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00:22:20Trans philanthropy
00:22:20Trans ist
00:22:38community. Just to think, in 1877, the population of Rapa Nui was 111 persons.
00:22:46It was protected by the Chilean to grow slowly. So around 1966, we were about
00:22:561,000 people. That same year, my uncle led a movement demanding full citizenship
00:23:02for our people. It gave us more rights than ever before, and we started to
00:23:08regain control of our lives by working within this new system.
00:23:15But being part of Chile is complicated. Even though our passports is Chilean,
00:23:21there is a cultural divide that often causes conflict.
00:23:36Today, some of us think that independence would solve this problem, but that, too, is complicated.
00:23:43You become independent on island. You go below under development. You have no resource. So what
00:23:49you end up doing, you sell the right to fishing, the right to other things, and you become very
00:23:57dependent on the money of those who pay. We are interdependent all around the world.
00:24:09hola, hola, hola, hola, hola, hola, hola.
00:24:17Look!
00:24:20Oh!
00:24:25Oh!
00:24:25Oh my gosh, don't start!
00:24:27It's a recycling truck!
00:24:28It's a recycling truck!
00:24:31Yay!
00:24:35It's easy to forget that almost everything we own comes from somewhere else, but anything
00:24:40we throw away stays where we live.
00:24:44On our island?
00:24:48That can be a problem.
00:25:02I have two packs of 1.000 kilos in a week, which are 2.000 kilos.
00:25:09Our people buy a lot of material, our people consume a lot.
00:25:14For 6.000 people, 6.000, 6.000, and for 6.000 people we work here.
00:25:22You'll see when we're going to go up, we're going to go to Valladolid, you'll cry, and it's
00:25:29a lot of money, and it's a lot of money, it's a lot of money, it's a lot of money,
00:25:32it's
00:25:32a lot of money, it's a lot of money, it's a lot of money, it's a lot of money, it's
00:25:39a lot
00:25:39of money.
00:25:40Las personas de mayor ingresos consumen más cosas más envasadas, colchones, ropa, zapatos,
00:25:48cosas que antes, hace 10 años, la persona aquí por lo menos tenía uno o dos y con eso
00:25:52y listo.
00:25:53Pero ahora tienen la posibilidad de tener cinco, diez.
00:25:57La gente, como tiene fácil acceso, es menos cuidadosa.
00:26:08Si nosotros tenemos una mala disposiciĂłn de nuestros residuos, pone en riesgo lo que
00:26:15es vital para el hombre y lo que es el agua.
00:26:17Efectivamente la isla tiene una gran napa, es como un gran pozo, una gran taza de agua,
00:26:24de la cual se va alimentando del agua de lluvia.
00:26:28El exceso de vehículos. Si yo tengo baterías, tienen metales pesados. Están a la intemperie,
00:26:36están mal dispuestas. ¿Qué me quiere decir que eso no se filtre y no llegue algo?
00:26:44Cuéntame un poco sobre el sistema de reciclaje.
00:26:50Para que resulte el tema de los envĂ­os de residuos al continente para su reciclaje,
00:26:54es que tenemos que buscar alianzas estratégicas, digamos, y además pedir favores.
00:27:02Ya hemos hecho cinco envĂ­os. La logĂ­stica de lo que significa hacer eso es demasiado
00:27:07alta, digamos. Es complejo cuando tú estás a cuatro mil kilómetros del continente.
00:27:14Tenemos que ir a hablar con la naviera, o en este caso también con la armada,
00:27:18para que nos ayude a enviar los residuos.
00:27:21Después que el barco llega a Valparaíso, nosotros tenemos que además pagar la descarga.
00:27:27Claro, para la gente, ah, ustedes venden los residuos.
00:27:31SĂ­, pero un kilo de cartĂłn a mĂ­ me pagan 20 pesos.
00:27:48¡Vamos!
00:27:52Para que sea difĂ­cil que sea para salir a la isla,
00:27:57el planeta parece que quiere volver a nosotros.
00:28:23Rapa Nui is located in what's called a gaier, where swirling ocean currents gather
00:28:29floating trash.
00:28:32With every wave, we're reminded of just how connected we are to the rest of the world.
