Actor Edward Norton may have started a movement after being moved to tears.
It all started when he read a profile on Brandon Stanton’s acclaimed Humans of New York website about a Syrian refugee who’d lost his wife and daughter in a bombing and is fighting stomach cancer. The unidentified Syrian, known as “The Scientist,” has relocated to Troy, Michigan, and Norton, through his charitable crowdfunding platform CrowdRise has been able to raise more than $420,000 for him and his family to help pay his medical expenses. Remarkably, the average donation has been only $28.
“You’re going through your daily life, stressed about whatever you’re stressed about on a given day and then you read something like that and you just realize that your own problems don’t amount to a lot,” Norton told MSNBC late on Monday.
RELATED: A social media platform based around charity
The “Birdman” star’s post earlier this week on CrowdRise called on contributors to “reject the ‘anti-human’ voices that tell us to fear refugees and show this man and his family what Americans are really made of.” Norton’s message was heeded by more than 14,000 donors and even President Barack Obama has weighed in, posting his support for The Scientist on Facebook, calling him and his family an “inspiration.”
Last night President @BarackObama wrote a very sweet welcome note to the scientist in Tuesday's story. pic.twitter.com/ZGrn3gOdR7
— Brandon Stanton (@humansofny) December 10, 2015
“It’s wonderful to see people acting out of their sense of empathy and shared humanity and making that small gesture towards someone they don’t even know — it’s very powerful,” Norton told MSNBC. “It gives you a good feeling about people.”
Of course, there are those voices characterized by Norton as “anti-human,” particularly on the far right in the Republican primary race, who have aggressively opposed the entry of Syrian refugees into the United States. GOP front-runner Donald Trump has gone even further, calling for a temporary ban on all Muslims entering the U.S. from abroad, a position which has received solid support from 42% of the conservative electorate. Norton said that kind of rhetoric is rooted in ignorance.
“It goes without saying that the average seventh grader can tell you that America is a country that by definition was made up of immigrants and people creating or providing circumstances to seek a better life,” Norton said. And while he acknowledges that some anti-refugee sentiment is borne out of genuine anxieties, Norton said, “I don’t think politicians who engage in that kind of fear mongering are acting on that anxiety. I think they’re acting very cynical.”
“To be super clear, I didn’t have any kind of political objective with this and it’s not almost in any way a political act or political commentary,” he added.








