FOMATPLAY okay I wanted to ask you something
																			about the freedom of movement
																			that you experienced in Europe.
																			so you were-, you mentioned
																			something at the beginning of the interview.
																			Can you maybe expand on that?
																			MARTA freedom of movement.
																			in what way?
																			FOMATPLAY in terms of reasons um
																			yes it's um....
																			you mentioned the fact that when Poland joined EU
																			and you had the freedom to,
																			of course, um
																			uh in a way excess a number of different uh yeah...
																			like services but also rights
																			but also uh.... yeah,
																			problems also within the EU.
																			so can you tell us uh
																			what meant to you that?
																			MARTA absolutely everything. I
																			remember;
																			I mean luckily after 2004
																			I really started travelling
																			because I was ready to start travelling. Before
																			yes we traveled
																			but as students; of course
																			we traveled around the countries that are very similar,
																			that aren't very similar in Central Europe
																			where travelling is a little bit easier
																			because we all speak Slavic languages
																			so even if we don't understand each other well
																			we're able to communicate somehow; and  our mentality is
																			is uh
																			more similar; but
																			for me the fact that I can cross the border
																			without being interrogated, without...
																			I don't even have to carry my password anymore;
																			just an ID;
																			ah that's fundamental.
																			I mean that
																			that is a miracle that we are,
																			I don't know if;
																			I don't know if everybody in Europe realises
																			that we are facing a miracle:
																			being able to live without the,
																			the borders
																			uh without all this bureaucracy to cross the border
																			without any...
																			until just recently we had to,
																			as Polish people,
																			we had to have a visa; to apply for a visa to
																			to be able to go to America
																			and that was a very complicated process;
																			also quite humiliating because you needed to stand...
																			first you needed to register
																			with the embassy, only in Warsaw.
																			You have to travel to Warsaw before
																			and you have to register yourself,
																			then you have to wait in this huge line
																			in front of the embassy
																			no matter what the weather was like;
																			and then you had to step by step
																			go from one window to another
																			declare that you didn't have any bad intentions,
																			declare that you had a steady job,
																			declare that you didn't want to become a...
																			I don't know, a prostitute,
																			a a terrorist,
																			declare that you absolutely didn't want to
																			stay in America illegally.
																			just to
																			to make that trip, I don't know,
																			to see New York, to see San Francisco
																			which is obvious now.
																			if I want to see Berlin, or maybe London
																			now I know but uh...
																			Madrid, just buy the tickets and go. yeah.
																			and it's accessible in this way,
																			also accessible for me as a Polish person.
																			there is no differentiation anymore.
																			what I am disturbed with still;
																			but this is the fault of
																			of Poland, of Polish government,
																			is that we are not all in the euro zone
																			because in Poland we still have the Polish currency,
																			which um
																			becomes problematic for people from the eurozone
																			when they come to Poland;
																			so it's a problem to exchange money.
																			Of course you don't exchange money at the airport
																			because the rate is horrible.
																			but then to look for an exchange office,
																			it becomes such a such a problem,
																			unnecessary problem,
																			also becomes a problem
																			from the administrative point of view.
																			I worked in a public institution,
																			we did international projects
																			and when you do a European project
																			you have to do double drop also counting,
																			counting the money, counting the rate all the time;
																			and then you lose money in between
																			because the rate is changing;
																			so you get the money in euros
																			but then it's changing to polar swap
																			and then there is the gap.
																			So this is, this is, this is one thing, of course.
																			I know the
																			national currency is connected to the sex of national
																			identity;
																			I know it's not, it's still not the strongest in Poland
																			but maybe it's not the most practical way for the
																			other countries in Europe which have
																			just decided to go for Euro,
																			which has become a very strong and the identity, of course.
																			FOMATPLAY Can you tell me  something about um
																			your national versus European identity?
																			is there even um a clash or do you feel it as a...
																			I don't know, belonging to a continuum,
																			maybe, of experiences and identities?
																			MARTA well, that's a very complex question for uh;
																			for a discussion that last days...
																			that's why I wrote my doctorate
																			also about this relationship between
																			the identity and culture;
																			because I was looking,
																			I was trying to define my identity.
																			I've never been a nationalist, never.
																			And I have
																			maybe never felt the need to be strongly national.
