Wednesday, April 28, 2010

America: The New Soviet Union

I sent the following to a talk radio show in Portland, OR after listening to him discuss the new Arizona Immigration Law. Thought I'd forward it on to you. Let me know your thoughts.


My name is Jessica. I'm from Washington State, but currently live and work in Ukraine as a Peace Corps Volunteer. I teach English as a Foreign Language to University students. As a foreigner, I must say I agree with President Obama and all those opposed to Arizona's new law. It is terrifying to walk down the streets of Ukraine and be afraid to speak English to a companion or on the phone. Because as soon as I (we) do, we're stopped by the police and asked for our documents. We're harassed by the police in Ukraine on different occasions. They do discriminate against race, gender and, most especially, because I'm an American. It's an awful feeling and it saddens me to think that America may be becoming more like a post Soviet Union country with laws such as the immigration law in Arizona. There are other alternatives to the illegal immigration problem facing America, instead of treating everyone, citizens alike, as criminals.


Peace,

Jessica

to read about the new law visit: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/24/us/politics/24immig.html

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Cowlitz County in Washington State Booming with PCV's!

Here is an article that appeared in The Daily News in Longview, Wa about Peace Corps. This is the local newspaper at home. :-) The article was released Dec. 17, 2009--The same day I swore in as a PCV in Ukraine!

When it comes to people who want to make a difference in the world, Cowlitz County is outpacing most of the nation.
For 2009, the county produced the fourth-most number of Peace Corps volunteers per capita in the nation, with nearly 10 for every 100,000 residents, the federal agency announced this week.
"Typically Washington and Oregon are in the top states every year for the number of volunteers" (per capita), said Matt Hogue, a Peace Corps recruiter for the Northwest Regional Office in Seattle. "We just seem to be states that are civic-minded. People here have a sense of wanting to give back and (who have) a sense of adventure."
JoEllen LaPlant, who recently returned from a 27-month stint in Bulgaria, fits that description.
"For me, it was just a time I wanted a new direction," she said. "It's a way to give back to the world. It tests you, it tests your limitations, and you grow in ways you never knew you could."
LaPlant, 50, lived in a town called Montana in the northwest region of Bulgaria, one of the poorest areas in a poor Eastern European country, she said. While there, she worked in the municipality's European Integration Department.
"I did a lot of translating, a lot of work on definition and computer skills," she said. "I also did computer training at the library and taught an English class. You just find and do whatever you can do."
LaPlant, a Kelso graduate, lives in Seattle, but she was counted as a volunteer from the local area because she listed Kelso as her home base. Her parents, Jim and Ellen Van Hook, live in Kelso.
Being an older volunteer, she was given a little more latitude about where she would be assigned, she said.
"I had asked for an Eastern European country. Part of it was accessibility if I needed to get home because of my parents versus being in the middle of Africa," she said. "It was a safety net knowing that I could be home in 15 to 16 hours."
LaPlant said she lived in a studio-style apartment the local municipality supplied for her. "It was in a Communist-style cement building," she said. "I was on the sixth floor. They did have elevators, but it was too scary."
She walked to work and shopped the local markets where there was always fresh fruit and vegetables.
The Slavic language, with its Cyrillic alphabet, was difficult to learn, she said.
"For almost three months you live with a host family for training in language and culture," she said. "You have to get to an intermediate-low level, and they keep testing you until you have enough language for survival skills."
Jessica Strickland of Castle Rock has just completed her three-month stint with two host families in Ukraine and Thursday was formally sworn in as a Peace Corps volunteer there. She was on her way by train to her permanent assignment in Eastern Ukraine, in a town close to the Russian border, said her mother, high school English teacher Sue Strickland.
Strickland said her 24-year-old daughter worked very hard to learn Russian, another difficult language.
"She pretty much immersed herself with her host families," Strickland said. "In the second host family, the grandmother spoke nothing but Russian. Jessica felt proud that after six weeks there, she could have an hour-long conversation with the grandmother."
In Ukraine, Jessica Strickland will be teaching English at a pedagogical college, which is similar to a community college.
Strickland said she was surprised her daughter wanted to be a teacher, but not so surprised at her joining the Peace Corps.
"She's always been very adventurous," she said.
Hogue, the recruiter, said the Peace Corps seeks people who have knowledge or skills that would benefit a community.
"We look at relevant degrees or work experience and ideally fit your role to a place needing your skills," he said. Then there are medical and background checks and paperwork before getting an official invitation from Washington, D.C., to join the corps. The process takes nine to 15 months, he said.
LaPlant said she was ready to return home, but she's also is starting to miss the people and the environment of Bulgaria.
"It's a struggle you can't even imagine before you go," she said, "then you find joy that you can't even imagine before you go.
"I've made friends for a lifetime."