Halina Skalska A Master’s degree student of International Relations at Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. Currently, she is working in AIESEC Jyväskylä as the team leader of Outgoing Exchange (OGX) team.
Interviewed by Harry Moonshooter
When did you first
know about AIESEC and when did you first become a member? What was the first
experience like?
I first heard about AIESEC in 2010, when I was in my home
university in Kyiv, but I became a member only after about one year. I applied
for the membership three times before I was finally accepted in August 2011. I
was excited about it at that time, after all the effort I had made to join this
organization.
What did AIESEC bring
to your life? Does it worth all the effort you made to join it?
Well, definitely yes! It has totally changed my life.
First of all, with AIESEC, it is much easier to for me to fine
people with the same interests as me, and then become friends with them! I have
made so many new friends since I became an AIESEC member, and they are from all
over the world! This is the most amazing part of my AIESEC life, the people! We
share our opinions and learn from each other. Such experience helped me to see
the world in different ways, and be more open minded.
Also it has brought me new opportunities. With AIESEC I got
the chance to come to Finland. Two years ago I could never imagine me being
here, talking with you, working in a different country and with people from
different parts of the world. Such intercultural work experience is very
helpful to me.
As you mentioned it
was in Kyiv where you first joined AIESEC. I think many people here in Finland
are interested in the city you come from, but most of them may not understand
much about it. So how does it feel to be a student there? And how different it
is from the student life in Finland?
Kyiv is a big city, especially if you put it into the
Finnish scale. Like any big city there are more activities going on, and for
students there are more opportunities. But at the same time there are more
challenges and competition. For example in AIESEC Jyväskylä there are only
around 20 members but in Kyiv there are more than 200. You could see the
difference. There is much more work to do in Kyiv, and more competition. The
cultural difference may also play an important role here as in Finland,
individualism and creativity is more encouraged, while in Central and Eastern
Europe efficiency is more stressed. The education system is also quite
different between Finland and Ukraine. For example there we do not use credits,
and we choose the courses we take in a different way.
But there are more similarities. Student life in Kyiv is not
all about competition and work. There are parks and squares in the city where
people go to relax and enjoy life. We have parties as well. I think student
life is always the most exciting part of life in all societies alike.
But now you are here
in Jyväskylä. What made you decide to come here and how did you achieve this?
I had dreamed about coming to Finland for two years before
it finally came true. There are so many things about Finland that attract me,
its unique culture, the beautiful nature and so on. By the end of the last year
I got to know this exchange opportunity from the coordinator in my home university.
Immediately I applied for it and then everything went on quite well. Finally here I am!
How is your experience
in Finland so far? Did you have any challenge at the beginning?
Of course at first I had a few challenges. They mainly came
from the culture and language differences. To bike on the icy ground was very
challenging for me as well and I fell down a few times. But now I have learned
how to do it and I am really happy about it.
Finland has made me enjoy winter for the first time in my life.
Maybe it is because the winter here is not as cold as I had imagined. I never
knew before that we could still have so much fun in winter. I have traveled in
this country, and I made so many new friends here. This is great experience
I would never forget.
Now since you have
experienced working with AIESEC in both Ukraine and Finland. What do you think
the AIESECers, or students in general, from these two countries can learn from
each other?
What AIESEC Kyiv need to learn from Finland is to be more
friendly towards students, and be more inclusive towards international
students. When I was working in AIESEC Kyiv, all the members are Ukrainians. So
when I came here it really amazed that in AIESEC Jyväskylä even more than half
of the members are non-Finnish students. In this way the members can have more
intercultural experience by working together, and I really enjoy it!
-Edited by Harry Moonshooter
-Edited by Harry Moonshooter