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Opinion

Best way to travel? Study abroad

24 December 2008, 20:31 | Alina Rudya, Kyiv Post
Best way to travel? Study abroad
Alina Rudya
The stately Central European University
in Budapest, Hungary, turned out to be
a good stop on Alina Rudya's
travel-study itinerary.
Some Ukrainian find the only way to see the world is to attend a foreign university

I enjoy traveling. It’s one of the biggest thrills of my life. I would rather visit a new country than buy a car, even if I had money for it, or a pair of designer shoes.

The most popular way of traveling in the world is backpacking. Students from Europe and Asia, America and Australia explore other countries and cultures while living in cheap hostels, hitchhiking, flying budget airlines and hospitality clubbing.

Backpacking is usually not what a Ukrainian would do. The usual destination for a Ukrainian tourist in the summer is Turkey, or maybe Budapest or Prague, for a change of pace. But that gets harder as Hungary and the Czech Republic are Schengen states now, and it’s still hard for Ukrainians to get visas to European Union nations.

A prepaid 3-star hotel room in Egypt, Bulgaria or Turkey is about as far as an average Ukrainian will get. Of course, there are exceptions. Some people have enough money to travel to Bali or Maldives, but I’m talking about young people, who don’t earn enough to travel to a five-star resort on the Indian Ocean.

So are Ukrainians just boring, or are there other reasons why they don’t do much traveling? It might be about money. But most backpackers in the world are students who try to find the cheapest way to explore the world – from volunteering to hitchhiking. This is not the case with the average Ukrainian student.

There is no “gap year” in the timetable of a Ukrainian student. People don’t take a break after graduating from high school. It’s normal to enter the university at age 17, or even earlier, and after finishing college to get a job and stick to it until your dying day. That’s normal. That’s prestigious. That’s what other people respect. If you’re not admitted to a university straight after you finish school, everybody pities you. Nobody expects you to make any other choice than college, even though the quality of higher education in Ukraine is questionable – 700 so-called universities in comparison to 11 in Poland.

I haven’t seen many Ukrainian people abroad who are there for fun and not for work, both legal and illegal.  I’m not talking about five-day long group tours to some well-known destinations, which are usually organized by Ukrainian agencies. I don’t want to be organized and let other people decide where I’m traveling, which hotel I’m staying in and how much time I have to  drink my coffee. I don’t like to stick to plans of other Ukrainian tourists.

To get to know a city better, you need to live through all the seasons in it, not just take a quick glance over Paris from the top of the Eiffel Tower.

So I found my own way to travel abroad. I studied. There are many scholarships for Ukrainian students in different countries, so I decided to benefit as much from them as I could.

I never really wanted to get my master’s in political science but did I have any other opportunity to live in Budapest for a year? And I’m not really into classic literature or German philosophy, but how else would I get an opportunity to live in Berlin and travel around EU countries without problems? So I finished this liberal arts program in Germany too. And while studying, I visited Spain, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, Hungary and Czech Republic. I would need to buy a separate tour to each of these countries and stand in long queues in front of the embassies for days if I stayed in Ukraine. But my student visa allowed me to do that fast, legally and in a fun way. I met different people, I visited unusual places, stayed in cheap hostels and flew budget airlines. I finally felt like a normal student.

And then I participated in a media program in Oslo for 6 weeks. What I remember most were my trips around Norway and Denmark. Bergen and Stavanger were exciting. Rafting in a national park not far from Lillehammer was an unforgettable experience, as well as my ferry trip to Copenhagen. Unfortunately, I don’t remember most of the lectures I had to attend every day, because I had other reasons to come to Oslo.

I’ve been to Sweden as well. Beautiful country, I must say. And I studied there too. In a small town of Jonkoping, where the Cardigans started their music career. Unfortunately, I can’t remember what I was studying. Joking, of course. But I managed to travel all around southern Sweden, see the cities of Gothenburg, Lund and Stockholm, which is still one of my favorite sights in Europe.

I guess all these programs are made specifically for people like me. They don’t give you much, but they don’t take much time from you as well. It’s not that I didn’t learn anything from them. It’s just that I learn much more from my travels.