																			I think I would rather believe in a, in a,
																			in this personal
																			individual identity than a national identity
																			unless it's very strong.
																			I don't think Poland has
																			managed to define very strongly its national identity.
																			FOMTPLAY Why is that?
																			MARTA but some people say we lost the time away
																			because we weren't....
																			in the 19th century
																			it didn't exist for 120 years, then after the war uh...
																			it didn't exist for uh 50 years, right?
																			I mean it existed but it was under uh
																			communism so we cannot speak about a natural identity,
																			national identity because it was very, well,
																			very strongly profound.
																			So we started to rebuild the identity only after 89;
																			30 years to build. I mean, look at you here in Naples
																			other Neapolitan people can
																			tell their story back to, I don't know,
																			16th century; My family in 17th,
																			16th century lived in this building.
																			And they can show you which building.
																			My family, all my grandparents, came to Venice
																			after the second World War.
																			from 4 different places,
																			absolutely different places in Poland; or not anymore in Poland
																			because the, the, the,
																			the orders changed. the best thing they uh...
																			FOMATPLAY where did they come from?
																			MARTA my, one of my grandmothers um came from uh
																			, which is now in [Bielorussia].
																			It used to be in Poland but
																			when they moved the borders after the Second World War
																			it became [Bielorussia]
																			so it became immediately inaccessible for her
																			because you need a visa and the tombs of her,
																			of her family are still there.
																			so imagine...
																			um my grandfather came from the vicinity of Warsaw;
																			he emigrated to find a job, to find a home.
																			hmm the other one came from South-Eastern Poland.
																			through the concentration camps in
																			 and the, the and the,
																			the second grandmother came from,
																			from the region around the Gdansk
																			so she was the the closest one
																			but not from the city; because the city was . So
																			how can you build a strong identity
																			with scattered memories and scattered experience?
																			and I'm not the only person.
																			I mean,
																			most of Polish people have this kind of experience
																			and how to build
																			a strong identity without the sense of continuity.
																			so we have been doing this this job for 30 years,
																			it's absolutely not enough.
																			and you can see
																			when you observe Poland a little bit more closely
																			you will see the struggles; or maybe the
																			maybe we should go this way,
																			or maybe we should go this way,
																			or maybe this way....
																			we're still looking for something to hold on to
																			FOMATPLAY is there anything that you miss badly about Poland?
																			And also
																			going back to what you were saying about Europe,
																			so as a as an institution
																			let's say, or as a common identity so what
																			are your feelings,
																			opinions uh,
																			perceptions about what Europe is nowadays?
																			MARTA I mean... I've,
																			I've done European projects as a professional.
																			I did this coordinated,
																			this four and a half year long European
																			project with Creative Europe with 11 partners;
																			my scholarship is also Erasmus plus
																			so 3 times in Berlin and here in uh
																			Napoli.
																			I had a contact with this European Union
																			um....
																			narration of
																			what the European is and what we should believe it is
																			but um...
																			all in all I think on this administrative level
																			we have no borders, we have eurozone,
																			we have different international
																			agreements that make things easy for us;
																			uh and this is good.
																			um
																			but as on the national level
																			I don't think the European integration exists.
																			it's still it's based on
																			the relations between countries are very strong
																			and are still based on stereotypes.
																			some nations get things for granted
																			just because they are those nations and not others.
																			um
																			and uh
																			maybe
																			maybe it's because that this
																			some nations have a very strong national identity.
																			and it's good
																			it's good to have a strong national identity.
																			I mean, if we all become globalized
																			what's the point?
																			FOMATPLAY what kind of nations are you referring to?
																			MARTA um....
																			I think,
																			I think all the nations that uh
																			in the Europe have always been cherished.
																			I mean you're at the uh
																			university that talks a lot about post-colonialism.
																			I think
																			it's very much connected to this imperial position
																			of countries.
																			We in Poland,
																			we've been colonized but we never colonized anybody so...
																			luckily; but
																			we don't have the sense of dominance over someone else.
																			I don't think so.
																			so for me
																			it's something strange,
																			something that I don't understand.
																			Also I've always um....
																			here in Naples, for example,
																			what's, what's shocking to me um
																			is this social hierarchy that is so strong between
																			so the poor and the rich;
																			the well established and lots of well established um
																			people. It come from a nation that was leveled to
																			to one line for, for many years after,
																			after the war we were just one class.
