比尔·盖茨夫妇斯坦福大学毕业典礼演讲

2015-03-02 14:17:45来源:网络

  The stigma of AIDS is vicious, especially for women. And the punishment is abandonment. When I arrived at her cot, I suddenly felt completely and totally helpless. I had absolutely nothing I could offer this woman. I knew I couldn't save her. But I didn't want her to be alone. So I knelt down with her and I put my hand out and she reached for my hand and grabbed it and she wouldn't let it go. I didn't speak her language and I couldn't think of what I should say to her. And finally I just said to her, it's going to be okay. It's going to be okay. It's not your fault.

  得艾滋病令人声名狼藉,特别是对女性。并且得病的惩罚就是被抛弃。当我走进她床边时,我突然感觉彻底的无力和无助感。我无能为力实施帮助。我知道我不能救活她。但是我不想让她独自一人(死去)。所以我跪下来然后伸出手,她摸到我的手然后就抓住,不松开。我不会说她们的语言而且我也不知道我能对她说什么。最后我只是对她说,一切都会好起来的。一切都会好起来的。这不是你的错。

  And after I had been with her for sometime, she started pointing to the roof top. She clearly wanted to go up and I realized the sun was going down and what she wanted to do was go up on the roof top and see the sunset. So the workers in this home for the dying were very busy and I said to them, you know, can we take her up on the roof top? No. No. We have to pass out medicines. So I waited that for that to happen and I asked another worker and they said, No no no, we are too busy. We can't get her up there. And so finally I just scooped this woman up in my arms.

  在我陪着她待了一会之后,她的手指向了屋顶。很显然她很想上屋顶,而我发现太阳快要落山了,所以她想做的就是等上屋顶并且看日落。那时房子里的工作人员非常忙碌,然后我对他们说,我们能不能把她抬到屋顶上?不行。我们现在必须要分派药物。所以我就等着他们分派药物,然后我又问了另外的工作人员,他们说不行,我们太忙了。我们不能抬她上去。所以,最后我就把她抱在了怀中。

  She was nothing more than skin over bones and I took her up on the roof top, and I found one of those plastic chairs that blows over in a light breeze. I put her there, sat her down, put a blanket over her legs and she sat there facing to the west, watching the sunset. The workers knew -- I made sure they knew that she was up there so that they would bring her down later that evening after the sun went down and then I had to leave.

  她不过是骨瘦如柴,我就抱着她上了屋顶。找到了一个在微风的吹拂下响着的破旧不堪塑料凳。我把她放在椅子上,拿一个毛毯盖住她的腿,然后她就坐在那里望向西边,看着日落。工作人员知道她在屋顶上,我确保他们知道并且会在日落以后把她带下来。而不久后我就要离开。

  But she never left me. I felt completely and totally inadequate in the face of this woman's death. But sometimes, it's the people that you can't help that inspire you the most.

  但是她从未离开过我。我感到彻底的无力去面对这位妇女的死亡。但是有时,就正是这些你不能帮助的人群给了你最大的激励。

  I knew that those sex workers I had met in the morning could be the woman that I carried upstairs later that evening. Unless we found a way to defy the stigma that hung over their lives.

  我知道早上我碰到的那些性工作者将来可能就会是那天夜晚我抱上屋顶妇女的样子。除非我们找到一个方法来对抗这个羁绊她们一生的耻辱。

  Over the past ten years, our Foundation has helped sex workers build support groups so they could empower one another to speak up and demand safe sex and that their clients use condoms. Their brave efforts have helped to keep HIV prevalence low among sex workers and a lot of studies show that's the big reason why the AIDS epidemic has not exploded in India.

  过去的十年中,我们的基金已经帮助性工作者建立了支持小组,那样她们可以互相协助,要求安全的性行为,让客户就使用安全套。正是因为性服务者们勇敢的努力保持了性工作者的低HIV感染率,并且很多研究表明这就是为什么印度没有大范围地爆发艾滋病的一个重要原因。

  When these sex workers gathered together to help stop AIDS transmission, something unexpected and wonderful happened. The community they formed became a platform for everything. Police and others who raped and robbed them couldn't get away with it anymore. The women set up systems to encourage savings for one another and with those savings, they were able to leave sex work. This was all done by people that society considered the lowest of the low.

  如果这些性工作者一起帮助阻止艾滋病的传播,就会发生意想不到的好事。她们形成的这个社区成为了一个任何事互相协助的平台。警察和其他任何强奸或者抢劫她们的人都不可能无法无天。妇女们组建起了互相鼓励储蓄财产的系统,这样有了足够的储蓄,她们就可以离开性服务行业。这就是那些在社会上被视作底层中的最下等人做的事情。

  Optimism, for me, is not a passive expectation that things are going to get better. For me, it's a conviction and a belief that we can make things better. So no matter how much suffering we see, no matter how bad it is, we can help people if we don't lose hope help and if we don't look away. (Applause).

  对我而言,乐观并非消极地期待事情会变好而是一种相信事情会做的更好的确信和信念。因此不管我们目睹了怎样的痛苦,不管事态如何糟糕,如果我们没有失去希望不转头而去,那么我们便能伸出援手。(掌声)

  BILL GATES: Melinda and I have described some devastating scenes, but we want to make the strongest case we can for the power of optimism. Even in dire situations, optimism fuels innovation and leads to new approaches that eliminate suffering. But if you never really see the people that are suffering, your optimism can't help them. You will never change their world. And that brings me to what I see is a paradox.

  比尔盖茨:我和梅琳达描述了几个最为在男性的画面,但是我们还是要尽量强调乐观的力量。即使是在绝境之中,乐观也会加速创新,产生新的避免痛苦的方法。但是如果你从未看过那些痛苦折磨着的人时,你的乐观也将无能为力。你也将不会改变他们的世界。这让我想到了我眼中的一个悖论。

  The modern world is an incredible source of innovation and Stanford stands at the center of that, creating new companies, new schools of thought, prize-winning professors, inspired art and literature, miracle drugs, and amazing graduates. Whether you are a scientist with a new discovery, or working in the trenches to understand the needs of the most marginalized, you are advancing amazing breakthroughs in what human beings can do for each other.

  现代社会拥有无与伦比的创新精神,而斯坦福大学正处在创新的核心。斯坦福孕育了许许多多的新公司,有思想的学校,硕果累累的教授,富有灵感的艺术文化,创新的软件,药品,还有优秀的毕业生。无论你是收获新发现的科学家,还是在深沟中了解社会最边缘人的需求,你都在为人类相互间的协作做出惊人的突破。

  At the same time, if you ask people across the United States is the future going to be better than the past, most say no. My kids will be worse off than I am. They think innovation won't make the world better for them or their children.

  同时,如果你问全美国的人——未来回避过去更好吗?大部分人会说不,我的孩子不如我优秀。他们认为创新不会让自己或孩子的世界更好。

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