For most of my friends from abroad my methods seem too complicated – getting two master’s degrees just because I wanted to see other countries. But to be honest, for a Ukrainian, it’s probably the easiest method except for getting married. It simplifies your travel life even more if your husband or wife is the happy owner of a nice European Union passport. An American identification will also do.

What I wrote above is called irony, bitter irony with a taste of exaggeration. Unfortunately, what is irony for others is reality for some of us.People might say that a Ukrainian can easily get a visa abroad when they are trained professionals. I know many people who work abroad for huge companies. But these are people who are working, not getting new experiences, like my friend Julian from Australia is. He graduated as a journalist in Sydney and now he’s working as a bartender in the White Trash bar in Berlin. He is totally satisfied with what he’s doing and he told me that he doesn’t want a more qualified job. Yet. He travels Europe, meets people, learns new languages. He owns a British passport by the way. And his friend Astrid, also an Aussie who is a pub-crawl guide, owns a French ID (thanks to her French mom) – even though she doesn’t speak a word of French.

Now I’m getting to the most depressing part of my story. Finally, I decided to get an education I really wanted – not for the sake of traveling, but for my own good. Other than traveling, my passion is photography. And Ukrainian schools and institutes don’t offer any really professional photography courses. So I applied to one of the oldest European photography schools – Lette-Verein, which is in Berlin. I was lucky (and hopefully talented enough) to be one of 28 students who were chosen to study among 470 people who applied. The day I got the letter of acceptance, I was in seventh heaven.

But then I didn’t get my visa. Simply like that. Germans told me that Lette is not a university and I cannot study in a higher education institute if I’m a foreigner. Ironically, there were Japanese and American students who were also accepted to my program. And even more ironically they got their study visas because they were from privileged countries.

I understand this all might be politics. But how can we speak about human rights after this? I’m a student, an artist, a human being. Why cannot I be judged for who I am and not for the country I am from?

So, as I said, I like traveling. Now I’m considering a Ph.D. I might apply to some European or American program next year, after I finish my third master’s degree. And, believe me, nobody’s more interested in the process of studying than in the result in my case.

Alina Rudya is a Kyiv Post staff writer and photographer.

