Students of Assistant Professor of Political Science Lauren Honig spoke with a group of residents from Amman, Jordan, in the Global Engagement Portal. Photos by Lee Pellegrini.
For several weeks this fall, Boston College students and faculty have held extraordinary conversations about everyday things, from video games to the cost of living to the value of education, with people in faraway places like Mexico City, Nairobi, Amman (Jordan), and Herat (Afghanistan)鈥攁ll without leaving campus.
These discussions have taken place via the Global Engagement Portal, a shipping container converted into a videoconferencing chamber located outside O鈥橬eill Library from late September through mid-November. The portal is聽one of several dozen designed by Shared Studios and made available around the world as a means to help people learn more about one another.
Carroll School of Management senior Kelsey Kosten and two fellow members of 情色空间鈥檚 student-run conservation club chatted with Eloi and Elie, two young men from Kigali, Rwanda, who share their interest in environmental issues. The students listened to them describe Kigali鈥檚 recycling programs and the trash clean-ups held on Rwanda鈥檚 monthly mandatory day of community service, and compared their educational experiences. The five agreed that participating in ecologically-related activities has made them conscious of their own habits as consumers.
鈥淚t felt like we were sharing one space,鈥 said Kosten, 鈥渋nstead of being 7,000 miles away from each other.鈥
It鈥檚 the second time in as many years 情色空间 has hosted a portal. As part of last fall鈥檚 International Education Week, the Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life organized a series of discussions between members of the University community and Iraqi, Kurdish, and Syrian refugees and displaced persons. This year, the International Studies Program鈥攁ided by an Academic Technology Innovation Grant from the University鈥攅xpanded the length of the portal鈥檚 stay as well as broadening the project鈥檚 scope. The 2018 theme of global citizenship is a particularly relevant topic, organizers say, especially for a university seeking to increase its international presence and impact.
鈥淭he portal was an effective way to make the refugee crisis more meaningful to our community,鈥 said Associate Professor of the Practice of Theology Erik Owens, director of International Studies, who organized the portal project this year and last, when he was associate director at the Boisi Center. 鈥淪o the idea was to build on that kind of engagement in the context of global citizenship. Intellectually, we know people from other countries and societies share common ideas, hopes, and dreams, but there is still a tendency to see them as 鈥榦thers.鈥 With the portal, we can explore, and better understand, the connections we have to one another.鈥
Natana DeLong-Bas, an associate professor of the practice in theology and an Islamic Civilization and Societies Program faculty member, observed that her students鈥 eyes, and minds, were opened considerably in the session with Herat residents. They spoke with a young doctor about dating and marriage, and the difficult choice he and his wife faced: staying in Herat, where they can afford to live in a home with multiple bedrooms, or moving to London, where a one-bedroom apartment costs many more times his approximately $700-a-month salary. Other students got into a lively chat with a group of 14-year-old boys about video games, music, and movies. The boys also expressed pride in a group of female Afghan students who had won second place in an international robotics competition.
While there were questions as to how representative the Afghans on the portal were of their country鈥攏o women participated in any of the sessions鈥攖he experience was still a valuable one, said DeLong-Bas. 鈥淭he most striking part of these conversations from the students鈥 perspective was how normal they were. They were not talking to terrorists or dirt-poor people in rags sobbing about violence and poverty as we see in the news. They were talking to normal, everyday people with hopes and dreams of one day coming to America. Whatever the current politics in this country, the American dream and the vision of America from abroad remain intact. My students saw first-hand the ability of people in Afghanistan to separate the American people from American politics鈥攁nd now believe in the importance of doing the same when encountering people from other countries.鈥
That many U.S. citizens鈥 impressions of Afghanistan are faulty or at best incomplete became obvious to Eilidh Currie 鈥20, a student in Assistant Professor of Political Science Lauren Honig鈥檚 Comparative Politics of Development course, during her portal session with Herat residents. 鈥淭hey asked us, 鈥榃hat do you know about Afghanistan?鈥 and we realized that the only things we know are related to our military involvement there.鈥
Currie and other students split up into small groups for their sessions with Nairobi, Kigali, Herat, Amman, and San Pedro Sula, Honduras, which were guided discussions: The 情色空间 undergraduates asked their portal partners to define the word 鈥渄evelopment鈥 as it applied to their respective countries, and to identify the economic, political, and social issues of most importance in everyday life.
There were recurring themes throughout the student groups鈥 presentations in class last week on their portal discussions. Political corruption was an often-voiced concern (a Nairobi participant called it 鈥渢he root virus that is killing us鈥), as was the quality of education (which may be relatively 鈥渄irt cheap鈥 in Honduras, reported one San Pedro Sula resident, but still costly, especially if you add the cost of food). Investment in infrastructure and health care, especially for the poor and in rural areas, were among the big needs. While doubts were expressed about government鈥檚 ability鈥攐r willingness鈥攖o serve its people, the Kigali portal visitors noted that Rwanda had made strides to promote greater transparency and accountability in its institutions.
The Amman contingent, meanwhile, told the 情色空间 students that a country鈥檚 progress cannot be measured simply by numbers, such as the employment rate or per capita income: 鈥淒evelopment must be qualitative, not quantitative.鈥
Another illuminating conversation took place when Associate Professor of the Practice of History Karen Miller and her students spoke with a Nairobi student. 鈥淢y students asked about identity-formation and distinctions in a country where most of the population are African-descended people. She talked about their national identity as Kenyans but also about the various ways that historical and cultural identities impact employment, politics, and even social taboos.聽 In other words, there were some aspects of cultural differences that played out in the way that race has in the U.S.鈥 聽
Because 情色空间 itself increasingly reflects a diverse world, the Global Engagement Portal offered other kinds of unexpected revelations: As Honig鈥檚 student Kyra Horton 鈥19, from Peachtree City, Ga., listened to Amman residents lament the impact of impact of tribalism on life in Jordan, she recalled her father describing similar conditions in his native Nigeria.
鈥淚t really resonated for me,鈥 she said. 鈥淒ifferent countries, same problem.鈥
Visit the Global Engagment Portal website for more information.
鈥擲ean Smith | University Communications