Saturday, 25 May 2013

Leavers Dinner Speech

One of the most spectacular guys I know. Šarūnas Genys  from Lithuania's speech at our Leavers Dinner.



My dearly beloved co-years, teachers, staff and above all friends,




Firstly, I cannot be grateful enough for all of you who have had faith in me in delivering this speech and possibly my haircut was slightly unexpected I hope you understand that the flaming hair represents the never ending UWC movement.  
All the drama aside, before coming to AC I didn’t know what to expect, I know sounds cliché, but my parents never went to UWC, neither they have heard about it,I have never gone to an international school before, never had friends from abroad.
A perfect inexperienced student to be transformed by the international atmosphere of AC you would, sharing a dorm with people from 3 other countries. Should be completely transformational, shouldn’t it?
Well, it wasn’t. I never measured my time in AC by the number of times Norwegian flag was up in the flag tower because of a national celebration. And possibly I did not truly learn a whole new set of facts about countries besides the easily observable things of how fruity Quebecois might be, how diverse can personalities from Serbia and how party-animals Bengalis might be with all of the Diwali celebrations and the singing of the stage. I understand how important it is for college to increase its diversity, although it’s never  clear if we have 89 or 91 nationalities, for me AC was never measured by any numbers.
AC for me was finally coming to understand that people from around the world are largely the same, have same fears, same expectations, same hopes and same feelings.
Atlantic college will always remind me of the philosophical discussions at 4 a.m. in the dayroom whilst sharing the last piece of toast and ever more than that the silly moments that bring people together and make them laugh, for example throwing buckets of ice-cold water over the people enjoying their hot shower after a long day. I don’t know if it’s only me but I believe that the power of laughter is immeasurable.
Hey, I acknowledge AC is not a perfect place, there are conflicts, there are awkward moments in the canteen when you get your spicy Chicken Tikka slice, enter the dining hall and the only free space is next to Alice and then you have to endure a long awkward lunch without saying anything. And that’s OK, not everything in AC had to be meaningful.
And no matter where you heading off now, whether it volunteering in India, travelling in South America or simply moving down to the barracks for AOC summer – ARAF my friends as we say in Welsh, and enjoy the last few hours of the journey that does not have an ending.
#uwcexperienceneverends
Stay golden, my dear friends and let’s make this journey last forever.


1 comment:

  1. Thank you so much to you, Abi, for your excellent blog! I'm the mother of one of your co-years, and I have learned much more about AC life from your stories on your blog than from what he's told me :-) You are an excellent writer and storyteller - and your blog has really been the best advertisement for AC/UWC. So thank you again, and good luck in the future!

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