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  Comments (24)
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VESNA    (Guest) | 20.01.2009, 12:51
OK, I think that some \"articles\" this newspaper publish are just despicable. The issue of visas for Ukrainians is clearly a difficult one. But for goodness sakes! What kind of image of Ukrainians you advertise here? An image of people who cheat to get some study grant? This person - this author so to say - says \"I never really wanted to get my master’s in political science but did I have any other opportunity to live in Budapest for a year? And I’m not really into classic literature or German philosophy, but how else would I get an opportunity to live in Berlin and travel around EU countries without problems? \" How is that? She doesn\'t want that degree but she deprives people who want it from getting it. Moreover she doesn\'t give a shit to hide her hidden motives. She goes to the University and study something that she is not even interested in... I guess grant organizations have to do better in their selecting process. As for the newspaper that publishes it... I am speachless.
more-logic    (Guest) | 21.01.2009, 17:48
There is a lot of logic in your word, however, the reality is that the funding the author of the article got a tuition is not for everybody. It is funding designated for foreigners/Eastern Europe/Ukrainians/etc. Citizens of Germany and the USA are not able to get it. As for Ukrainian citizens, all of them have the same intentions. Go abroad, see the world, get married a foreigner. If this girl was selected, she was the best choice. I mean, she had the best scores, grades, statement of purpose, etc. She learned the rules of the game better than others. Moreover, such students come and bring their knowledge, they show those lazy western students how to study. In so-called group projects such students share their knowledge and western students get additional benefits. Yes, some accents in this article could have been done differently. She was sincere. Next time she will be more diplomatic. Ukrainians still have rather good education, they need other things from western universities.
VESNA    (Guest) | 23.01.2009, 00:08
I cannot agree with at least one of your statements. You say that \" As for Ukrainian citizens, all of them have the same intentions. Go abroad, see the world, get married a foreigner. \" Unfortunately articles as this one humiliate ukrainians who do not fall under the category of husband-seekers-on-grant-mone y. And when I wrote that she deprved more worthy from getting the chance of education, I mean it exactly as I said. This little scheming person \"learned the rules\" as you put it and sneaked in instead of somebody who might have wanted to get the education in political science (the education this authoress clearly said was uninteresting and unnecessary for her) in order to teach, to consult, to work in that field and so on.
I feel sorry for Ukraine when I see people like her. As a journalist I feel sorry for ukrainian journalism when I see articles like this.
Guest    (Guest) | 23.01.2009, 07:06
Well, this topic is too complicated. I would name your approach as \"too Soviet\". You are trying to divide into black and white all the time. The same girl who is the author of the article would like to study in the west but to get B.A. degree but such scholarships are not given to 17-year-old kids to get B.A. They must first to have certain career. When they have the career they are eligible. All this is too complicated. If those who you think she deprived really wanted to study in the west, why did she win those scholarships? Because she was better prepared, she did more work. If they wanted so much to study why didn\'t they prepare their statements of purpose better than her? Your analysis is too simple. Dig dipper. It is not enough to want. It is necessary to work. She worked better. This means she deserves that scholarship. It does not matter what her purpose is, but she worked more and got better results.
Guest    (Guest) | 23.01.2009, 07:15
One more addition. Grant writing is a big field. This girl did not want to study but worked harder than other and that is why got the grant. Those who \"deserve\" and \"want to study\" worked less hard and did not get a grant. There are thousands of those who have parents who are university professors who write those applications and those whose US boyfriends and occasional friends write. And those who attend different Bible studies and those Bible studies priests write:))) The author of the article at least may be did all that herself. I have met in my life a number of a reputable US professors who wrote such applications to Ukrainian friends who just on time invited them to good parties:) Direct your energy against them. Don\'t blame the girl who worked hard. What is bad in the idea to get married to a foreigner. Did the Soviets teach you that it is bad? It is also often a hard work to survive all that adjustment of the living with a totally different mentality in the pillow next to you:(
life-stories    (Guest) | 23.01.2009, 07:23
Many years ago I met a woman, a PhD candidate in Latin. She spent a few years of her life and finally got that US grant. She went to the USA and finally got married. Do you think that only she is guilty in the demographic problems in Ukraine? I don\'t think so. There were wars, there were Stalin camps, etc. Anyway, she got married to a guy with a salary of 10 dollars an hour, he had no parents, no properties. He had US citizenship, that\'s it. She spent a few years in the USA but they got divorced before she got a green card. She failed to get a green card and returned to Ukraine where she had a big apartment, almost ready dissertation and other features of decent life. She defended her dissertation, became the acting dean and her life goes on. It is none of my or your business to blame her. It\'s her life. It is her right to choose either doing one more research in Latin or writing eternal applications for western scholarships. If she won that grant she was prepared better. That\'s it.
Alina Rudya    (Guest) | 29.01.2009, 00:59
It\'s a pity that so many people misread my article. Unfortunately I had to study really hard to write all my applications, get better grates and to be accepted. the fact was that I was not looking for easy money (believe me, it was not that easy anyway) or for a marriage. I wanted to get my visa, so that I can see the world just like other student all over the world do. Are you blaming women from some strict-Muslim countries, who escape to the West, because they want some other life for themselves as well as for their daughters?
You re being very judgmental and unfair. I wrote that there is \"bitter irony\" in what I wrote, but I guess not everybody can read through it - because its so easy to blame instead.
having fun    (Guest) | 06.01.2009, 03:16
Hey, guys, why are you so angry with Ukrainian educated beauties? You also love free stuff, all those coupons, etc. America is a paradise of free stuff. You waste half of life on cutting tooth paste and laundry coupons from papers. She is smarter, she gets free degrees and travels. Good for her! These guys are afraid of a female with 3 Master\'s!!! They can satisfy only a cleaner, a cook, and a nanny!!!
another_student    (Guest) | 06.01.2009, 00:00
\"what have you done to change the system in Ukraine?\"

