Building a broad contact list
Following the initial selection, more than 400 competitors entered the elimination round, held on 21 December 2014. W.island invited scholars and experts from around Taiwan to act as “guides.” Young people wanting to visit a particular world leader, whether as an individual or as a group, submitted a travel plan to the guides responsible for the relevant field of endeavor, and at the competition venue each person or group was given seven minutes to describe their travel plans. After the scores were calculated, 62 young travelers were selected.
Having a list of world leaders to visit does not mean that things will necessarily go as one wishes. After all, if these people deserve to be called world leaders, they are sure to have a very full schedule. Without a good enough reason, why would they agree to be interviewed by a young person from Taiwan? On this point, Sean Lu explains that on the one hand the travel plans that the travelers put forward need to be highly appealing, and on the other they need to use “contacts” to best effect. Among the many Taiwanese located in places all over the world, some may have connections with a world leader in their particular location. If they are willing to help out, in a spirit of generosity, then there is a chance that by following the threads of these many interpersonal relationships, the young people may succeed in making their visits. Sean Lu describes this “networking” as a process of “gathering strength for Taiwan.”
We live increasingly in a “small world,” a phenomenon investigated by scholars such as Harvard psychology professor Stanley Milgram. Every person is like a node in a spider’s web, with each node connected to the nodes around it, finally forming a world network of personal contacts. This notion has gained currency in the concept of “six degrees of separation,” which suggests that every person in the world is connected to every other through a chain of no more than six personal acquaintances. That is to say, one needs to go through no more than six people to get into contact with any other person in the world. In 2008, a researcher used Facebook traffic data to show that the average separation between any two users was 5.73 degrees; three years later, the average separation between two Facebook users anywhere in the world had fallen to 4.74 degrees. One might say that these findings give some degree of support to W.island’s plan for young people to interview 100 world leaders. Sean Lu first invited the 100 Taiwanese academics and experts who are acting as guides, to each provide the names of five international personalities in various fields whom they are able to contact. From among them, the W.island team can then identify those who may have connections to the 100 targeted world leaders. In this way they will cast their first net in the search for contacts. “Then we repeat the process. You know A, A knows B…, and in the end you will find the opportunity to contact a key person who will enable your visit to a world leader to become a reality.” The young travelers themselves are also required to propose their own plans for contacting the persons concerned.
Stepping out of one’s comfort zone
Of course, this process requires boundless zeal and patience. Shih Chin-tay says that both when he was growing up, and in the course of his career, he has met many life mentors, without whose selfless contributions he would have been most unlikely to have got where he is today. Now he wants to pay it forward, so he is willing to do his utmost to create opportunities for young Taiwanese that will help them grow. “I’ve watched Travel with a Purpose through its first three years, and I want to say that when these youngsters come back from their journeys, they really have changed completely. So I want to tell young people: Go out into the world and take a look around. It will broaden your mind and you will come back with a different perspective.”
The plans for visiting world leaders put forward by the winning young travelers are indeed highly creative. For example, Zeng Bozhang, a student in his seventh year of study at Kaohsiung Medical University, currently doing his hospital internship, wishes to visit Aung San Suu Kyi. He forms a “hyperlink” between the space in which Aung San Suu Kyi was confined for 15 years under house arrest, and the hospitals in which he will practice medicine in the future, “because a place of imprisonment and a hospital ward are two places where human character is laid most bare.” Xu Ruifu, a student in the Department of Electrical Engineering at National Taiwan University, and some of his classmates, have formed a group to visit Sergey Brin. For his generation, he says, Google seems as omniscient as a god. “We will put together ten questions that even Google cannot answer, to interview Sergey Brin.”
“Just imagine the scene of young Taiwanese scholars in dialogue with Aung San Suu Kyi about democracy, or with Steven Spielberg about creativity!” Sean Lu is enthused by the prospect. Of course, many challenges undoubtedly lie ahead, from the large ones, such as how to persuade these world leaders to accept visits from young Taiwanese, down to the small ones, such as dealing with the details of life while traveling, and how to raise enough funds for the journey. One of the guides for this year’s journeys, Professor Lin Chung-i of the philosophy department at National Chengchi University, offered these words of encouragement to the selected young travelers: “When it comes down to it, travel is a process of taking yourself out of your comfort zone.” Another guide, the famous social trend observer Chan Wei-hsiung, said: “Just go! Because the biggest freedom in this world comes when you find the courage to visit the places that you fear, and you return renewed by the difficulties you have overcome.”