00:29:26We're reminded of this.
00:29:29We're reminded of this.
00:29:33There are a lot of things that started to happen here.
00:29:41There have been several storms,
00:29:44sea torbellions.
00:29:50These are changes of consciousness that are also calling the island
00:29:53to their people to sensitize.
00:30:00We want to make the island 100% sustainable,
00:30:03and that's our dream.
00:30:08We want to make the school.
00:30:12The school will be the first prototype
00:30:15of bioconstruction.
00:30:20I went to Argentina to make a sustainable construction
00:30:23with recycled materials.
00:30:29I studied engineering in construction.
00:30:32No one knows me as engineering in construction.
00:30:37They know me as Enrique, the musician.
00:30:41The guy who sings.
00:30:43Not even Enrique.
00:30:45You, the guy who sings,
00:30:47he goes...
00:30:48Ah, yeah.
00:30:49So they know me.
00:31:05When we go to build the school,
00:31:08we call people to invite them to participate.
00:31:12Nobody will come because they are engineering in construction.
00:31:15They will come because they know him through their songs.
00:31:31They'll come because of their work.
00:31:36They can't even find the same way.
00:31:40And they can be a dream of the most part
00:31:43They've been here for a while.
00:31:44They can't even provide them for the rest of their time.
00:31:45They've gotten from buying the world,
00:31:47they've done it with the puedas.
00:31:48They can't even talk about their乏.
00:31:49That's why our classes are great.
00:31:52If you pay, the concept of now is to pay and to understand.
00:31:56And many parents say, we want to pay.
00:31:58We say, no, if you want to be a part,
00:32:01you can organize the concerts,
00:32:04you can help to do the aseo.
00:32:06There are so many things.
00:32:08At the end, it's like to say,
00:32:10I'm part of this too.
00:32:18And you know what it is?
00:32:20Yes, it's going to be on TV.
00:32:22Yes, it's going to be on TV.
00:32:25Sadly, the biggest challenge is...
00:32:29I mean, it's just, oh, it's money.
00:32:33The recognized pianist pascuense Mahani Teave
00:32:36is going to be a concert
00:32:37to benefit the development of the music school
00:32:41in the Isla of Pascua.
00:32:42This is going to be the first step of a very big project
00:32:45that will encompass all the artistic disciplines.
00:32:48But what we need is the financing.
00:32:57We have a unique place in the world,
00:33:06which is called Rapa Nui.
00:33:07We need to take care of it,
00:33:09because when this place dies,
00:33:11nothing, nobody, no money, nothing,
00:33:14we'll be able to bring it back.
00:33:18For decades, the Moai have fed our people
00:33:21by drawing foreign money to our lonely island.
00:33:25To me, the Moai represent much more
00:33:28than what our ancestors could do.
00:33:31They show me what impact the past can have on our future.
00:33:34Well, here we go.
00:33:40And we're looking for a little bit,
00:33:41Hello!
00:33:43How are you, brother?
00:33:50We're looking for another part.
00:33:56We're looking for another part.
00:33:59How are you?
00:34:04We're looking for another part.
00:34:06In the time of the boys, they are people who eat the stone, who eat with gold.
00:34:16We are going to the beach for 15, 16, 17, 18 years old, men and women,
00:34:23without realizing that you are a woman who has your hair, your hair, your hair,
00:34:28everything for us was the same.
00:34:31It is not like today.
00:34:33You have a good head, you have a good head, you have a good head.
00:34:38No.
00:34:45But when the materialism began,
00:34:49and I think that clearly, in a hard way,
00:34:53when it came to the movie in 1993,
00:34:56boom, it came to Hollywood with everything that means.
00:35:01A lot of silence, please.
00:35:04A lot of silence.
00:35:05A lot of silence for the essay, please.
00:35:07Silence.
00:35:13When the movie came, my dad, the anthropologist,
00:35:17pulled out his own camera and watched.
00:35:31No pictures. No pictures.
00:35:34It was my island.
00:35:36Asshole.
00:35:41Hello, Kito.
00:35:43Look at me, yeah.
00:36:13I see more danger in all this.
00:36:17Why is everything going to be so difficult?
