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Transcript of YouTube Video: War Journalism Should Be Rooted in Empathy — Not Violence | Bel Trew | TED

Transcript of YouTube Video: War Journalism Should Be Rooted in Empathy — Not Violence | Bel Trew | TED

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00:04

If you load up my social media feed right now

00:07

and give it a quick scroll,

00:09

it's like experiencing frighteningly different alternate universes.

00:13

Even if you weed out the trolls,

00:16

the extremists, those people, I would say,

00:18

who cling to the extremes of reality,

00:20

everyday, normal people’s experiences of major world news events

00:26

are so frighteningly different,

00:28

it would make you question if there is a reality at all.

00:32

We live in a world where there are 1,001 ways to communicate,

00:36

and yet we've completely forgotten how to speak to each other.

00:41

As a journalist, I'm among the few people

00:43

who really can and should talk to all sides.

00:46

That irreverence where I can chat to a fighter on the frontlines in Libya,

00:51

but also march into a presidential office in Kyiv demanding answers,

00:55

is what drew me to this job.

00:57

I guess you could call me an accidental war correspondent.

01:02

I don't really like the phrase war correspondent,

01:05

as I think it's a bit dehumanizing,

01:06

but it's the quickest way to explain what I do.

01:09

And it’s accidental because honestly, I’m really frightened on frontlines.

01:14

And I'm also really terrible at identifying military hardware.

01:18

There's a running joke that journalists think everything is a tank.

01:22

It's kind of true.

01:24

(Laughter)

01:25

But the region where I was born, the region I grew up in,

01:28

and the region I specialized in, the Middle East

01:31

has been ravished by war,

01:33

particularly after that beautiful explosion of hope

01:36

with the 2011 uprisings was largely stolen by authoritarian regimes.

01:42

Since then, my scope has widened to include conflicts like Ukraine,

01:46

as the tectonic plates of global politics have shifted.

01:51

And so, in many ways,

01:53

I see a really wide spectrum of sides,

01:56

probably quite a unique spectrum of sides,

01:58

that transcends those echo chambers

02:01

that X and Meta are desperate to funnel us into.

02:04

And what I'm seeing right now

02:06

is more division among people than ever,

02:08

and that division is more violent than ever.

02:11

And that division is so fundamental, it's almost existential.

02:15

One person's perception of reality cannot exist alongside someone else's.

02:21

Whole communities are being otherized.

02:24

Genocidal language is being bandied around

02:26

like people are using song lyrics.

02:31

To borrow a phrase from a colleague who I deeply respect,

02:34

who was a journalist for many years and now works in disinformation,

02:38

what we're seeing right now is the total collapse of discourse.

02:44

Now the first group to be blamed

02:46

for any breakdown in societal communication

02:48

is usually the mainstream media.

02:51

I'm not entirely sure what everyone means by the mainstream media.

02:55

I know that I'm frequently accused of being it,

02:57

like it's a cartoon villain,

03:00

which, I guess is kind of flattering, right?

03:02

Little old me, Bel Trew,

03:03

responsible for every major media outlet on the planet.

03:08

But although I'd like to defend my compromised profession,

03:13

there might be a tiny nugget of truth in it.

03:16

And that truth might just be key to fixing this.

03:22

I'd like to tell you a story.

03:26

For the last two years,

03:27

I’ve been covering Europe’s bloodiest war in generations:

03:31

Ukraine.

03:33

In April 2022,

03:35

when the Russians withdrew from around the capital, Kyiv,

03:39

my teams and I went up there.

03:42

After a pretty horrendous day of reporting,

03:45

we stumbled upon the body of a young Ukrainian man.

03:48

He'd been bound, he'd been shot in the back,

03:51

and his body had been dumped by this abandoned Russian camp.

03:57

We spent a year trying to find out who he was, what happened to him,

04:01

what happened to his family.

04:02

And in the process,

04:04

we uncovered a devastating part that plagues every conflict.

04:09

The desperate search for the missing and for the dead.

04:14

During the course of filming this investigation,

04:17

which became my first feature-length documentary,

04:19

"The Body in the Woods,"

04:21

we met a teenage boy, a Ukrainian teenage boy called Vladislav.

04:26

Vladislav's mother, his only parent,

04:29

had been shot dead by Russian soldiers

04:32

as she tried to deliver humanitarian aid outside of Kyiv.

04:37

Vladislav was desperately looking for her body, and in fact,

04:39

he'd actually been given the wrong corpse to cremate at one point.

