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Fulbright Program for U.S. Students

Fulbright Foreign Student
Newsletter

Issue 3 | April 2007

Spring Updates
table of contents

A Fulbright Family

by Radia Daoussi, France, 2006-2007

My Fulbright experience was decidedly going to be a family experience. Driving from Peru to Baltimore with my husband and two little girls (Vineeta and Sevilla, then 3 and 5), I arrived – nine months later - one hour before the orientation to my Master's program at Johns Hopkins University. Proof that nothing happens without a deadline, I suppose.

Completing some 80 credits in 11 months was going to be a challenge, but we all survived it! Vineeta and Sevilla quickly became the mascots of the School of Public Health as they were involved in every possible special event on campus. The family proudly attended the presentation of the culmination of my year’s work on HIV, Abortion, and Family Planning in Zimbabwe.

Radia Daoussi, France, 2005-2006 
Radia Daoussi, France, 2005-2006 
Even settled in the States, we were still infected with the travel bug. We drove from Baltimore to Chicago where I attended the enrichment seminar set to explore “Building Trust in Diverse Communities.” It was wonderful to connect with the Fulbright community at the seminar representing some 60 countries. We all made an impression at the high school we visited and it was exciting to witness the students’ eagerness to learn and harness possibilities for a bright future.

Driving up north this time, the 'Fulbright Family' went to Toronto in the summer of 2006 to attend the International AIDS conference, where the Vineeta Foundation (our small NGO) had been selected from over 400 others to prepare a program on the oral history of AIDS. Initially crafted as a radio program, the project evolved into a documentary where Vineeta and Sevilla asked their very own unscripted questions to the crème de la crème of the HIV/AIDS prevention and scientific world. Their interaction with people living with HIV and AIDS was funny and fascinating. Please Talk to Kids about AIDS is dedicated to the memory of Wendy Klag, late wife of the Dean of the Hopkins School of Public Health.

Screened at Johns Hopkins University, Harvard University, and George Washington University, the film generated debate and new sense of hope that if we could overcome our own taboos, embarrassment, and prejudices (as children do), the fight against AIDS could be won.

Craig McClure, Executive Director of the International AIDS Society made a special trip from Geneva to raise awareness on the role of the AIDS conferences. His Excellency Celestin Niyongabo, ambassador of Burundi, and his wife attended the screening as well. Ambassador Niyongabo moved the audience when he said that he and his wife were proud to represent their nation and their family in fighting this disease. Understanding, so dear to Senator Fulbright, plays a crucial role in overcoming the pandemic that defines our time.

Over the miles and years as a family, we have realized that leadership is a tremendous opportunity to save and change lives, to take action, leave a legacy and inspire others to do more. Leadership isn’t leading others; it’s inspiring others to lead. As a family, we have inspired many around us, and I cherish that more than any other academic or professional achievement. We’ve shown young students that there is no career versus family dichotomy. That you can include your family in everything and they must, of course, come first.

It was a delight to meet J. William Fulbright’s real family; his wife, Harriet Mayor Fulbright. At a reception in Washington, she explained that a new documentary depicting her late husband’s life and work was finished and soon to be released. We took a picture of her and the girls, and now we really feel part of the Fulbright Family.

 



 

Photo of the Month


Pilar Gonzalo, Spain, 2006-2007 
Pilar Gonzalo, Spain, 2006-2007 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photo All Photo of the Month submissions must include the grantee's name and country in the Fulbright Photo Gallery comments in order to be considered.  Please click here for more information.



 

My Fulbright Impressions

by Victoria Fedulova, 2006-2007, Russia

Hello, everyone! My name is Victoria and I’m a Fulbrighter at the University of Houston. I’ve been in the U.S. for more than half a year by now so I guess I’ve got something to tell you.

So many things have happened since I arrived on the 29th of July, 2006. To start, a few words about the Gateway Orientation in Lincoln, Nebraska. This was a really unforgettable experience with 56 people from 32 countries getting a chance to see someone they could only read about in Geography or History textbooks. I believe we all had a lot of fun socializing and, frankly speaking for me, this was the best part of it. I hadn‘t traveled much before I arrived in the U.S. and getting to know people from all over the planet, with all their cultural and social peculiarities, made me understand better who I am and realize how diverse the world we live in is.

Victoria Fedulova, Russia, 2006-2007 
Victoria Fedulova, Russia, 2006-2007 
The bad part of my experience (and it was probably the only negative experience I‘ve had so far) began later - when I arrived in Houston two weeks earlier than the term started. It wasn’t a nightmare. I managed to get into a permanent apartment pretty quickly (thanks to a nice lady who picked me up at the airport and took care of my moving in and other minor details of settling in a new place). The worst part was (you remember, I arrived too early) the lack of communication for the following two weeks. I had to replace it with writing e-mails and surfing the Internet just to entertain myself somehow and to kill the time before the fun began. Thanks to all my friends and to everyone who wrote to me, as this really helped me to overcome the depression I was falling into.

After that, things went well; we had an orientation at the University of Houston where I made some friends and then more later at the Residence Hall. I eventually didn’t feel that lonely anymore. In fact, there was no time to feel lonely. I should say international students at the University of Houston are very well taken care of. At the beginning, we had a tour around Houston. It's a beautiful city, with its high skyscraper downtown outline, trees, parks and fountains and bright blue sky -- a lot of sky. We attended football games, had all kinds of parties, went camping (between the studies, of course, not instead of them!).

 

For Thanksgiving, we went to Dallas where I met another Fulbrighter I had met in Nebraska, Marek Filinger with whom I later went on a trip with. We had a real Thanksgiving with turkey, television and good old movies. We felt like one big family.

 

“Hey, what about studies?” I anticipated the question. Sure. This part is no less exciting but… My advice to lazy students; don’t even think about applying for the program if you’re not planning to work hard and that’s that! I had 4 classes (i.e., 12 hours) and enough to keep me busy all the time with readings and papers. The classes themselves were really interesting, very informative and some things I learned enabled me to look at certain points from a new perspective. I got all A’s at the end of the term, which makes me quite content with the way I worked.

 

My winter break started with a trip around Texas. I had a wonderful traveling companion, Marek. We were able to see many things: we went to museums, art galleries, visited theaters and historical sites. We even had a ghost tour in San Antonio. There were strolls along the beaches of Corpus Christi and Galveston, and camping in one of the Texas State Parks (in fact, we visited four State Parks). We climbed the Enchanted Rock (it was an easy climb but I‘m not much of a real mountain climber, I confess). We investigated some beautiful caves. Later (I was on my own by then), I visited New Orleans, Chicago, Washington, DC (WOW!!!), and Santa Fe. I’ve seen the New Mexico mountains, the famous Nuclear Energy Museum in Los Alamos and the International UFO Museum at Roswell. But it would take me too long to describe all my travels which were, of course, exciting and unforgettable (and educational, by the way).



 

A Call for Articles with Photos


We welcome articles with accompanying photos for future issues of the Fulbright Foreign Student Grantee Newsletter. Articles should ideally be about your experience of being in the U.S. as a Fulbright ambassador, and any relevant and/or unique musings you might want to share with your fellow Fulbright grantees and others interested in the Fulbright Program. 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 should show you engaged in program activities, or be illustrative of your article's content. 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!