00:36:45With Kevin Costner, the people worked with the family Antella, from the child, you know, everything.
00:36:52To the grandma.
00:36:53To the grandma.
00:36:55To the grandma.
00:36:57Look at that.
00:36:59People started to have money in the family, they started to modernise them up, and the refrigerator,
00:37:05cars.
00:37:06People are stuck there on consumers.
00:37:17our people would have changed one way or another because the world was getting smaller
00:37:26around this time the dictator augusto pinochet lost power chile began to trade more with other
00:37:33countries even nasa came to rapa nui to expand the runway into an emergency landing site for
00:37:40the US space shuttle the shuttle never showed up but the new runway brought Baker planes now anyone
00:37:51could come anything could come and why would we ever go back remember the first time you tasted
00:38:04yogurt I do you loved it but what if to protect the future of the place that you love you
00:38:13had to
00:38:13let go of the things that you love could you make that choice
00:38:19I don't know how to do the change
00:38:28how do you do the change
00:38:31Yes, and down.
00:38:33Bawaw.
00:38:34Do you want to do it?
00:38:35Yes.
00:38:36He's going to jump and jump and jump.
00:38:38Hey!
00:38:51Hace 15 years ago, we met in Tajay.
00:38:56We were sitting there looking at the Moai, thinking about the island, of the people.
00:39:01And suddenly, a girl came with her guitar.
00:39:05And I didn't have guitar, I wanted to play guitar.
00:39:09And then I said...
00:39:14It was a very strong connection.
00:39:20But it was a pity, because it was just the age that I thought,
00:39:26that all of us became alcoholics, drugs, and everything.
00:39:31And I thought, what a pity,
00:39:33because a such a beautiful human being,
00:39:35so beautiful,
00:39:36that at the end of the issue of eating.
00:39:41And then, when we had a drink,
00:39:42everybody went on the way.
00:39:46You have yogurt.
00:39:49You can taste chocolate.
00:39:50You have chocolate milk, friends.
00:39:59We went to Santiago, and I also started to know his music,
00:40:07which always came to me, because they always had messages,
00:40:12that were like to wake up to the people.
00:40:21We realized that we wanted to be together.
00:40:26We had the same feelings towards the island.
00:40:49We had the same feelings towards the island.
00:40:53We had the same feelings towards the island.
00:41:15Thank you for being here, for gathering together, for joining the marriage,
00:41:21the unity of two dreamers, and not only dreamers, brave warrior.
00:41:41A worldwide example for the well-being of Rapa Nui.
00:41:472 years ago, I found similar sounds.
00:42:12From 47 to 48h30, I had no prediction,
00:42:14but it wasn't my condition too.
00:42:15I found them as well, as it needed.
00:42:16But it was amazing.
00:42:17I met the Pidu here in the island in 1989.
00:42:23At that time I worked in South America,
00:42:26in the space space center that the Europeans have,
00:42:30in the French Guiana.
00:42:33I arrived to Rapano, and one day,
00:42:36when I arrived at the moment,
00:42:39she saw me and said...
00:42:43What?
00:42:46If you could have a mosquito,
00:42:47you would fall for me.
00:42:49My own garden, I was like this.
00:42:52We became a good friend.
00:42:54He was a good friend,
00:42:54he was a good friend,
00:42:55he was a good friend.
00:42:57We lived, we married, we went to Europe.
00:43:02The Pidu used to be a little bit of the system.
00:43:04She liked her, she liked her.
00:43:07She was a modern woman,
00:43:09she was a modern woman.
00:43:10She was a good friend,
00:43:11she was a good friend.
00:43:13But, I was like...
00:43:14No, I was like,
00:43:15I was like...
00:43:16You're like the same as a European woman.
00:43:18Yes.
00:43:31There is the machine gun.
00:43:33Good luck if you take it.
00:43:40Here I have two duches.
00:43:44It works, of course, when the tank is full.
00:43:49But when the tank is not full,
00:43:51I take a water bottle
00:43:53and I take my ducha here
00:43:55with a better feeling.
00:44:01The energy and the vitality
00:44:04to break through that wall
00:44:06of older male politicians
00:44:08that most people are cut off with.
00:44:10Yeah, I did, I did.