04:44

Orphaned and alone,

04:45

he moved in with his lawyer, who was helping him in the quest.

04:50

All he had left were a few belongings and a pet hedgehog.

04:56

The reason I'm telling you this today

04:58

is because when we did the initial first screening,

05:02

the first feedback we got

05:03

was that while this was definitely a documentary about war,

05:08

there wasn’t a single image of a frontline trench in it.

05:11

In fact, the only videos of tanks and soldiers

05:14

appeared at the beginning when we were setting the scene.

05:17

We had that footage from our own reporting,

05:19

from our own archives.

05:20

We had the footage of incoming projectiles,

05:22

of frontline artillery positions, but for whatever reason,

05:26

it had ended up on the cutting-room floor.

05:30

Subconsciously,

05:31

we'd realized that the most impactful way to show the devastation of war

05:37

was in the image of a teenage boy,

05:40

his hedgehog and his heartbreak.

05:44

Powerful war reporting didn’t need to constantly frontload violence.

05:52

The 24-hour news cycle that we have pinging relentlessly into our phones

05:56

was really born in, and because of war.

06:00

I think it's interesting that the first dedicated 24-hours-a-day news network,

06:04

the first global one, CNN,

06:06

really cemented its name in 1990

06:09

with its on-the-ground coverage of the first Gulf War.

06:13

Al Jazeera Arabic rose to global prominence

06:16

with its coverage of the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

06:20

Now I think if I was to ask all of you today

06:23

to imagine what war reporting looks like,

06:25

you'd probably conjure up an image of someone in a helmet, a flak jacket,

06:30

maybe dodging out of the way of an incoming projectile,

06:33

an image that often becomes the story and even the headline.

06:37

But if you think about that for a second,

06:40

that doesn't really go beyond visualizing the dictionary definition of war.

06:48

Now don’t get me wrong,

06:50

this is an incredibly important part of war to show,

06:53

but I worry if it drowns out, if it dominates other sides of conflicts,

06:57

like the devastating impact on civilians whose lives are upended,

07:01

who lose their loved ones,

07:02

who have to live with life-shattering injuries,

07:06

then maybe it tips into the fetishization of violence.

07:11

I think part of the problem might be

07:13

the historical patriarchal structures within the news industry,

07:16

which still [is] a little bit present today.

07:19

Breaking news, there are female war correspondents.

07:24

There are even women editors-in-chief.

07:27

But to me, it's not about what gender you identify as,

07:31

but how we as journalists perceive and communicate what we see.

07:36

And so often frontline coverage has been quite macho.

07:41

In fact, for a long time, it was known in the industry as the “bang bang.”

07:48

The bang bang.

07:51

What a phrase, right?

07:53

Some of the most devastating moments in human history,

07:57

reduced to the literal sound of the murderous machines.

08:03

Of course, there are always human-interest news pieces,

08:06

but in journalism, they're always called the softer stories,

08:09

which puzzled me because sometimes,

08:10

they're the most gut-wrenching part of any conflict.

08:13

And I was really struggling with this.

08:15

And what makes good journalism

08:17

after a particularly tricky trip to Ukraine last year,

08:19

where I just met so many families whose lives have been upended

08:23

that I decided to print off a sticker and put it on my laptop,

08:27

where it remains today.

08:29

And that sticker reads Truth and Compassion.

08:35

For so long, I've lived by the maxim "the truth will set you free."

08:39

But as I went from horror to horror, from war to war,

08:42

I realized that sometimes the truth was a bit blurry.

08:46

And if we only peddle our own truths,

08:49

we're in danger of not seeing all sides of the story,

08:51

as difficult as it is sometimes to reach across that divide.

08:56

And that's where we cycle back to the collapse of discourse.

09:01

Right now, any of you,

09:03

without even turning on the news

09:05

or opening a news channel or newspaper,

09:08

you can access, from your mobile phones through social media,

09:11

some of the most horrific images from world news events

09:15

ever brewed in the darkest cauldron of the human psyche.

09:20

And this has only been made worse by social media companies

09:23

getting rid of their trust and safety divisions.

09:27

It's really staggering to see what humans can do to humans.

09:31

These days, I'm seeing on networks like Telegram,

09:34

these videos being shared,

09:37

and they're met with likes and smiley emojis

09:39

and messages of encouragement.