																			So... to me all
																			all those hierarchies are very difficult to understand;
																			to find myself
																			because the sense of freedom from me
																			means that I can feel free
																			as me;
																			no matter my education,
																			no matter my, my name,
																			my nationality, whenever I go.
																			And it's a nice myth that
																			maybe European administration wants to build
																			with all the documents
																			and beautiful descriptions of what Europe is
																			but in fact I don't think it works yet.
																			And maybe,
																			maybe um...
																			typical; I'm being typical Polish:
																			very skeptical pessimistic
																			but I don't think it's possible that we are all so
																			beautifully integrated because after all
																			the hierarchy, strong hierarchy success
																			between the nations but also within
																			within particular countries.
																			you've been there so you understand it perfectly.
																			FOMATPLAY mhm how would you feel if um
																			your rights as a EU citizen were removed?
																			how would you feel if your rights...
																			MARTA if my rights were removed?
																			FOMATPLAY yes.
																			or taken away?
																			MARTA my rights as a European citizen,
																			meaning?
																			FOMATPLAY the freedom of movement, of expression...
																			MARTA um
																			well,
																			you can just go back
																			in time; Two years ago. I mean,
																			not that any of our rights were removed
																			because it was emergency; I'm referring to Covid and to,
																			to lockdowns.
																			but we were limited and that gave me...
																			that,
																			that made me think many times what would happen if we;
																			if it was a permanent situation, it would have been a distaster.
																			absolutely. but my parents,
																			my grandparents live like this.
																			because they couldn't walk around.
																			only my mother is telling now, saying now that
																			she has this period of uh retirement
																			short period of retirement to make up for all the years
																			she has to make up in 10/20 years for all the time
																			that she had been deprived of this,
																			this right to move around; to
																			to develop the curiosity to to
																			to broaden her Horizons,
																			you know?
																			so I think it would be a disaster for me.
																			was this.... if you ask me
																			there was a beautiful project um
																			uh done by a Polish artist uh
																			Katarina Krakovac in Barcelona;
																			she's a sound artist and she asked uh many people to record and send to her
																			this short recording of one most important word
																			that represents the most important value to you;
																			and then she composed this sound, sound installation
																			in Barcelona from all the recordings that she obtained;
																			and my word was freedom.
																			And freedom to me is... yes is...
																			I mean, if anybody takes away my freedom
																			I can as well you know
																			stop living. what's the sense?
																			FOMATPLAY hmm
																			wonderful!  uh
																			what do you think of Brexit?
																			I think we're approaching the end of the interval.
																			MARTA I'm not so much connected with the United Kingdom and
																			if they make this choice,
																			this...
																			I... this is my biggest fear. that uh
																			one day when Poland decides to make this exit
																			out of the European Union, that would be suicide.
																			FOMATPLAY is it plausible? as an option?
																			MARTA well,
																			if you make it up random and if you're lucky enough
																			maybe if you were convincing enough
																			I mean there are...
																			Poland is divided half and half
																			and it's been reflected in the elections:
																			both the presidential elections
																			and the governmental elections;
																			it was almost 50-50.
																			there was 1% of difference in the presidential election
																			so we're balancing on this very thin line
																			and if the skeptics of the European Union are lucky enough
																			maybe it might be the case that in the referendum this 1 or 2 per cent will decide.
																			that would be, that wouldn't, wouldn't be
																			I... yeah
																			things are happening but uh
																			we didn't believe what happened but...
																			maybe, I hope not.
																			FOMATPLAY mhm.
																			And
																			do you think that the age factor plays a role in this?
																			MARTA No, unfortunately no.
																			FOMATPLAY wow.
																			MARTA they have been studying it and it doesn't.
																			It depends
																			the difference depends on...
																			I was um...
																			um
																			context of the city and not city.
																			and just that predominantly,
																			predominantly.
																			Because people in the cities have different needs
																			than people in the countryside.
																			and in part is not enough
																			because there are a lot of rul-,
																			rural areas,
																			areas that are still inhabited by many people
																			and voters who have absolutely different needs;
																			and those who inhabit the cities
																			and different ethnicities.
																			FOMATPLAY very interesting but also scary.