People who study so well constitute about 2-3% of the college students. So, if to speak about population in the whole, it is a small number of people. The only thing they can change – get married to somebody who will help them to leave this country for good… This is the reality. The main thing to be successful in the Ukrainian society is the knowledge of the art and science of bribery. The best students in this course are those who are not able to study but know how to give gifts to teachers starting from kindergarten. Then they get better and better command in this and finally buy a good position somewhere in the presidential secretariat :) OK, sometimes such a student who studies so well is a genius. Like Vladimir Lenin. They are able to change the society. It would have been really better if Lenin had not been a genius…He also traveled around Europe and one day he came back and changed his country :( Don\'t ask us to come back...
Guest    (Guest) | 05.01.2009, 21:54
The author has written this article for the Ukrainian readers. All others should complain about Slavic women somewhere else. You are not happy that German taxpayers paid for Alina\'s education? Ukrainian taxpayers pay also a lot of taxes. Then that money is stolen by oligarchs. Those oligarchs come to your beautiful Germany and spend in hotels, restaurants and resorts. This gives you and your relatives jobs. Do you know that there are islands to visit which there is a one-year line in travel agencies in Moscow because every fat cow from Gazprom desperately wants to travel there? Why is this young girl worse than all those cows from Gazprom? Alina\'s parents pay taxes and all that money is regularly stolen and brought abroad. And paid for real estate somewhere in Spain, etc. Whom are you blaming? Go to the street and blame your Schroeder, who is on payroll of the Russian oligarchs.
Guest    (Guest) | 05.01.2009, 22:42
Ukrainians pay a lot of taxes??? are you blind or braindead!??!?!
So because Putin steals its ok for Alina to steal and encourage others to follow in her path of deceit?
Wow. Your moral compass is REALLY whacked!
Guest    (Guest) | 05.01.2009, 23:56
Have you ever seen the pay stubs of Ukrainians? Yes, we pay taxes. A lot of taxes.
just_curious    (Guest) | 06.01.2009, 00:15
What has this girl stolen? She has studied. She has accumulated knowledge. It is not her fault that the society does not need her knowledge. In the USA & Canada, there are so many people who live the whole life using grants for research which nobody needs and nobody will ever use. These are billions of $$$... All those institutions, inventing theories for countries forgotten by God ... She is a hard-working eternal student. Good luck, Alina!
Guest    (Guest) | 05.01.2009, 21:41
Well, it is sad that people must overcome so many obstacles just in order to have some travel. Don\'t blame the author. What do you expect from her? Do you want her to go to some far Ukrainian village to teach kids English and German? I think, her parents invested a lot of money into her knowledge of foreign languages not for this purpose. Ukrainians pay fortunes to provide foreign languages for their daughters, then they hire tutors to write applications to those western universities and then some lady from the German embassy denies her the entrance visa. Is that lady better than Alina? Why? Because her grandparents were born somewhere in Bavaria and were a part of the crowd which brought Nazi to the power? Any average girl born in Germany can work at the restaurant part-time and travel around Europe and the author with her education and foreign languages should overcome so many obstacles. Life is unfair in its nature:) Alina, these arrogant readers live in a different world...
elmer    (Guest) | 31.12.2008, 18:30
There are some good points made in the other comments, and I\'m not trying to be critical.

Here\'s my question: instead of trying to get AROUND the current system in Ukraine, and getting 2 or 3 master\'s degrees - in order to travel - what have you done to change the system in Ukraine, so that Ukraine becomes a part of the European Union, and part of the Schengen Zone?

It seems to me that the first instinct of Ukrainians is how to get AROUND something.

It also seems to me that the logical conclusion from your experience is that the people in Ukraine should work to change the system in Ukraine so that Ukraine, too, can take part in the privileges - and obligations - of the European Union.

That way, you won\'t have to keep piling on assorted master\'s degrees.

