Announcement
December 7, 2007
UNICEF, One Laptop per Child, Google Launch Initiative to Preserve and Share Stories around the World
UNICEF, One Laptop per Child (OLPC) and Google today announced the launch of "Our Stories" (www.ourstories.org), a joint initiative to preserve and share the histories and identities of cultures around the world by making personal stories available online in many languages.
Using laptops, mobile phones and other recording devices, children will record,
in their native languages, the stories of elders, family members and friends.
These stories will be shared globally through the Our Stories website, where
they can be found on a Google Map.
By making these stories accessible around the world, the Our Stories project
hopes to contribute to a better understanding of our shared humanity across
countries and cultures, across religious traditions, across languages, and
across generations.
"Information technologies can help young people around the world learn more
about each other," said UNICEF Executive Director Ann M. Veneman. "Our Stories
will promote dialogue across borders and cultures and give young people a voice
on a wide range of issues."
Low-cost XO laptops by One Laptop per Child will serve as a foundation to help
build this digital archive of personal stories by providing children in developing
countries with easy-to-use technology to record their stories and interviews.
"One Laptop per Child is very excited about partnering with Google and
UNICEF to capture the thoughts and feelings of children and their communities
around the world," said Walter Bender, President of Software and Content/COO,
One Laptop per Child. "The XO laptop is a tool for sharing and collaboration
and this project is a great way to build a global community."
The Our Stories website will initially include stories collected by Brazil’s Museum of the Person and stories recorded for UNICEF by young people in Ghana, Pakistan, Tanzania and Uganda.
Our Stories has taken inspiration from the StoryCorps® project in the United
States founded by MacArthur Fellow Dave Isay. "StoryCorps is proud to lend
its experience in recording the conversations of nearly 30,000 Americans to
this global undertaking," said Isay. "These efforts teach us that the lives
of everyone whether they are in New York or Nairobi matter, and that they
will not be forgotten."
More stories from more countries will be added to the site every month in an
effort to preserve an oral history of humanity in the 21st Century.
"Google as both a company and as a culture loves a good story," said Elliot
Schrage, Vice President of Global Communications and Public Affairs for Google.
"We’re proud to support the Our Stories global initiative and we hope that
this collaboration will not just encourage better storytelling but better listening
to stories."
Leading figures have already lent their voices to the project: Ban Ki-moon,
Secretary-General of the United Nations, Her Majesty Queen Rania Al Abdullah,
Queen of Jordan and UNICEF Eminent Advocate for Children, and Ishmael Beah,
UNICEF Advocate for Children Affected by War and best-selling author of A
Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier, have all recorded messages welcoming
users to the site and encouraging them to share their stories.
Listen to a story today at www.ourstories.org.