																			MARTA I mean, yeah.
																			well...
																			it depends which options you're representing.
																			FOMATPLAY very true. um
																			I think we can move on to the final
																			part of the interview. So now I ask you
																			questions but very short ones, yeah.
																			So you can um answer very short and briefly
																			like a sentence or a word. yeah?
																			so uh define freedom of movement in one sentence.
																			MARTA hmm lack of borders.
																			FOMATPLAY hmm okay
																			how would you sum up your freedom of movement
																			experiences across the EU
																			so far?
																			MARTA how would I define?
																			FOMATPLAY sorry
																			how would you sum up or define me
																			your freedom of movement experiences?
																			MARTA I mean I...
																			I didn't really feel the limits; not that I remember.
																			FOMATPLAY okay
																			um how would you feel.
																			how would you feel
																			if your freedom of movement was removed?
																			MARTA the worst disaster.
																			FOMATPLAY where's home and where do you feel you belong?
																			MARTA I belong,
																			my home is where I am happy.
																			FOMATPLAY okay.
																			uh what do you miss the most uh of your home country?
																			MARTA well I miss people like left behind, because they can
																			come here with me.
																			FOMATPLAY mhm
																			and how do you feel in your host country?
																			how do you feel in your host country, Italy?
																			MARTA I feel wonderful.
																			I feel I'm a better person and I...
																			I've never been happpier than here.
																			FOMATPLAY that's very nice to hear, wonderful! ah
																			would you take the same decisions today, why?
																			MARTA because I don't regret anything.
																			FOMATPLAY wonderful! and who are you?
																			could you define yourself using three or four words?
																			MARTA oh my God!
																			um free,
																			independent,
																			um woman. most of all
																			I'm an artist
																			fascinated with art.
																			FOMATPLAY amazing!
																			thank you Marta, very much.
																			grazie.
																			yes uh
																			let's switch switch uh..
																			FOMATPLAY Marta
																			can you tell us something about your journey
																			so what brought you here in Italy and Naples
																			of course?
																			FOMATPLAY uh
																			what brought me here? uh
																			I've been always fascinated
																			with
																			Italy
																			but er
																			particularly this region.
																			Napoli,
																			the, the
																			the Gulf of Napoli with uh
																			its nature.
																			for many years I've been coming here as a tourist,
																			and then er at some point
																			being a tourist no longer satisfied me.
																			I didn't want to be a tourist anymore
																			I wanted to feel integrated as part of the city
																			which fascinated me so much.
																			and so my doctorate, the studies,
																			gave me the opportunity to apply for scholarship and uh
																			gave me an opportunity to have,
																			take scholarship twice;
																			uh to uh
																			establish a collaboration,
																			professional collaboration
																			with two different institutions
																			that um
																			work within an area that I specialise in
																			with this country in arts.
																			And so... finally
																			I was able to spend nine months altogether here
																			working with, in my opinion,
																			the best institutions of art.
																			FOMATPLAY which was?
																			MARTA first uh
																			I did five months with Fondazione Morra,
																			in Naples.
																			Casa Morra uh
																			in Materdei. I worked uh
																			at the uh
																			in the archives,
																			and then I spent uh
																			four months with Museo Madre working uh
																			with uh
																			the then director, Artistic Director
																			Director Kathryn Weir on a huge
																			fantastic exhibition of .
																			and I was invited to the uh
																			to do curatorial research for Kathryn Weir,
																			who was the curator of the exhibition.
																			FOMATPLAY wow!
																			was this process easy for you? or was it difficult?
																			MARTA um
																			easy and difficult. I mean
																			if it hadn't been easy,
																			it wouldn't have been so challenging and so satisfying;
																			it would have meant that the institutions
																			didn't offer me
																			enough of a challenge
																			and this kind of scholarship is meant to give you,
																			give you a little bit extra; to,
																			to give you the opportunity to learn to
																			to develop
																			and me having had 15 years experience in arts,
																			in curating, in
																			in managing arts
																			that the level had to be a little bit higher
																			and I think I've been challenged a lot,
																			also linguistically
																			because I had to find myself in an Italian context.
																			um but also
																			of course each institution has its own procedures,
																			which has its own ways,
																			which is always very interesting to me as,
																			as I've studied,
																			I've researched institutions the way they work;
																			not only as far as the program goes
																			but also as far as organisational administration goes.
