Ezequiel Jimenez (’07 – ’09)

Where to start? The fjord. Fiskekake. The boathouse. The K building. World Today. Mariano. Kåre S. Pete. Daniel. MT. Winter. Tea. Being cold. The 3km trip to Flekke shop. The room temperature. The fifth umbrella of the year. A show. Lots of music and the love of my life. Ah, yes, and the IB.

RCN was a transformative experience changing every bit of whoever I was in 2007. An inexplicable place where possibility is infinite as is the bond that unites a community in the middle of nowhere. The explanation I give to people when trying to explain RCN and what it means to me, always falls short of an explanation of some sort of social experiment where we play to mirror what the world is or ought to be. I wish the world was a tiny bit of what RCN is.

The strong foundation of critical thinking and immense curiosity for understanding and celebrating diversity led me to pursue human rights as a passion. Building on Naren’s human rights class (and Matthew’s during my first year) I was fortunate that Mark and Nicky were an endless source of advice and encouraged me to attend Macalester. Pursuing perhaps a traditional UWC path, I studied Political Science and got to intern and work in various places that continued to feed into a set of intellectual and practical skills within human rights. However, as challenging and enriching Macalester was, I’m not so sure it compares with a Kantina conversation about the state of the world over tea. The certainty of really knowing how to fix the world is a feeling I only had in RCN and have every time I am lucky to return. It’s an incredible sensation of possibility, certainty and empowerment.

Decided to dig a bit further into the machinery of policy making I pursued a masters degree in human rights policy in the UK, Sweden and Norway. For two years I was lucky to devote time to the question of how to make and measure human right-led interventions. The time spent in Norway and Sweden was particularly enriching as I realized that some of my social policy biases are indeed, very Nordic. Fortunate to arrive in the London in a pre-Brexit world, I started working with Amnesty International, trying to materialize my Kantina-like feelings. Currently, I work in the Office of the Secretary General giving technical support to Amnesty’s offices around the world. As frustrating and challenging working in human rights might be, I am encouraged by knowing that there will come a time when my dear RCN and UWC friends around the world will start calling the shots, making sure those countless nights of debate, tea and overpriced First Price cookies were well spent.

And, at time of writing this, there is an urgency for UWC to do its part in putting a sustainable future before ambition, and before bigotry. Knowing that we belong to a principled way of thinking about service and peace, I am confident that even in a Trumplandia world, we can be part of a path showing respect, curiosity in the other and love for what makes us different, unique. I have an unshakeable trust in the people of RCN to lead the way.

 

2016-11-14T08:25:49+01:00November 14th, 2016|

Antonin Besse – A UWC Founder

UWC Red Cross Nordic would like to express its sadness at the news that Antonin Besse, patron and honorary vice-president of UWC, has passed away and to extend our thanks to his family for his deep commitment to UWC since its founding and, in particular, for his support of students from the Yemen who have studied here at RCN over the past 21 years.

It was Antonin who bought and donated St Donat’s Castle for the founding of Atlantic College back in 1962 and who, later, contributed to the founding of the UWCs in Italy and Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Closer to home, a few years ago Alistair, our Deputy Rektor, and I were on the phone to the Yemeni National Committee and were in the process of giving a full report on the Yemeni students on campus at the time – a few minutes into the conversation, something began to dawn on Alistair and he began to mouth to me that ‘Tony from the NC’ was, in fact Antonin Besse II (one of the founding figures of UWC). Highly articulate, erudite and perceptive, Tony was committed to following the progress of Yemeni students on our campus – a phone call from Tony from his flat in Paris was never short and always enjoyable. With support from the British Council, he would carry out selections himself with his motto at the heart of his forging connection between the backgrounds of the students and UWC: ‘From Nowhere to Somewhere’.

He was a great admirer of Tom Gresvig, one of the founding members of Red Cross Nordic, and regretted that he had never found an opportunity to visit our campus.

Our Yemeni students owe him a debt of gratitude and so do all members of our College, past and present, given the rich addition of our Yemeni students to our deliberately diverse community over the years.

Frenchman, Arabist, businessman, educator and friend – we thank you for all that you gave to UWC and educating for peace and a sustainable future.

For more information on Tony’s life, his support of UWC, his father (and his partnership with Kurt Hahn), please click here for an extract from David Sutcliffe’s book ‘Kurt Hahn and the United World Colleges with other founding figures’.

2018-10-16T09:32:23+01:00November 14th, 2016|

Disaster Preparedness

During the workshopAs part of our College’s partnership with the Norwegian Red Cross, we host different types of workshops, lectures and activities led or supervised by the Norwegian Red Cross in order to introduce Red Cross values and principles to our students. On Thursday 20th of November, as one of the activities offered for those on campus during November break, the College hosted a workshop run by Pål A. Dahl, a member of the Sogn og Fjordane Red Cross. The topic, Disaster Preparedness, was taught by exploring concepts such as capacity and vulnerability through interactive discussions that encouraged students to share their perspectives and experiences; and evaluating theoretical cases in order to see how we can improve the College preparedness for any potential hazard.

The workshop focused on: building capacity, personal preparedness, emergency plans, mapping risk and vulnerability. This enabled students to have a better understanding of related concepts, comprehend how to plan an emergency response and learn how to prepare for different types of hazards. This was a stimulating training course which served to introduce the 16 students present to disaster preparedness, an essential part of the Red Cross – both in Norway and in other parts of the world.

Thank you to Avis Rolfe, RCN’s Red Cross Coordinator, and Hilde Genberg for setting this training opportunity up for us – and to the SoF team for making it happen.

Abdul Abo Shokur (RCN ’17 Syria & Sweden)

2018-10-16T09:32:23+01:00November 14th, 2016|

A special week in Aurland

Sogn Jord-og Hagebruksskule and UWC RCN have had a long and fruitful cooperation. We’ve had joint staff meetings, their organic food in the RCN cantina and a student exchange programme. This autumn three of our students spent five days in Aurland during RCN’s Project-based learning week learning about organic farming, animal husbandry, greenhouses and more. But above all, they learned about caring – for the Earth and each other.

As Ka Ming, a student from Hong Kong said:

As a girl who has grown up in a big city with many, many people and shopping malls , spending five days on an organic farm was an incredible experience. The fresh air, the calm vibe, the kind faces … everything was just so impressive! It is the first time that I’ve had the opportunity to get in touch with organic farming, my first time to touch goats, my first time to drink and eat such pure, fresh food. I really liked how their students treated us in such a friendly and sincere way. Once I mentioned to a student that I had failed in planting basil and how disappointed I was – and she gave me a fresh basil plant the next day and told me that I could try it again. Even though it wasn’t a very big gift, the meaning was tremendous. The farm and the people there reminded me of why I wanted to go to UWC, to try to cherish our environment, to try to keep a good heart and to try to think of others first. The spirit they have is very inspiring and they showed me that the ‘reality’ is not always the reality. 

Thank you for the staff of the SJHS, especially Spira Svendsen for hosting our students, and to their kind students who treated RCN students as members of the Aurland family.

2016-11-18T12:22:04+01:00November 14th, 2016|
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