00:44:13Eh, oh.
00:44:15Me quedé siete años afuera,
00:44:17en Francia.
00:44:19Me fui a trabajar en la UNESCO en ParĂ­s.
00:44:24Y de ahĂ­ hablamos nosotras
00:44:26para hacer la bĂşsqueda
00:44:27del patrimonio de la mano en Europa.
00:44:31Todos los artefacts,
00:44:33con la idea de que un dĂ­a regresa
00:44:37alguna pieza de todo este,
00:44:39de todo eso que está afuera.
00:44:41Y tĂş sabes que hay cantidad ahĂ­.
00:44:55No, no decidimos.
00:45:00TĂş decidiste, frojo,
00:45:02de venir de vuelta a Lapanui.
00:45:03Yo no decidĂ­ nada.
00:45:06Yo querĂ­a quedarme como protector de mi pueblo.
00:45:13Por supuesto, soy orgulloso de Slapidu,
00:45:16en su misiĂłn de ecologista,
00:45:21su fuerza, su energĂ­a.
00:45:27Pero creo que el patrimonio es aquĂ­,
00:45:29que debe estar.
00:45:33La misiĂłn es despertar la consciencia
00:45:36de las nuevas generaciones.
00:45:41La cosa divertida de estar en amor
00:45:43es que no es siempre fácil.
00:45:45Y a veces tienes que dejar mucho.
00:45:49Pero estar con alguien
00:45:50te enseñe a compromisar
00:45:53y te permite
00:45:54lograr más
00:45:55que nunca pudiste sola.
00:46:01¿Estás bien?
00:46:02¿Estás bien?
00:46:03Ya.
00:46:05No he esperado de invitar a usted
00:46:07a una actividad llamada Lapanui.
00:46:09Limpia Lapanui.
00:46:10¡Bravo!
00:46:11Mi hermano está bien decir
00:46:14Maikima Itakitatou.
00:46:15No.
00:46:17Ite tatou kaina.
00:46:19TĂş repites.
00:46:20Ite tatou kaina.
00:46:21SĂ­.
00:46:24Taaato.
00:46:25Ruao Koroju Ataureari Anapoke.
00:46:29Dales emociones
00:46:30para que ellos dicen
00:46:31ah, me considera.
00:46:34Itakitatou.
00:46:35Ite tatou kaina.
00:46:37Ay.
00:46:38Bravo.
00:46:39Este es la cosa.
00:46:40Es el mensaje.
00:46:42SĂ­.
00:46:44Andres.
00:46:45Esta altas sonido de asas una
00:46:48justicia de asas siva.
00:46:50Mi hermano tiene asas una
00:47:02sincera.
00:47:08Enseñen del sonido.
00:47:11Estulal se Rita mantiene...
00:47:12...I don't know if I can't help...
00:47:25...I'm not going to be out.
00:47:28What is it?
00:47:30I was working for my kids.
00:47:32...that was what I wanted to do.
00:47:33I called my family Hucke.
00:47:3636 cranes of this motorcycle.
00:47:39I am one of them.
00:47:43Take the clean positions that correspond to them.
00:47:51Those are their ancestral territories.
00:47:56What do they do with their land or their land?
00:48:07You and I come from the Midu clan, who once lived along the north coast.
00:48:15Before I was born, my dad restored our Moai here.
00:48:22And many years later, I asked your mom to marry me in the shadow of those same Moai.
00:48:33No matter where we live, this place keeps calling us back.
00:48:40And one day, I hope it calls to you.
00:48:48And one day, I'm a one of them.
00:48:50And one day, I was able to live in the opposite direction for a ride.
00:49:00And one day, I knew you were able to live in the middle of the city.
00:49:02And another day, I was able to live in the middle of the city.
00:49:02And one day that I was able to live in the middle of the city.
00:49:14How much time is this going to be done?
00:49:17About half an hour?
00:49:18Yeah, let's do a little bit because I have to go and buy things for the other master's
00:49:21before closing the door.
00:49:23On Saturday, they close at 1 p.m.
00:49:27Well, the construction is still advancing.
00:49:30It's a heavy rain today.
00:49:32So this limit, the advancement of the work.