																			This is fascinating for me so everything new
																			everything uh uh fresh
																			challenging so it's very fascinating.
																			FOMATPLAY hmm hmm
																			and going back to this Italian context in terms of,
																			for instance,
																			uh the culture that was welcoming or not welcoming you;
																			what kind of the feelings did you have when you uh
																			arrived?
																			did you feel some sort of resistance or some sort of...?
																			MARTA here in Napoli
																			I believe I, I haven't felt any resistance at all.
																			ever.
																			FOMATPLAY wonderful!
																			MARTA and um in comparison, I've
																			I've travelled a lot and um
																			being a Polish person
																			it means that
																			not all the doors are immediately open for you
																			because you come from Eastern Europe.
																			You come with this heavy luggage of communism,
																			you come from behind the Iron Curtain;
																			probably
																			some European countries believe that it still exists
																			and uh
																			it stigmatizes you, stigmatizes you
																			because also
																			because of the sort of migration from Poland
																			that exists. people migrate from Poland to do
																			jobs at a particular level,
																			not scientific jobs, not maybe intellectual jobs,
																			but rather physical jobs so this,
																			this is a challenge for a person who,
																			who represents another area of specialisation;
																			not necessarily the
																			the construction works area for our house services
																			but um...
																			apart from different minor faux pas that sometimes,
																			you know,
																			come out from the mouth of some people unconsciously.
																			FOMATPLAY can you tell us more about this?
																			MARTA well I guess the first reaction,
																			but this is it's not only in Italy, it's everywhere. um
																			is this surprise: oh
																			you are from Poland? and well
																			I know a Polish person. I have a,
																			I have a cleaning lady from Poland
																			and
																			it's very nice but uh
																			after some time, after a couple of years
																			it occured to me that these are the lens,
																			this is the perspective through which the people from,
																			from Western Europe perceive this. just a week ago;
																			and I'll tell you this anecdote; I went to um
																			Bosco di Capodimonte to read a book
																			because I had some free time.
																			And I came across the, the guards
																			of the Bosco and uh we had a little chat
																			because, well, they were looking at me in a strange way
																			me coming from Poland
																			whenever anybody's looking at me in a strange way I,
																			I think I'm doing something wrong so I said
																			"am I doing something; I might trespassing.."
																			no, no,
																			no we were just looking at you in action"
																			and of course here everybody's very friendly,
																			they ask me immediately where I'm from
																			and obviously
																			they categorize me as Ukrainian or Russian
																			because I'm blonde
																			so the Polish is the third sort of go to;
																			and "oh, okay. well,
																			have a good time" and and then the, the elder guard,
																			I think it was about 60-
																			70 approached me in a very nice way and told me "oh
																			you're from Poland what do you do here?
																			um do you have a job?"
																			in a very careful way and I said "oh
																			yes or no because my job is not fixed"
																			"but what do you do?"; "well,  I work in the arts"
																			hmm
																			"well because
																			I've been looking for a person
																			to take care of my house.
																			I need someone to clean my house.
																			and I thought you were from Poland
																			and maybe if you were looking for a job".
																			and then I said "you know what?
																			not all the Polish people look for a cleaning drop".
																			he didn't do it to offend me, that's the point.
																			the point is
																			that the perception of Polish people is like this:
																			they take care of elderly people,
																			they do construction works.
																			I've had many, many examples of this kind of remarks.
																			"oh yeah I know a cleaning lady from Poland"
																			and for you.
																			FOMATPLAY yeah.
																			and how uh does that make you feel?
																			MARTA lt makes me feel ashamed mmm of, of,
																			of the kind of image that has been built
																			of Poland; of Poland as an inferior country.
																			maybe it's the... maybe it's the problem of Polish people;
																			maybe not enough Polish intellectual emingrates
																			but I don't think so; because Polish and intellectuals,
																			are intellectual emigrates as well;
																			and also it happens to Polish intellectuals
																			that they are being perceived
																			in this very patronizing way.
																			I have this wonderful example of my professor
																			who used to teach at a university in Germany
																			and every time he said,
																			he introduced himself as a professor
																			everybody was so surprised.
