Actress and campaigner Cate Blanchett called on the world to adopt a more compassionate approach to refugees on Tuesday.
The UNHCR goodwill ambassador told an audience at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, that not only do refugees need support in the form of nutrition, healthcare and shelter, they also need to be heard, to have their stories put in a positive light.
In 2016, a Pew Research Center report on the refugee crisis in Europe found that in eight out of 10 European nations surveyed, over 50 percent saw incoming refugees as increasing “the likelihood of terrorism”in their country.
According to UNHCR’s Global Trends 2016 report, developing regions hosted 84 percent of the world’s refugees, with some of the poorest nations offering asylum to 28 percent of the global total, or 4.9 million refugees.
“There has to be a burden share, no one country can house these people. And you’ve got to remember that these are not terrorists, these are innocent people,” Blanchett said during a session titled “An Insight, An Idea With Cate Blanchett.”
“Everyone I’ve met, they all want to return home and they want to be useful to their host countries.”
On Monday, Blanchett was honored at the Crystal Awards in Davos for her leadership in raising awareness about the refugee crisis. On accepting her award, she called upon leaders to reengage with refugees, rather than turn them away.
“Nowhere is the fractured world more humanly embodied than in the refugee — a person uprooted from all that they hold dear, forced to flee, often resented and reviled in the country where they settle,” Blanchett said. “This is the narrative that we truly need to disrupt.”
On Tuesday, Blanchett accentuated this point further, stating that the world was at “a fork in the road,” and what was “incredibly upsetting” was the amount of “misinformation about refugees.”
“We try and teach our children to be compassionate, to be tolerant, to accept diversity, to share — but yet all of the structures that are around them are not doing the same thing,” she said. “So, it’s quite a schizophrenic world that they are living in and I personally want to go down the compassionate path.”
She added that there was “far more opportunity” when countries diversified their workforce and populations.
On her work as a goodwill ambassador, Blanchett admitted she was not an expert, but rather more of a witness. She said that having the privilege to go out into the field enabled her meet refugees and raise awareness.
“To bring those stories back, to bring the human face back to those enormous numbers (of refugees). I think those numbers are overwhelming and can make us all disconnect,” she said, highlighting UNHCR statistics that stated that 22.5 million of the 65.6 million people forcibly displaced by the end of 2016 were refugees.
“But when you reengage with a single story, you don’t know what’s going to make a point of connection. So I think that’s part of my role and also advocacy and helping to fundraise for the organizations.”
In terms of advice and approaching the subject, Blanchett told attendees that it was important to listen and have open-minded conversations.
“You’ve got to countenance opinions that are not necessarily your own. You do have to see things from all perspectives — it’s the only way to find sustainable solutions,” she said.
Like this story? Like CNBC Make It on Facebook.
Don’t miss:
Davos flashback: 9 inspiring quotes for those looking to lead
How Alphabet’s all-company meetings boost transparency and openness in the workplace
5 leadership lessons that Elton John learned from his ‘darkest hours’
Actress Cate Blanchett calls on world to show more compassion to refugees