00:49:36One, if you are working outside of the building, obviously, you get wet, wet.
00:49:41But your personnel that work, you just see one arriving and it is 11 in the morning.
00:49:49So they say, I'm sorry, I could not come because it was raining.
00:49:52Or, I'm sorry, the TV is more entertaining than walking under the rain, you know.
00:49:58After all, we are in a nice Polynesian environment.
00:50:00Why to rush, okay?
00:50:03But somebody who wants to be an entrepreneur and has a deadline of doing the work will have
00:50:08to stay and get nervous or simple, take it easy.
00:50:16Since I was educated in the Western societies, I like a schedule and to get things done within time.
00:50:41My dad goes to Santiago, the capital of Chile, at least once a month.
00:50:46Because here, he can buy the supplies and get the medical attention that the island can't provide.
00:50:54He met us here on your first trip to the island.
00:51:03What is your drive for?
00:51:06You're talking about money making?
00:51:09Yeah, just this growth and idea.
00:51:12It's utopia for people to say, oh, well, you drive for money.
00:51:16Everybody drive for it to exist.
00:51:20It's not that money is the goal, it's the objective.
00:51:23Money is the means that we should attain things called improvement in your life.
00:51:37This is a big city of Santiago.
00:51:41We're right in the middle of the cement forest.
00:51:51I was growing up in an almost subsistence economy.
00:51:56And we will have one shepherd years to visit the island.
00:52:00So normally we eat taro and sweet potato.
00:52:04Peaches.
00:52:06And to have a can of peaches, I mean, you will talk for months about it.
00:52:10And to have one apple as the shepherd goes by, my father would have an apple and split it in
00:52:16ten little pieces so we can taste it.
00:52:19So in my case, as you grow up, you're also very insecure as to whether you get the money for
00:52:26what you need.
00:52:31So what do you do then? You strive and work hard.
00:52:48If we take the planet as an organ, like the eyes, like the heart, like the arms, like the feet,
00:52:56the island is the center of our body.
00:53:21If we detonate this energy from the island, it will move all the continents of the planet.
00:53:27And to all the people that need only a small movement
00:53:34to do more strength to do everything that is in their place in this nation.
00:54:10The walls were all made with 1.500 pneumatics, 40.000 bottles of glass, plastic,
00:54:17what he calls the Earth.
00:54:19They provide their own energy through solar panels.
00:54:25They have rain water collectors.
00:54:28It was a way to solve several problems that we have in the island.
00:54:55It's like this way.
00:55:02There's a lot of noise in this world, telling us that we'll fail, that we're
00:55:09too idealistic, that what we want is not possible, but it's just noise.
00:55:33The walls that were done with tires?
00:55:36Wait, we made the walls from tires?
00:55:38Yes.
00:55:40We have seen a lot of non-profits now around the world, and often, like, non-profit leaders
00:55:46are doing great work, but they don't think a lot about, like, how.
00:55:50How to maintain it in the world.
00:55:52You could want to do all the good in the world if you don't have the means.
00:55:56But I think you can generate them, I mean, you're right, I'm just saying, like, you know,
00:56:01Elon Musk.
00:56:02Yeah.
00:56:04Tell him that we want on the island to make it out.
00:56:06Oh, personally, I don't know him personally.
00:56:07You don't know him personally.
00:56:08I know who he is.
00:56:09I don't know him personally.
00:56:10No, no, no.
00:56:12Tell him that this is the perfect island to make it completely self-sustainable.
00:56:17I mean, this is perfect for that.
00:56:18It's too small for that.
00:56:20Don't imagine, he can completely, like, redo the whole system here.
00:56:26This is the little planet, you know?
00:56:28Anything that works here will work for the rest of the world.
00:56:31Really?
00:56:31Like, if it works for 5,000 people, it's going to work for 5 million, 5 billion?
00:56:35Can it scale?
00:56:36Like, where I come from, like, we come from Bangladesh, right?
00:56:38I mean, the capital city has 15 million people.
00:56:41Like, if you're a big people from Bangladesh here, like, if you show them that, they're like,
00:56:46I can't really use it.
00:56:48You see, the thing is that, I think you're thinking it's too, like, maybe specific.
