能力。 这群男人最终被指控 将满载 1500 磅重的 炸弹的厢式货车 停在世界贸易中心北塔的 地下停车场, 爆炸造成 6 人死亡, 同时致使超过 1000 人受伤。 这些是我曾经敬仰的人。 这些是我曾经称呼其为 ammu, 意为叔叔的人。

By the time I turned 19, I had already moved 20 times in my life, and that instability during my childhood didn't really provide an opportunity to make many friends. Each time I would begin to feel comfortable around someone, it was time to pack up and move to the next town. Being the perpetual new face in class, I was frequently the target of bullies. I kept my identity a secret from my classmates to avoid being targeted, but as it turns out, being the quiet, chubby new kid in class was more than enough ammunition. So for the most part, I spent my time at home reading books and watching TV or playing video games. For those reasons, my social skills were lacking, to say the least, and growing up in a bigoted household, I wasn't prepared for the real world. I'd been raised to judge people based on arbitrary measurements, like a person's race or religion. 当我 19 岁的时候, 我已经搬超过 20 次家了, 童年所经历的不稳定 并未给我 结交朋友的机会。 每当我感到和附近人相熟时, 就是我要收拾行囊 去下一个地方的时候。 作为永远的班级新生, 我常是同学们欺负的对象。 为了不被同班同学欺负, 我将自己的身份保密, 但结果是,作为 安静又胖乎乎的新同学 很轻易就成为被欺负的对象。 所以更多的时候, 我待在家里 看书看电视 或者是打电动。 正因为这样,我的社交能力有所缺失, 简单地说, 成长在固执的家庭, 我没有准备好应对现实世界。 我被教育成用武断的方式, 依据人们的脸或宗教, 来评断他人。

So what opened my eyes? One of my first experiences that challenged this way of thinking was during the 2000 presidential elections. Through a college prep program, I was able to take part in the National Youth Convention in Philadelphia. My particular group's focus was on youth violence, and having been the victim of bullying for most of my life, this was a subject in which I felt particularly passionate. The members of our group came from many different walks of life. One day toward the end of the convention, I found out that one of the kids I had befriended was Jewish. Now, it had taken several days for this detail to come to light, and I realized that there was no natural animosity between the two of us. I had never had a Jewish friend before, and frankly I felt a sense of pride in having been able to overcome a barrier that for most of my life I had been led to believe was insurmountable. Another major turning point came when I found a summer job at Busch Gardens, an amusement park. There, I was exposed to people from all sorts of faiths and cultures, and that experience proved to be fundamental to the development of my character. Most of my life, I'd been taught that homosexuality was a sin, and by extension, that all gay people were a negative influence. As chance would have it, I had the opportunity to work with some of the gay performers at a show there, and soon found that many were the kindest, least judgmental people I had ever met. Being bullied as a kid created a sense of empathy in me toward the suffering of others, and it comes very unnaturally to me to treat people who are kind in any other way than how I would want to be treated. Because of that feeling, I was able to contrast the stereotypes I'd been taught as a child with real life experience and interaction. I don't know what it's like to be gay, but I'm well acquainted with being judged for something that's beyond my control.

什么让我开了眼界呢? 某次经历 挑战了我思考的方式 发生于 2000 年美国总统竞选期间。 在预科期间, 我参与了 在费城举办的全国青年大会。 我这组的话题是关于青少年暴力, 作为倍受欺负的受害者, 这个话题我很感兴趣。 组员都有着不同的生活轨迹。 大会临近结束的某天, 我发现我的某个朋友 是犹太

人。 我也是过了几天 才知晓这件事情, 我认识到,我们之间 并没有与生俱来的仇恨。 我从未有过犹太朋友, 坦白地说,我为此感到骄傲, 能够跨越 我人生绝大部分时间 认为是不可能逾越的障碍。 另一个转折点是, 某年暑假,我在布希花园 这个主题乐园打工。 我见识到有着不同信仰, 来自不同文化的人们, 这样的经验 对我的人格发展 是至关重要的。 因为在过去的日子, 我接收到的教育是, 同性恋是罪恶的, 据此推断, 所有的同性恋者都有着 消极的影响。 在我打暑期工的时间里, 我有机会和同性恋演员 一起合作, 我很快发现,很多同性恋者 是我所见过最善良, 最自由开放尊重他人的人。 在儿童时期被欺负的经历 教给我要对他人的遭遇 感到同情和怜悯, 对我来说, 我会善待那些 对我好的人。 因为这样的感受,我能够 用真实生活和交际经历来 抵挡从孩童时期就被灌输的成见。 我不知道作为同性恋者的感受, 但我熟知那种被 无法掌控的事物所评断的感受。

Then there was \honest with myself about my own bigotry and helped me to realize that a person's race, religion or sexual orientation had nothing to do with the quality of one's character. He was in many ways a father figure to me when I was in desperate need of one. Inspiration can often come from an unexpected place, and the fact that a Jewish comedian had done more to positively influence my worldview than my own extremist father is not lost on me.

接着,有个“每日秀”的节目出现了。 每一晚,乔恩·斯图尔特催促我 诚实面对自己的偏见, 帮助我认识到一个人的种族, 信仰和性取向 对这个人的人格没有任何关系。 某种程度上说, 每当我迫切需要一个父亲的时候, 他就在那里。 鼓舞人心之事 往往来自你无法预知的地方, 事实上,一个犹太裔喜剧明星 积极地影响我的世界观, 比我那极端的亲生父亲 多得多。

One day, I had a conversation with my mother about how my worldview was starting to change, and she said something to me that I will hold dear to my heart for as long as I live. She looked at me with the weary eyes of someone who had experienced enough dogmatism to last a lifetime,

英语学习资料2018912

TED演讲|我的父亲是恐怖分子,但我选择了和平OnNovember5th,1990,amannamedEl-SayyidNosairwalkedintoahotelinManhattanandassassinatedRabbiMeirKahane,theleaderoftheJewishDefenseLeague.No
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