United Words

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www.unitedwords.org

Sponsored by the Hearst Corporation

Awakening: the Atlantic College experience exposes students to worldwide issues

Summer 2009

Yaroslav Zabavskiy

Atlantic College: opening visions “

M

y little sister died.” I watched the tears flowing down her face, seemingly endless streams, transforming her beautiful dark eyes into deep lakes of lament and sorrow. “But I thought she just had a cold? Why did your parents not take her to hospital?” I thought there was a trace of marvel at my naivety in her sad smile. “Andrea, you don’t understand.” No, I did not understand. All I could do was sit down next to her, press her against me and feel the shivers going through her. This was different to me crying in my mother’s arms over some boy that had dumped me. The idyllic world of my childhood was shattering around me, each memory a piece of broken glass painfully stinging its way into my heart with every sob of hers. One of the most striking features of the Atlantic College experience for me was the brutality with which it suddenly exposed me to everyday reality. Some of the ideals I had believed in were shred to pieces in

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front of my eyes and I could do nothing but try to understand. Always sheltered by my parents’ never-ending love, I had developed a very hopeful approach to the world. People love each other and there are difficulties, but together we may overcome these difficulties. Or so I thought. She later explained to me that her parents could not possibly have raised the necessary money to take her to hospital. “You must know that £300 is a lot of money in Africa.” Again the smile around her lips, not powerful enough to extend to her cheeks. The feelings I had that night are blurred in my memory. But what I started realizing was that for some people, there is no tomorrow. My naïve belief in Switzerland’s aid to developing countries and in the goodwill of the world – all the consolation I had gained from living in ignorance was being destroyed in that moment. While £300 in Switzerland buys some new clothes, the absence in Africa made a little girl die. In Switzerland, “poverty in Africa” is a

phrase repeated so often that it has almost become a leftist political cliché. Thinking back, I believe that I had been living in total alienation from humanity. I think I needed a place like Atlantic College to understand the world as one. Africa is no longer a distant political concept; rather, it is part of humankind and therefore of me. Seeing inequality this close up is what struck me that night. I saw the extent of my former ignorance. There is a new reality now. Although it was hard in the beginning, I know that this step has been a step towards maturity. Andrea Daniela Mihic School: UWCAC 2007-09, Home country: Switzerland “When I say today that I want to do good in this world, it is not for diplomatic reasons, but because Atlantic College taught me that poor or rich, we are all human and as such we all deserve love and care”

Sponsored by the Hearst Corporation 29/06/2009 15:49:47


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