If Ukrainians are clever enough to work their way around the system, they ought to be clever enough to find a way to change the system.
Alina Rudya    (Guest) | 12.01.2009, 01:49
well, it\'s quite hard to change the system when you\'re 20 - and that was the age I went to study in Budapest. and as I\'ve already written - I\'m an artist, a photographer - I dont want to mess with politics. I just want to live my life, so dont blame me for it.
Guest    (Guest) | 30.12.2008, 17:12
There are obviously two important things you dont get.
Studies are there to futher your education and to prepare you for a better productive life. They are NOT occupational theraphies or alternative travel.agencis.
As a EU citizen I pay taxes and some of these are spent to help foreingers get better education. Germany and it\'s taxpayers already subsidised you an education and as such you were rightfully denied a second education in their country.
You overestimate the importance of travel and underestimate what you can learn at work. How interesting work is depends on what you make of it and how much you learn there is dependant on the commitmnt you show there. I would say that your attitude towards work might explain low ukrainian productivity.
With the US & Japan we have long standing reciprocal exchange programs that as far as I am concerned justify these decisions.
I hope you employer does not read these postings, because I would detect a attitude problem here ;-).
Guest    (Guest) | 31.12.2008, 00:22
PERFECT answer!
I would fire immediately the lazy loaf Alina.
Go get a job and stop free-loading on other people! You are the perfect typical ukrainian - trained to mooch and suck off of the wealth of others.
SHAME SHAME on you.
English lesson to you, Alina - you are a TAPE WORM - the lowest biological form, which attaches itself in the lower intestinal tract of the bowels of its host victim and eats FECES while destroying its own host.
Foreign education = cheap travel. Only for cockroaches like you. GET OUT.
Alina Rudya    (Guest) | 12.01.2009, 02:01
to be perfectly accurate - Germany paid nothing for my education- I\'ve got an American grant to study in an American college in Berlin. and Im not writing about cheap travel here - Im writing about VISA problems, which you probably never had and i wish you never do have. Studying abroad was my way to move freely and not to live cheaply.
and to be even more accurate - I would have to pay for my photography studies anyway, so dont worry about me stealing your money. And dont even dare talking about Ukrainian low productivity - 80% of our population works very-very hard to get some 200 euros per month - amount which you probably earned while typing this ignorant message.
Mike2    (Guest) | 27.12.2008, 12:58
Wasnt Ukraine going to join the EU? Wasnt this the promise of European democracies? Yushenko removed then the VISA requirement for EU citizens, in expectation of Europeans doing the same?

Then, at the height of the Georgian conflict, the EU promised Visas to Ukrainians. Anyone seen the result?
Guest    (Guest) | 26.12.2008, 08:15
Well, if you didn\'t get visa for Germany, there are some reasons obviously and they are not depending on the fact that you are Ukrainian. Some countries don\'t give visas for second or even third studies, as they have a lot of foreign students which want to study. Although not all need a visa to study in another country, all need a so called residence permit. Residence permits for students which want to study within the European Union are given, if the student can support himself financially and if he is accepted by the University. For students from third countries, like Ukraine, there are further conditions, often for eg. that the willigness to travel back is given, some may have some restrictions on 2nd or 3rd studies and so on.

It is understandable that Ukrainians don\'t understand that they need visa. But neverthless, a lot of illegals still try to reach the EU by Ukraine. It is a famous route for Afghans and other nations to go by Ukraine and to reach the EU.
Mazyar Torabee    (Guest) | 25.12.2008, 06:32
II totaly enjoyed reading your interesting artical. Surely you are a well-talented girl combining education with the pleasure of travelling around, experimenting and experiencing now countries and cultures. I must say that I am Iranian. I lived in Iran for 20 years and I have been here in England for 8 years now. I have been through difficulties to do with visa for travelling when I was back in Iran. I never managed to travell abroad when I was in Iran but now as a UK citizen, I managed to study and travell around like you. Nowadays most Iranians who want to travell around the world, select the same way as yuo did. They combine studying and travelling. Most of them go to your country. I have some friends in Kyiv studying different subjects in university. I also like to take a trip to Ukraine.
Any how, Ukraine is also on the list to join the EU very soon.
I hope one day the world becomes one country and mankind become its citizen.
I whish you a merry chrismas and a happy new year.
ali    (Guest) | 26.12.2008, 06:29
nice comment mazyar
Guest    (Guest) | 26.12.2008, 08:17
Ukraine will not join the EU very soon. And visa regime is not only up to joining the EU. People from Mexico or some people of South American can travel visa free to Europe. There are a lot of human-traffickers in Ukraine, trying to bring in young prostitutes.
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