Names: Courtney Smith (US), Galen Cobb (US), Nigama Annapurna (India), Lohit Bhambri (India), Palash Sethi (India), Charlie Baer (US), Marta Wayne (US), Md. Monjurul Islam Rifat (Bangladesh), Shambadeb Basur (india). Not pictured: Bachir Assao Neino and family (Niger).
The program is designed to combat student isolation and promote cultural exchanges
Source: The Independent Florida Alligator
By Eluney Gonzalez
As the holiday season approaches, most students flock from Gainesville to visit friends and family for Thanksgiving and Christmas, among other winter holidays, leaving many UF international students feeling estranged from the festivities. Alone and unable to return to their families abroad, this time of year can be isolating as cities shut down for the holidays.
“Everything is closed and the place feels like a ghost town,” Marta Wayne, director of the UF International Center, said.
To mitigate this problem, the Greater Gainesville International Center is partnering with the UFIC to match international students with host families in Gainesville for the holidays.
The goal is to connect people during this difficult and isolating time, GGIC president and former Gainesville mayor Lauren Poe said.
“But I think more than anything, just being welcoming,” Poe said. “Saying, ‘Hey, we see you, we know that this is a difficult time.’ Just be more inclusive to folks who are cut off from our American traditions.”
A prospective host family will invite its international students for meals and activities on significant cultural holidays, including Thanksgiving, Hanukkah, Christmas, New Year's and Ramadan among others.
“We’re interested in families sharing meals or meeting students for coffee,” Wayne said. “Ideally, the connection will last all year.”
Apart from the benefit to the students, Poe and Wayne hope the interactions will go both directions.
“We’re also hoping the program will facilitate cultural exchange between the students and the Gainesville family they are matched with,” Wayne said.
Poe agreed, adding: “It would be a really important opportunity for the families to meet new people and learn about someone else's traditions and cultural identity.”
Terrence Ho, a GGIC board member, signed up to be a holiday host in honor of his personal experiences abroad. In his years abroad, over 100 families have hosted him.
“I've experienced and given hospitality to people all over the world for many, many, many years,” Ho said. “And it to me seems to be the main thing that cures xenophobia, ignorance. That's the sort of stuff that I just wish I could keep paying forward.”
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