00:56:55I know it might not seem comparable, but I think if you sit down and start finding the route,
00:57:00I think, like, you know?
00:57:11I know it might not seem to have enough, like, you know, the way it makes you go.
00:57:21Like, do you want the sugar?
00:57:26Yeah.
00:57:27Yeah.
00:57:27You know, you're gonna die.
00:57:29I know you're gonna die.
00:57:30You're gonna die by stone.
00:57:32Yeah.
00:57:33And then you're gonna die by stone.
00:57:34You're gonna die by stone and get your Wrong.
00:57:35Ah, okay.
00:57:37Is this team ready?
00:57:39Let's go.
00:57:45I'm enojado, hijo.
00:57:48They killed us, and they didn't come.
00:57:56They killed us only 5, and they killed us.
00:57:58Of those 36.
00:58:09How are you going to win five bribones?
00:58:12By the way, by the way.
00:58:16Is it good for the morning?
00:58:20I'm going to do it. It's going to be beautiful.
00:58:42I'm going to do it.
00:58:42Do you know how much you should go?
00:58:51260 tons.
00:58:54I got 43 tons.
00:58:57That's worth it.
00:59:07I'm going to do it.
00:59:24Now we're four.
00:59:26Four working.
00:59:34I'm going to do it.
00:59:35It's hard to get help to work
00:59:38because everyone is doing their job and their business.
00:59:53But it's a process.
00:59:55It's hard to do.
00:59:56It's hard to do,
00:59:59but it's hard to do.
01:00:02If not,
01:00:04it won't happen.
01:00:12The idea is that classes are still free.
01:00:15The truth is that I don't know how we're going to live
01:00:19because I can't pay anything to anyone.
01:00:26It's fine.
01:00:31I'm going to be able to do it.
01:00:36I just want to do it.
01:00:37Oh, my.
01:00:44It's all right.
01:00:45It's the greatest and imaginable gift of the universe.
01:00:52And the practical part changes absolutely everything.
01:00:58But basically, I'm all day with her.
01:01:05I'm still living in the school as soon as she can.
01:01:10When she duermes...
01:01:17It's been easy, difficult.
01:01:24It's been very difficult the work we're doing.
01:01:29So it's like...
01:01:32It's like...
01:01:35Universe, please help us.
01:01:44Yes, what we're thinking is...
01:01:47...that the school can be a tourist point.
01:01:51That they can borrow money for people to know the space.
01:02:02There's a lot of fear.
01:02:05Fear of what?
01:02:06The things that are generally done, like the land, the agriculture...
01:02:11...to teach children...
01:02:13...to maintain and preserve all this legacy that is here...
01:02:17...no are very valid.
01:02:18And if something is done, it's like...
01:02:21...to preserve, but for the tourist.
01:02:23And not for me, for the person.
01:02:26Where is T recommend?
01:02:27That's what I found there...
01:02:27Or maybe a short island...
01:02:44...I bought over this summer.
01:02:46It's been so quiet, it's been a travel journey.
01:02:51And even though it was that from scratch...
01:02:52...to have an own journey that the parts of Europe was...
01:02:54...durined of es announcing...
01:02:56but it's also one of the few times in the year that we cheer for each other
01:03:00as we celebrate what remains of our past.
01:03:39I wanted to play the tapati to pass this music to the people.
01:03:49I feel a lot of pain, a lot of separation from the people.
01:03:57And that's why, in some way, my ancestors tell me to sing and tell me to go up to the
01:04:02stage and sing your music.
01:04:04And I can't say no.
01:04:27I can't say no.
01:04:30I can't say no.
01:04:44I can't say no.
01:04:48I can't say no.
01:04:53I can't say no.
01:04:55I can't say no.
01:04:55Yes, how the palms do well.
01:04:58Take it back and build it.
01:04:59Let the palms know and the hand also do well.
01:05:03Do you think painting is so simple?
01:05:07Yeah.
01:05:08Take a point that is artistic and work in artistic.
01:05:17Okay, okay.
01:05:19I'm going to paint you because I have another job.
01:05:37I hope one day you'll participate in the parade.
01:05:40It's beautiful.
