Hans Rosling was said to be unable to deliver bad news.
That is a misconception.
Three years before passing
away, he remarked that the one thing that had surprised him the most during his
tenure as a global educator was that he became so famous – despite having so
little influence over people’s real knowledge. He realized he was stuck in
”persona hell”, and that people remained ignorant at a level worse than random
guessing when they took Gapminder’s tests. Not because of a lack of knowledge,
but because of ”an actively upheld ignorance”.
He had discovered that people
actively had set their minds to remaining ignorant.
Hans Rosling had devoted
decades to try to throw out our Tintin-like perspective, but kept on having to
say ”wrong, wrong, wrong” when the Swedish people answered the question of how
many children are born per woman in Bangladesh.
So how do we let Hans Rosling
rest in peace?
By forgetting that he
sometimes swallowed swords in a heavy metal style tank top.
And by remembering that
mothers in Bangladesh no longer give birth to five children on average, nor
four, but TWO POINT TWO children.
How do we let Hans Rosling
rest in peace?
By forgetting that he got more
clicks than Lady Gaga online.
And by remembering that 80
percent of the children of the world now have access to the most important and
most cost efficient of all vaccines: the one for measles.
How do we let Hans Rosling
rest in peace?
By forgetting that Time
Magazine put him on some list.
And by remembering that Hans
Rosling was certain that the world, if it got it’s act together, can reach the
goal that the United Nations set for the year 2030: to exterminate extreme
poverty for everyone, everywhere.
How do we let Hans Rosling
rest in peace?
By forgetting that he was a
”data rock star” at the lecture network website Ted.
And by remembering that life
expectancy globally has skyrocketed, and now averages 72 years.
How do we let Hans Rosling
rest in peace?
By forgetting false quotes,
distributed by people who want everything for the world but Rosling’s humanism.
And by remembering that he
spoke of the refugees on the Mediterranean by saying: ”Send a ferry to help
them over, instead of saving them when they are about to drown”.
How do we let Hans Rosling
rest in peace?
By forgetting that he once
competed in ”På spåret”, one of Sweden’s oldest and most popular game shows.
And by remembering that Hans
Rosling, the man, was a result of a political struggle that created a nation
built on social security, that made it possible for him – who grew up in a home
without a flushable toilet – to be the first in his family to study at a higher
level. His dad worked in a coffee factory, his mother as an assistant at a
library. And that he, thanks to that same nation state, was able to receive his
first cancer treatment as a father of small children, at age 30. And that the
treatment gave him another 38 years to live.
How do we let Hans Rosling
rest in peace?
By – hesitantly – forgetting
that he once turned some colleagues down when they wanted him to take part in a
student comic theater celebration: ”got no time. gotta stop ebola. get something
online.”
And by remembering that Hans
Rosling sometimes was mistaken, or drew the wrong conclusions.
How do we let Hans Rosling
rest in peace?
Perhaps by following his
example, and whisper a quick ”thank you” when turning on the water faucet, to
get clean, fresh, healthy water.
In the spirit and hope of his
heavenly harmony, may we finally understand what his Lego blocks, his graphical
bubbles and Swenglish accent were all about:
We hold our destiny in our own
hands.
Translation from Swedish:
Andreas Ekström
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