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Home » The Art of Diplomacy: Tayo Rockson (Transcript)

The Art of Diplomacy: Tayo Rockson (Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of Tayo Rockson’s talk titled “The Art of Diplomacy” at TEDxCooperUnion 2017 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

A Diplomat’s Journey

By the time I was a freshman in college, I had lived in Nigeria, Sweden, Burkina Faso, Vietnam, and the United States. Five countries, four continents. And the reason I lived in all these countries is because my dad was a diplomat. And so as a kid, I would watch as he sought to maintain international relations as it pertains to peace, war, trade, economics, human rights, and the environment.

I observed as he sought to establish common ground with his colleagues locally and internationally. I studied him. I even had his morning routine down. Every morning before he went to work, he would sit down on the dining table, flip out the newspaper.

Bear in mind, it was the mid-90s, so people still read that. But he would bring out the newspaper, go through it from front to back, and then he would turn on the news. It would be CNN at first, and then BBC, and then the local news station.

Learning from My Father

And as a seven-year-old kid, I didn’t quite understand why my dad did all these things. And so I asked him, “Dad, why do you do all these things?” And he looked at me and said something to the effect of, “I can tell you, the world is bigger than you. And so if you want to be successful in it, you have to understand it.” So, you know, to my preteen years, that didn’t quite resonate.

So I just did what any seven-year-old kid would do. I continued to mimic my dad anyway. So I took in the same information that he took in. I would read the same newspapers. I would even fill out the occasional crossword puzzle I saw. And then I would turn on to the news and follow the same thing.

But it wasn’t until I found myself in Burkina Faso in middle school that I finally got what my dad was trying to do. He was trying to understand the differences around him so that he could find the commonalities that existed within them.

The Art of Diplomacy

You see, in Burkina Faso, I was embedded in a sea of difference. I was this skinny kid with a thick Nigerian accent in a French-speaking country in an American international school going through puberty. And I suddenly found myself as the odd one out in a place where everybody was already different from who I was.

And so for me to make friends, I had to understand the differences around me and find the commonalities that existed within them. That, ladies and gentlemen, is the art of diplomacy, understanding the differences around you and finding the commonalities that exist within them. Every year, diplomats are posted out to new countries, new environments, with thousands and sometimes millions of people that are vastly different from who they are.

And their job is to find the common thread that weaves through this new environment. I believe that this skill of cultural competence is the most important skill that we can develop in the 21st century.

Combating Fear and Hate

I also believe that this is the best way that we can combat the fear and hate that we experience today, the fear and hate that is contributing to the glowing divide that we’re experiencing as a world today.

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You see, if we’re to ever have a chance of attaining a peaceful future, we must learn how to come together and find common ground. And it’s with this in mind that I’d like to share three ways with which we can embrace the art of diplomacy.

Three Ways to Embrace the Art of Diplomacy

The first way, numero uno, the first way to embrace the art of diplomacy is to collect and gather information. I would watch as my dad did this, because he did this all the time. He had his little pens and notebooks, and he would observe his environment, take notes, read on this culture, and then interview.

Ways that you all can apply that is by taking notice of your current surrounding, observing what brings people together, what puts smiles on people’s faces and what causes them to frown, taking mental notes of that, reading up on the cultures around you, and then interviewing, asking questions.

Ensure that as you’re interviewing, you’re asking open-ended questions, questions that allow them to tell you about themselves, questions that allow them to tell you how they interpret things in the world.

My Experience in Burkina Faso

I followed this same exact process when I found myself in that very different environment in Burkina Faso. I looked around me, and I saw that the activity that brought the most people together was basketball. And so I went to the library, and I checked out all the books on basketball, studied up on the history and the culture of the game.

It’s what natural 10-year-olds do. And then I picked up the magazines, the Sports Illustrated for Kids. Once again, that’s something that’s not available anymore, but I picked up on that to make sure that I knew who the current players were, the current basketball players were.

So I was well-versed in the game of basketball. Once I felt well-versed enough, I went to the best basketball player on campus, Michael Albright. And I asked him, “Hey, could you show me some of this crossover? I’m trying to crossover like Allen Iverson. I’m trying to do that dunk that Kobe Bryant did the other day.”

And then that conversation led to me asking him to teach me how to play the game of basketball. And our one-on-ones became two-on-twos, and then three-on-threes, and then four-on-fours, and five-on-fives. So pretty soon, I found myself in a position where I had new friends, and my new friends were now inviting me to do things outside of school.

The Importance of Coming Together

What this experience taught me was the importance of coming together for a common goal.