TED Talks Daily - What Kosovo can teach the world about freedom | Vjosa Osmani Sadriu
Episode Date: April 24, 2026“Truth is the real oxygen for democracy,” says Vjosa Osmani Sadriu, the 6th President of the Republic of Kosovo. As a child of war, she once longed for someone to save her people. Now she’s been... in the rooms where decisions are made — and she’s never forgotten what brought her there. In conversation with solutions journalist Angus Hervey, she reflects on what it takes to defend democracy in a world where truth itself is under threat. (Recorded on April 14, 2026)Learn more about our flagship conference happening this April at attend.ted.com/podcast Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hu.
I honestly believe that the truth is the real oxygen for democracy.
So when you're undermining truth, you're undermining democracy itself, which obviously is not perfect.
It can be messy.
It can be painfully slow sometimes.
But the opposite of it is destruction.
That is the former president of Kosovo.
Vyosa Osmani Sadriyu.
She spent her life fighting for both truth and democracy.
As a child of war, she once huddled in the mountains with a battery-powered radio,
hoping the world's leaders would come save her people.
She grew up to become one of those leaders,
and she never forgot what brought her there.
There are millions of children around the world
who are now listening to today's leaders hoping that someone would not turn a blind eye on their suffering.
And it's about continuously, continuously fighting and never giving up.
In this conversation with journalist Angus Hervey,
she reflects on what it truly takes to defend democracy
in a world where truth itself is under threat.
The conversation is coming up right after a short break.
And now our TED Talk of the Day.
President Muslimsmani, thank you so much for joining us.
Thank you so much for having me.
It's a great honor.
You've just left office under circumstances you didn't choose.
And you're not alone. Democracy right now looks like it's losing ground everywhere,
against populism, against cynicism, against sheer exhaustion.
What lessons has this experience taught you about what it actually takes
to build and sustain democracy?
I'd like to say that the lessons that I've learned
don't only belong to my mandate as president.
I continue to learn.
As we speak, I learned a lot today by listening to the previous speakers.
and I learned a lot throughout my life growing up as a child of war,
as you mentioned at the introduction.
We grew up together with all the children of Kosovo,
under a system of oppression,
which started as an apartheid-like regime
and ended as a genocidal war.
Growing up in that system
where everything is taken away from you,
from your childhood to the right to go to school,
to your parents' right to go to work,
At that time, just going out and playing as children meant that it was an act of quiet resistance.
But at the same time, as a nation that today is thriving in many senses,
but especially in terms of democracy despite crisis that we're facing right now,
we've learned that oftentimes the line that stands between a child of war
and a leader of peace is an opportunity.
the opportunity to live, to survive, first and foremost,
and then the opportunity to thrive.
And this opportunity was given to us by people who believe in humanity,
people who never gave up on human values even against all odds,
whether it was political and military leaders who came to our rescue
and did not turn a blind eye on our suffering and came to save our lives,
democracies around the world, who joined to say,
save those values of freedom and human rights, or, you know, leaders in churches and mosques
who opened their hearts and minds and joined communities together so that we can have some
humanitarian support. And practically, it's this that shaped me to the leader that I was for
the past five years, a leader for peace, because I knew that while I was leading my country,
no matter how small my country is, we could have a powerful voice.
in the world. That voice that is going to speak up against depression, against autocracies,
against genocidal regimes, and make sure that we become the voice of that child who today is standing
on the line, on the line to survive, but also in the line for food to survive, because we were there
I mean a few decades ago,
and today we are given the opportunity
to give that contribution for peace.
These past five years have not just been years
of leading my country,
defending democracy,
but at the same time,
speaking for those who don't have a voice right now,
because once we did not have a voice
and there were people around the world,
whether political leaders or leaders in their communities
or just ordinary people who joined to help us,
who became our voice when we did not have one.
So that's the lesson that I've learned
that no matter how small you are as a country,
it is not just the political or military or economic might
that defines your strength.
I think, after all, it's the strength of your story.
You just need to have the courage to tell it.
Kosovo is a tiny country.
You just said this.
fewer than two million people, but under your presidency,
the secured visa-free travel to Europe and applied for EU membership.
So you've been in the rooms where those big decisions get made.
You have an inside its perspective that none of us know or have access to you.
What do you see when you watch the world's geopolitical tensions playing out right now?
I see a lot of devastation, obviously.
We're all seeing how there are too many conflicts,
too many wars, too much suffering happening right now.
