Tuesday, August 26, 2008

West Bank Trip in the News



Tuesday, 26 August 2008
Students return from West Bank trip Print E-mail
Janice Peterson - DAILY HERALD
Provo High School participates in Arabic study abroad program

Four Provo High School students are returning to school this year with a unique perspective of the Arabic language they have been learning.

The four students and their Arabic teacher recently returned from a three-week trip to the West Bank, sponsored by Relief International. The group has previously brought Palestinian teens to the United States, but the experience was a rare opportunity for the Provo High students.

"This is the first time that they've actually brought American students over," said Audrey Bastian, the school's Arabic teacher.

Bastian said she became involved with the organization last year, which enabled her to connect her students with Palestinian youth participating in Relief International programs across the world.

The Palestinian youth would speak to her students through videos, and her students would send their video correspondence back. After a year of learning Arabic, the students were invited by the organization to visit Palestine and meet the youth with whom they had been speaking.

The trip, which lasted from mid-July to early August, was a good opportunity for the students to learn first-hand about Arabic culture, Bastian said.

"We were learning about people and interacting with them, but when we actually stayed in the homes, I think it solidified the exchange," she said.

The two boys, Adam Evans and Josh Porter, stayed together in one home, and the two girls, Kathlene Ornano and Angela Ford, stayed in another. Each day, the group would meet their teacher and visit different organizations in cities around Palestine, learning about art, music and other culture. Bastian said the more-independent living situations helped the students to get a better feel for the way of life in Palestine.

"We learn about the culture, then do it ourselves," she said.

Bastian said the trip was an important learning experience for her students and the Palestinians they met. Both cultures tend to have strong opinions about the other, but meeting in person helps both sides to see they are actually very similar.

"I'm guessing it will be a life-changing experience for them," she said. "They really enjoyed it."

Provo High School Principal Sam Ray said that while the school did not sponsor the trip, the new Arabic language class opened the door for new experiences for the students. The school will be offering Arabic, Chinese and Russian this year -- all languages deemed critical by the U.S. Department of Defense. With current political tensions in many parts of the world, Ray said understanding such languages and cultures is important for Americans.

"I think it gives them an insight into the world that they wouldn't have otherwise," he said.

Adam Evans, a 10th-grader who took part in the trip, said the amount of security in the country was surprising to him, and he knows more about the turmoil in the region now that he has visited. Evans said he enjoyed visiting the Dead Sea and seeing the large wall separating Israel and the West Bank.

"I now understand Arabic better because I actually went over there," he said.

Kathlene Ornano said she enjoyed meeting Palestinian teens and finding similarities with her own culture. She said she was surprised to find they enjoy swimming and soccer and other activities that American youth enjoy. Ornano said getting to know another culture was fun for her, and she enjoyed learning Arabic better in her time abroad.

"I've been living in two cultures my whole life," she said. "So to just see a third one, I love this!"

Ornano said she believes many Americans are sheltered and do not understand other cultures throughout the world. She said this trip and others are important for other cultures to understand Americans, and for Americans to return home and educate others about their experiences.

"I think that one person can change the world," she said.

Friday, August 15, 2008

Welcome back!









I am excited to start another Arabic adventure with you. During the summer students were involved in several different Arabic activities. One student did Startalk and is planning to take Arabic classes at BYU. Also, four students went to Palestine/Israel for an intensive language experience and to meet Palestinians and stay in their homes. They also made the Palestinian Ma'an newspaper. (Posted below)

MAAN NEWS AGENCY
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"This is what diplomacy should be;" Utah teens come to the West Bank

Date: 24 / 07 / 2008 Time: 15:53

Bethlehem – Ma'an – "This is what my job should be about," said Alistair Baskey, head of Cultural and Education Exchanges for the US consular office in Jerusalem, "not answering e-mails and phone calls."

This week Baskey has been overseeing a group of four American teenagers from Utah and more than fifty Palestinian youth from Hebron, Nablus, Ramallah and Jenin, as they connect in a language and cultural exchange. "This is real diplomacy," he said watching a basketball match between the teens.

The group is all part of a program funded by the US State Department that connects American youth with their peers in places as far away Tajikistan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan and Palestine. The ongoing and primarily web-based events are organized by the Global Connections and Exchange Program in cooperation with Relief International Schools On-Line (RISOL). The program is multifaceted, and includes IT training for participants, cultural information exchange, and online Arabic lessons.

Majd Iwidat, a 17-year-old Hebronite, learned how to use several different software programs as he and his peers at a local community center put together an instructional video on basic Arabic for a high school class in Utah. His participation in the program has earned him more than just IT experience, however.

As a RISOL student Majd traveled to the United States, visiting Washington DC, Los Angeles and Seattle, where he met his peers from Afghanistan, Tajikistan and the United States.

Kathlene Ornano, a 16-year-old American from Provo, Utah, was one of four Americans taking part in the program's organized visit to the West Bank. Kathlene started learning Arabic when she was 12, after she discovered that it was the language spoken in Egypt, where she hopes to some day explore the ancient pyramids.

It was Majd's video tutorials that helped Kathlene learn Arabic in her high school class of 13 students, under the direction of teacher Audry Bastian. Ms Bastian has brought the tools from RISOL into her language classrooms, to help her students learn what life is like in the countries where Arabic is spoken, and expose the students to the language in a real and interactive way.

While Majd joined the program out of his interest in computer technology, hoping some day to study computer science at Harvard, Kathlene isn't sure what she wants to do with her knowledge of Arabic. "Right now I really just want to know more," she said.

This is the first group of youth under 18 that the US consul has brought into the West Bank since 2001. "Security concerns" are preventing the group from visiting Majd in Hebron, and the young man will not be able to join the group during their tour of the Haram Ash-Sharif since he was not among the ten participants selected to receive special permission to enter Jerusalem.

Indeed, the reality of the situation – the group is followed closely by at least four security guards, has restricted access to Palestinian cities, and faces the restricted access of Palestinians to Jerusalem – is going to be part of the experience for the visiting Americans.

For the moment, however, the students do not seem too concerned about the political ramifications of their meeting.

Majd says that despite the impact that the United States has on his country, he is happy to meet good people from the area. Kathlene is enthralled with the ancient architecture of the old cities of East Jerusalem and Bethlehem. She was amazed to discover, upon entering some of the old buildings that "everything is new and modern." She said that the trip has shown her "there is a different view on the inside," of the homes, at least.