09:44

In the case of Ukraine, some of these videos that show the haunting,

09:48

last moments of soldiers' lives as they're cowering in the trenches

09:52

and you see that bird's-eye view of the grenade dropping on them.

09:55

Some of those videos are shared on X to comic music.

10:02

Now it’s not the fault, of course, of conflict journalism.

10:05

That's not the only reason that we got here.

10:07

But I wonder if the history of bang bang journalism,

10:10

if the entertainment of the news industry,

10:12

if the pursuit of clicks and likes has in some way contributed.

10:17

Of course, it's gone well beyond what any news agency can even stomach,

10:21

let alone be held responsible for.

10:25

The violence has morphed into our inability to hold our own pain

10:29

and yet see the suffering of others.

10:32

It has polarized all of us so much

10:34

that we cannot imagine that there is another side to the story,

10:37

let alone that there might be a humanity to it.

10:40

It's a world where it becomes an extremist position

10:44

to call for a deeply needed humanitarian ceasefire.

10:49

It's a world where we have a broken discourse.

10:54

But it's a world, maybe,

10:56

where conflict journalism can step up.

11:03

For the last few months,

11:04

and I'd like to share a few more stories,

11:07

I've been covering the most bitterly divided war of our time, Gaza.

11:15

This is the fourth war in Gaza that I've covered,

11:17

although I should say that foreign correspondents are not permitted

11:20

to be actually inside Gaza, apart from on-military embeds.

11:23

So it's up to our brave Palestinian journalist colleagues

11:26

who are spearheading the coverage

11:27

at great risk to their own lives, from within Gaza.

11:31

But if we go back a few months,

11:34

in Israel,

11:35

the horrors of Hamas's bloody rampage on October 7,

11:39

spurred a lot of society to back the military offensive in Gaza.

11:45

But what I learned when I was on the ground

11:47

was that not everyone was behind it.

11:52

I spoke to family members of those

11:55

who've been held hostage in Gaza right now by militants.

11:58

I spoke to family members of those who were killed on October 7,

12:03

and some of them said to me

12:04

that they didn't believe that a destruction

12:06

and a collective punishment of Gaza would do any good.

12:12

They said "not in my name,"

12:13

and some of them have joined protests calling for a ceasefire

12:16

that are taking place in Tel Aviv right now,

12:19

despite the fact that they're facing global criticism

12:22

from people on their own side.

12:25

There was one interview that struck me,

12:28

was with a man called Yonatan, an Israeli man,

12:31

and his mother had been killed on October 7.

12:34

And this interview impacted me so much,

12:36

I actually had to put my phone on mute

12:38

because I needed to take a minute to breathe.

12:43

Yonatan told me, "Vengeance is not a strategy.

12:48

Violence will not fix violence.

12:51

Invest in peace."

12:54

To experience such a searing level of pain,

12:56

like to have your mother murdered,

12:58

but yet to see the suffering of others,

13:00

is the deepest well of compassion

13:02

I feel that we can all learn from.

13:06

It's a well of compassion that's perhaps needed right now,

13:09

as the death toll is soaring in Gaza.

13:11

As some of the world's most respected rights groups,

13:14

like Save the Children, are saying,

13:15

Palestinian civilians and children are being killed at a historic rate.

13:19

And it is a deep well of compassion

13:21

that I feel journalists could learn from to build a better journalism.

13:27

A journalism that turns from the patriarchal tendencies

13:29

to fetishize violence,

13:31

that tells the true impact of war in and out of the trenches.

13:35

A journalism that could go some way to helping us heal society.

13:40

A journalism that might even be able to help fix this broken discourse.

13:47

I'm talking to you like I'm the Mother Teresa of journalism, right?

13:51

Like I haven’t put on a helmet and a flak jacket

13:54

and stood repeatedly in front of a camera

13:56

and talked about the bombs landing all around me.

13:59

Like me and my editors haven't messed up news coverage choices

14:02

and watched with horror the weaponization of words.

14:07

I don't know what to say to you all today, I know I can and will do better.

14:13

I know that we, the journalists, the storytellers, with our platforms,

14:17

can help put us on a better path.

14:19

I know that we, the viewers and the readers,

14:21

with our ability to direct news coverage through our consumption,

14:25

can help put us on a better course.

14:29

It's why I won't take this sticker off my laptop,

14:32

so it reminds me every day.

14:35

And it's why I will continue to shout from the rooftops.

14:40

Only truth and compassion together

14:43

can set us free.

14:46

Thank you.

14:47

(Applause)