But at the same time, when I sit around those rooms and join world leaders where these decisions
are made, we try to make an impact.
We try to make an impact by sharing our story, because as I said, politics on one side,
or geopolitics, if we're trying to talk bigger, it's not just about military and economic might.
It's about doing things right.
And we've heard and we're hearing nowadays so many stories about suffering, about pain, about
things going wrong, about things being destroyed.
But at the same time, it is important that we share success stories.
And Kosovo is one such success story.
It shows what democracies can achieve when they stand together for values, when they stand
together in defense of freedom and against autocracies and against some of the crazy
genocidal minds that we had to live under.
And at the same time, it shows that
even when you live under oppression,
there's nothing,
nothing that can stand on the way of a people that wants to be free.
It takes years, it takes years, it takes decades.
In the case of our nation, it took centuries.
We had to live, occupied, and under oppression
for century after century.
but we never gave up on our identity.
We never gave up on our quest for freedom.
And ultimately, we became free.
And just sharing that story of success
is so important in these rooms
in order to also change mindsets
among countries that are so much bigger than ours
and to also convince them to act,
to make sure that they save lives,
to make sure that they put values in front of everything else.
because sometimes standing on the right side is of history.
It's the most difficult decision.
It's not convenient for the moment.
But long term, it is what humanity needs right now.
So it's very important for us to be in those rooms,
to race our voices, to speak up,
but also to be heard and to have an impact
in how these decisions are made today.
That may not impact necessarily my country very much,
but they do impact humanity at the much larger level,
and we need to make sure that we are part of those decisions.
Okay, I want to pick up on something you said there,
which is about being in those rooms
and when you have a decision that conflicts,
what do you do when your own personal moral values
rub up against a strategic geopolitical decision that you need to make?
How do you figure out which way to go?
You fight. That's what you do.
You have to fight.
You have to fight your way through
and try to use a very dynamic diplomacy
to convince other leaders to find a way that can protect both,
that can protect moral values on one side,
but at the same time make sure that enough countries
think that that is also strategically in their interest
so that these decisions can be made
in a way that can better the societies
and better human values and protect human values.
It's not easy, and we don't always wait.
We don't always win.
There are times when not necessarily moral values are the ones who win its other interests
that come beforehand, but that doesn't mean that we have to stop.
And when this happens, I'm always reminded of the resilience of my nation, the resilience
that our people showed.
Because resilience oftentimes is not just about surviving.
It's also about thriving after you're given the chance to survive.
And this is the story of Kosovo.
story of survivors who thrive. It's about not giving up. It's about continuing to fight because
you know how much is at stake. And you know how many people around the world have their hopes
on those decisions that are made on those rooms. And, you know, when I would visit the United Nations
or when I would visit the European Parliament and other institutions, I shared with leaders how
as a child we were sheltering in mountains. We were sheltering from the shelling and the bombing
and the people who are trying to come and kill us.
And we had that little radio with batteries.
And we were listening to these meetings and these speeches,
hoping that someone would come and save our lives.
And it's so important when I sit in that chair,
when I sit in those big meeting rooms with leaders
that I never forget that,
that there is a child,
there are millions of children around the chair,
the world who are now listening to today's leaders hoping that someone would not turn a blind
eye on their suffering.
And it's about continuously fighting and never giving up.
Okay, we're at TED.
So it wouldn't be TED if we didn't ask a question about AI.
We hear a lot these days about what AI might do to society.
But for you, these questions aren't theoretical.
I mean, they are a very real fight over truth.
What's been your own personal experience of this?
It hasn't been a good one, I have to say this,
and especially if we're looking at the past couple of days
after I finished my mandate, which I just finished.
Actually, this is my first international activity
after finishing my mandate as the sixth president of Kosovo.
Thank you.
But it was important for me to not miss this one.
it hasn't been a good one
because in politics, obviously,
you have to be prepared for everything.
But we're living at a time
when they can clone your voice,
clone videos of you,
make pictures of you that never actually took place,
of meetings that never took place,
of conversations that never took place,
and this changes the entire narrative.
Because, look, I honestly believe
that the truth,
is the real oxygen for democracy.
So when you're undermining truth,
you're undermining democracy itself,
which obviously is not perfect,
it can be messy, it can be painfully slow sometimes,
but the opposite of it is destruction,
it's pain, is suffering,
and we've lived the opposite of democracy,
which is why we're so resilient in protecting it,
and it requires a day after day protection and fight
to keep it alive.
