miércoles, 20 de marzo de 2013

EU = equality? Probably, but not in the UK



We all know UK is famous for its strict rules and generous social laws. We also know its universities are one of the world’s most expen.. ehm, top universities. So it’s sort of clear why so many Bulgarian and Rumanian students leave for the UK in search of better education. Some of these people are eager to receive their diplomas out there and then come back to Bulgaria/Rumania and create their own business. Others crave for the highest positions in international enterprises… What unites them, apart of the maternal language they all share, is the foreboding destiny that is lurking over them in the UK.
Imagine you were a young man who decides to study abroad. You write essays, prepare documents, take credits (for it’s impossible for your parents to pay the tuition fees themselves) and - finally! – you leave! You are enthusiastically naïve that everything will go well – yes, you’re well aware there’ll be some tough moments when you’ll have to work like a horse and sleep for 3-4 hours a day, but you also think this will be something temporary and later on, like after the first few months, you’ll find your rhythm, you’ll make new friends with cool and intelligent multicultural people, you’ll practice your English… and, stupidly enough, you believe you’ll be able to find a job. Ok, you’re realistic, you know it won’t be the world’s best job ever, but still for a person that knows four foreign languages and has an impressive CV regarding experience and activities, you’re rather optimistic.
Halas… Reality bites… You turn out to be in a hostile place where it seems that no one cares of you. What’s more, they’re even trying to make your situation even worse. You don’t believe me? Well, here’s the story of Ivan, a Bulgarian student in UK.
“I had a gap year working in Sofia for a foreign agency and I was getting a decent salary. Ok, decent will be too modest, I was 19 and I was feeling at the top of the world – young, gaining my own life and even being able to save a lot for my studies. The next year I was accepted in the X university in London. I was the happiest person ever! I got a loan and I left. All in all, that was when all happy moments finished. Indeed, I was pleased by the scholar system the British have – less theoretic  and really free to follow. However I had that little problem – I couldn’t work. Let me explain: for a foreigner to work he should have a special permission. To obtain it, he should send his ID cart, the original, to the office (something preoccupating up to here?). In my case I didn’t have any passport, and you should know British seldom accept other document of legitimation. So I waited for three months – I had to assist my classes while my whole being was tortured by the thought of my diminishing finances. Then I got enough. I wrote a letter of complaint and surprisingly fast I received an answer from the represent of my municipality of London and latter on from the very Minister of the Immigrants.  I was baffled – my complaint had been heart, for the first time in my life I saw a working bureaucracy!
Anyway, my good mood was rapidly extinguished – I couldn’t find even the most miserable job! Me, the one who had worked in a foreign agency at the age of 19 for a huge salary was now forced to pray for the post of a guardian in the madhouse!
By that time I was really depressed. I was experiencing the roughest discrimination ever… Yes, I was young, eager, well educated, intelligent and I couldn’t find a job for I was a foreigner…
I came home in Bulgaria. I didn’t have money so I thought I should make another gap year and work. However, out of a sudden, a vacant position at the university appeared. I was accepted (without even being interviewed) at the post of IT assistant – the polite way of saying “the one that changes the tonners and fixes the PCs”…
I was lucky. It was not a hug job, but at least it gave me some money to continue my studies. I had to work four days out of seven and I was having classes some other two days. At the end I had two mere days to do my homework and study, to arrange my room and to have some sleep. You understand it was sort of impossible…
My story had a happy end. After fighting with the bank’s manager who denied me a free student's account in the bank just because I was foreigner and I had an ID and not a passport (believe me, I went mad explaining for a hundred time that the ID is a valid document of identity… Still, in the end, I got the account while some of my friends didn’t… If not, I should pay 10 pounds per month for a non-student account. And 10 pounds equaled to my food for four days…) and leaving on the verge of the misery, I got a job at Cartoon Network…
By the way I should mention the fact that I was feeling so much elder than my colleagues at the university. Being local people, they knew nothing about fighting for your life. Also they had a lot of extra funds autorised by the government – for materials and etc. I didn’t for I was a foreigner (it’s ok, I understand this and I don’t protest… Just mentioning the discrepancy between me and them and the fact they were preferred at the interviews for jobs)…
Now I’m back in Bulgaria and I have an ambitious plan for our national Art Design Studios…”
This is the UE. This is UK for the Easterns. There’s no official deny of students’ admission, for they all pay tuition fees, but the ambience make them leave in horror. Is it fair to stimulate such a policy of segregation (at the moment, on the eve of the elections, many people raise their voices against the small social donations that the foreigners have nowadays…). Also, should people be judged by their nationality rather than their abilities? I doubt it. All in all, the situation in the UK for Bulgarians and Rumanians stays fragile. Meanwhile many youngsters prepare to leave for the new 2013/2014 university year…

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