01:05:43Everyone is painted in Kiev.
01:05:47And the lines between us blur.
01:05:49I'm going to paint you because I have another job.
01:06:19I'm going to paint you.
01:06:22Two marches in a single line.
01:06:32It's beautiful.
01:06:34It's beautiful.
01:06:38It's beautiful.
01:06:39I'll see you later.
01:06:40You are future.
01:06:49I've got a job.
01:06:51That won't be right.
01:07:12With all the shops open, I'm creating over 50 new jobs, but this is my own
01:07:21Rapa Nui creation, Rapa Nui expenses, Rapa Nui work.
01:07:28So, just have to fix the number of people working in each one of these shops and also the supermarket.
01:07:37So, it's progress.
01:07:41When I was young, I never really understood why my dad did what he did.
01:07:47And sometimes I still don't.
01:07:49I know that he thinks a lot about our ancestors and what they were able to achieve.
01:07:56And in some ways, he might be striving to match that.
01:08:02Now that I have you, I've realized that what drives his choices is his love for his family,
01:08:10for his people, and wanting them to have a better life.
01:08:23When we talk about our culture, we talk about ourselves.
01:08:28We talk about our culture.
01:08:33We talk about our culture.
01:08:34We talk about our culture.
01:08:39We talk about our language.
01:08:58And that's what I do.
01:09:00It's what I do.
01:09:01That's what I do.
01:09:03That's what I do.
01:09:03And my dad, it already isn't my dad.
01:09:05It's that guy who is taking care of his business.
01:09:30What my dad talks about, you can still feel when you're in front of the Moai.
01:09:38Our ancestors, the Polynesians, carved the Moai to remember the great leaders who came before them.
01:09:46They had few resources, but they were able to achieve amazing things.
01:09:55One of the biggest misconceptions is that our people died out because we destroyed our environment.
01:10:02The trees did disappear.
01:10:04The good soil washed into the ocean.
01:10:06And food could not easily grow.
01:10:09But our people survived.
01:10:12Where are we?
01:10:14There's a lot of documentaries and photographers that come out here.
01:10:18They use this as a visual example of the deforestation on the island.
01:10:24And the famous line is, what were the natives thinking when they cut down the last tree?
01:10:32The funny thing is, is that just across the street, there's a bunch of manavai and also rock mulch gardens.
01:10:39They learned new and different ways of planting in this environment that no longer had any trees.
01:10:52They had only the wood for able to survive.
01:11:02When they put them, they put the seed pensar.
01:11:07They put the seeds on the ground.
01:11:08They put the plants in the ground, as well as you put them on the ground.
01:11:17For example, if you take a tarot, you have more minerals, more calories, you are much more concentrated.
01:11:29You have to survive with what nature gives you from the place.
01:12:09Now we need to work, grab a ball, make the oil and plant a tree.
01:12:17Work, work, work, work.
01:12:31Antes que nada, hay que amar a su gente, no importa como sea, educarlo.
01:12:48Let's keep the mind open to the opportunity that exists all around.
01:12:53So the more we learn about the world, the easier it becomes for us to cope.
01:13:03Each of us has a place we call home.
01:13:06And each of us has a responsibility to care for it.
01:13:10As you grow up, you'll need to pick up where we left off.
01:13:15Copy our victories.
01:13:17Learn from our mistakes.
01:13:19Reach beyond Rapa Nui to show our global community how we can better care for the only home we've ever
01:13:26known.
01:13:31Our kaina.
01:13:34Our planet.
01:13:38Soy orgullosa.
01:13:40Ser un Napanui.
01:13:42Soy orgullosa de nacer de los Moai.
01:13:47Y nosotros somos los Moai vivos.
01:13:49TĂş y yo somos muy bien.
01:14:25TĂş y yo somos muy bien.
01:14:49TĂş y yo somos muy bien.
01:15:19TĂş y yo somos muy bien.
01:15:40TĂş y yo somos muy bien.
01:16:23TĂş y yo somos muy bien.
01:16:33TĂş y yo somos muy bien.
01:16:36TĂş y yo somos muy bien.
01:16:49TĂş y yo somos muy bien.
01:16:50TĂş y yo somos muy bien.
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