So I think the way how AI is abused nowadays is extremely dangerous for democracies worldwide,
which is why it requires education.
So we have people who are digitally prepared to differentiate between what is made through AI
and what is actually true for the people who are involved in decision-making in our daily lives.
and secondly, it requires system that don't necessarily overregulate
so that they can block the use of AI for the betterment of society and humanity,
whether it's in medicine or in saving lives
or doing much of the stuff that we've heard from the previous speakers today.
But at the same time, it allows people to defend truth.
Because if we don't find instruments that will defend truth,
ultimately, everything that we can use AI for,
is good will be diminished in terms of their impact if we do not defend truth. And especially
in democracies, this is crucial because if propaganda is going to overcome truth, we're going to
have populism, we're going to have extremism, we're not going to have the human values which kept
us together during the most difficult times prevail, but we're going to have lies that can prevail. And
that is very easy in the digital age unless we invest in systems that can educate people
to differentiate between what was actually made artificially and what the true story
of the people that are going to represent you is.
You're a Muslim, but you recently went back to a church where your family was sheltered during
the war, and the pastor who hid you was there. You've also just received the Bonifacho
the eighth prize at the Vatican, which was an award previously given to part.
John Paul II, what does that tell us about what's still possible?
I think it tells us that we should not let hate prevail.
As I said, we've lived under oppression and we went through a genocidal war.
In Kosovo, the biggest massacre that was committed by the Milosevic regime
was a massacre against Catholics, but then if you look at every other village,
every other town, they killed Muslims.
So they killed everyone, no matter their religion,
because it wasn't about religious differences.
It was about human differences in the sense that you either believe in human values or not.
You either believe in the right of someone else to live, whether they pick one religion or not.
And in Kosovo, we've seen how these human values prevailed.
We've seen cases where mosques sheltered Catholics,
and we've seen cases where churches sheltered Muslims.
And yes, my family and I were Muslim,
but we were sheltered in a church
when the Milosevic regime was trying to kill us.
And just a few days ago,
I participated in the funeral of a pastor,
Dom Kelman Spachi,
who sheltered hundreds and hundreds of civilians
of different religions.
And when the Serbian police went to his church
and asked him to give up on those people,
he said, no, if you're going to kill someone,
and you have to kill me first.
And he stood between those police officers of that genocidal regime
and civilians of different religions on the other side,
showing that an act of courage, an act of humanity
is bigger than any oppressor, is bigger than any regime.
And for us as a nation, this has been a value that we've defended for centuries.
Even during the Second World War,
our nation gave an example of what we call BESA.
It's a code of promise.
When you promise to protect someone, you do it with your life.
And our nation is the only place on earth
where the number of Jews after the Second World War
was higher after the war, then before the war,
because we protected them with our lives.
It's a case where we're...
we've shown not just tolerance, but respect for the values of each other.
No matter which religion you belong to, it's humanity that should prevail.
It's respect for each other.
And today in Kosovo, you have families where one brother is a Catholic, the other one is a Muslim.
This has never differentiated us because we've put these values of respect and humanity
before everything else.
And we're very, very proud of that.
And we hope to have these kind of values also in other countries,
as I think it can save lives the same way that it has saved lives in Kosovo.
It hasn't divided us,
and I think it is important that we give that example
to other people in the world as well.
President Osmani, thank you for joining us.
We know that this is a tumultuous time,
and that the future is unclear and uncertain,
but we're so grateful that you appeared here on the TED stage
and shared with us.
Thank you so much.
The future, it's important that we have a future.
So many people around the world don't know whether they do.
There's always that child that is still standing on the line
and waiting for that opportunity.
And let's not forget that that child of war today,
whether in Ukraine or in Gaza or somewhere in Africa
can be the leader of peace tomorrow
if we together give them that opportunity.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
Thank you very much.
That was Vyosa, Osmani Sadriyu,
and Angus Hervey at TED-20206.
If you're curious about Ted's curation,
find out more at TED.com slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today.
TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective.
This talk was fact-checked by the TED Research Team
and produced and edited by our team,
Martha Estefanos,
Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Lucy Little,
and Tonica Sung Marnivong.
This episode was mixed by Lucy Little.
Additional support from Emma Tobner and Daniela Ballerazo.
I'm Elise Hu.
I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed.
Thanks for listening.
