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Making Lasting Local Connections
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Experiencing the Middle East through an Entirely New Lensby Sarah Alsamarai, 2009-2010, JordanSaint Augustine once said, “The world is a book, and those who do not travel read only a page.” When I was selected for a Fulbright grant to Jordan, I felt that the world had opened before me and that I had been given an opportunity to experience the Middle East through an entirely new lens. Though I had heard a great deal about the region from my parents, both of whom were raised there, and through the many books I had read in college, the time was ripe to take my knowledge to the next level. The time had come for me to engage with the social justice issues that matter most to me in a region very dear to me.
I later found out that this child had been thrown from a roof by a member of a militia on the same day that her father was kidnapped and killed. Among the other fierce realities with which I was confronted was that many of my students have jobs and do not go to school. Some earn little over a dollar a day - a very small amount in Jordan’s capital - which has come to be known as an expensive place to live. I learned that while the international community in many ways has forgotten about the Iraqi refugee crisis, millions of Iraqis live in Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon. They need protection, support, and programs to ensure their futures. Their lives have been disrupted, their educations halted, and in many cases, their incomes stopped entirely due to the war. In thinking about the Iraqi refugee struggles, I am truly at a loss for words. Perhaps Senator Fulbright summed up the cost of war effectively when he wrote, "We make policy apart from the image of what our world would be like after a war - apart from any awareness of the piles of decomposing bodies, the mutilated children, the cemeteries, and the broken lives that are always the tangible human results of any war." Having completed my intensive Arabic courses, I have been conducting research on chronic health conditions among the Iraqi population and collaborating with the World Health Organization. I wish my fellow Fulbright grantees the best of luck and encourage them to remember the premise of our grants - Senator Fulbright’s vision of world peace through promoting mutual understanding - so that we can hope for a future when no more wars will be waged. To comment on and interact with other Fulbrighters about Sarah Alsamarai's article on the Fulbright Community on State Alumni, please click here. |
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Finding Local Solutions for Arsenic Mitigation in Bangladeshby Christine Marie George, 2009-2010, BangladeshDuring my Fulbright fellowship, I have been living in Dhaka, Bangladesh working to develop community-based strategies for reducing exposure to and the bodily burden of arsenic in Bangladesh as part of my dissertation research for my Ph.D. in Environmental Health Sciences at Columbia University.
Providing field arsenic
testing services and encouraging the switch to low
arsenic wells is the simplest form of mitigating
arsenic exposure for Bangladeshi villagers who
drink from wells with unsafe arsenic levels.
Field testing, though significant, has only
mitigated arsenic exposure for about half of the
affected population in Bangladesh. I
hypothesize that this is at least in part because
no systematic efforts exist to train local
community members to measure arsenic exposure and
disseminate information about its risks within
their communities.
My Fulbright fellowship has given me the opportunity to implement and evaluate a self-designed, community-based arsenic mitigation strategy. Starting the project was quite a daunting process since I had to learn how to navigate the logistics of 1000 Bangladeshi household visits. Through this experience, however, I have gained invaluable project management skills. Most importantly, I have learned how to work with people from a culture very different than my own. Learning Bangla has opened opportunities for me to communicate meaningfully with the villagers partaking in my study and to learn more about their culture. The local villagers who trained to become arsenic testers have exceeded all my expectations. As arsenic testers, they have empowered communities by providing information on arsenic's effects and well water arsenic testing. My time in Bangladesh has been an unforgettable cultural experience that I will always remember. To comment on and interact with other Fulbrighters about Christine Marie George's article on the Fulbright Community on State Alumni, please click here. |
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Connect and Share Your Experiences with Fellow Fulbrighters on State Alumni and FacebookState Alumni If you are not already familiar with State Alumni, it is a social network sponsored by the U.S. Department of State exclusively for all current and past participants of State Department-sponsored exchange programs, including the Fulbright Program. To register for State Alumni and gain access to the Fulbright Community, go to https://alumni.state.gov. The Fulbright Library The Fulbright Library on State Alumni is a new way to share, connect and collaborate with other current and former Fulbrighters. It offers a platform, categorized by subject area, for you to share your articles, blogs, classroom materials and other media related to your areas of interest and research, particularly work related to your Fulbright grant. If you are already a member of State Alumni, you may access the Fulbright Library at https://alumni.state.gov/fulbright/library. Share your photos with the Fulbright Community!
The Fulbright Program now has an
official Facebook
presence where you can join discussions,
comment on wall posts, and learn more about the
program's many facets. We encourage you to
visit the Fulbright Program's Facebook page
regularly to read about Fulbrighters in the news,
ask questions, and engage with fellow Fulbrighters
from around the world.
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A Call for Articles with PhotosWe welcome articles with accompanying photos for future issues of the Fulbright U.S. Student Grantee Newsletter. Articles should ideally be about your experience of being abroad as a Fulbright grantee (and cultural ambassador), and discuss your research, classroom or teaching experiences, as well as any personal examples about how you’ve achieved the goal of the Fulbright program: to increase mutual understanding between the people of the United States and the people of other countries. The length of the article should be no more than 500 words and not require much editing in order to be published. The accompanying photos (preferably high resolution, 300 dpi or above) should show you engaged in program activities, be illustrative of your article's content and include captions. Please submit your articles with photos within two weeks of the release of this newsletter. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us. We look forward to receiving your articles! |