																			"you're from Poland and you're a professor
																			hmm congratulations"
																			and after some time he was so fed up with these remarks
																			that he started answering "yes,
																			I'm a professor but being from Poland
																			after work I steal cars" ha ha ha ha yeah.
																			I mean uh
																			this is a kind, a little bit a neapolitan way
																			turn something that is a little bit painful or not nice
																			into a joke, into a very ironic joke, so...
																			FOMATPLAY do you have your own coping strategies
																			to dismantle this kind of stereotypes?
																			MARTA well I do my best to represent myself and my country.
																			but uh
																			every time I...
																			it became a little bit of a problem because I...
																			as I said I
																			I've travelled a lot
																			er first as a tourist then er
																			my job also involved travelling a lot and uh...
																			at first I didn't have a problem,
																			I mean with all the enthusiasm
																			uh in Poland
																			we entered European Union in 2004;
																			everything was opened and I believed in this
																			integration between the countries in Europe
																			and uh...
																			that's why whenever anybody asks me "where are you from?"
																			"from Poland" and I don't see any problem with that.
																			But having observed the reactions in the comments
																			after many, many years
																			now that I am aware of all the stereotypes that are
																			so strong
																			this question "where are you from?"
																			becomes for me a little bit of a problem;
																			and because I don't,
																			I no longer want to admit that I am from...
																			for many reasons,
																			but also to avoid those kinds of comments that... "okay,
																			oh I I have a cleaning lady",
																			"I have a I have a security guard from Poland", but...
																			so my coping strategy
																			has being developed but I am
																			at this point
																			that I can face this kind of comment
																			and give a very strong answer;
																			like I said to this person in Bosco
																			di Capodimonte: "look,
																			not every Polish person does clean for a job"
																			FOMATPLAY what was his reaction to this?
																			MARTA no, he was apologizing to me.
																			he didn't want to offend me anything so this,
																			this stereotype is so strong,
																			so strong and so rooted in the mentality
																			of Western European countries
																			and their representative inhabitants
																			that they don't even realise that they are hurting,
																			offending me. I mean, not that
																			I have no respect for all those
																			professions that I talked about
																			but uh in the mentality of the Western European people
																			there are no other jobs that the Polish people can do.
																			That's why also for me professionally
																			it's not so easy to climb the ladder because
																			my start is not as comfortable as, for example,
																			the start of a French person. Enough to say
																			"I'm French" and all the doors are open.
																			enough to say "I'm Polish" hmm
																			FOMATPLAY so where do you think these stereotypes come from?
																			MARTA uh...
																			well I guess uh everyday life. I mean,
																			if you are in the streets
																			people have contact with other people
																			and a lot of other people
																			do the jobs that they do. I mean,
																			now it's such a shame being in in Germany in,
																			in, in,
																			in, in in Berlin, especially, hearing,
																			overhearing Polish language among the homeless people,
																			among the, the,
																			the, the ugliest homeless people in the street. I mean,
																			this is also the fault of the immigrants.
																			They are working on the opinion,
																			and they do not take any responsibility.
																			but also of course
																			I mean that the kind of migration that uh
																			that we're facing the kind of migration that is
																			that uh encompasses
																			certain kinds of professions and not other kinds
																			because it's difficult for a Polish person
																			with the first language as Polish.
																			that is absolutely unuseful for any other countries
																			because nobody else is exposed but us
																			and it's a complicated language.
																			so also linguistically speaking
																			I think it's easier to find simpler jobs.
																			that's my point of view. I don't know.
																			FOMATPLAY do you think that the media have a responsibility
																			in constructing and perpetuating this
																			very stagnant representations of Polish people?
																			MARTA No. if I would blame media for every single,
																			every evil that exists in the world...
																			I know that there are
																			certain tendencies in the media
																			to show Poland as inferior.
																			I um. I have been taking these lessons of German with a teacher who always prepares to me
																			a couple of articles from German media
																			also sometimes considered concerning Poland.
																			And I see very often this patronizing tendency, okay.
																			the polish that
																			that they don't understand the world as well as we do
																			because they've been maltreated for many years
																			and they're still underdeveloped
																			but also of course uh
																			now the image of Poland is not very positive
																			and progressive, let's say;
																			so, it's, I mean...
																			we weren't to blame too. mhm
																			I'm saying we were...;
																			let's say I'm proud of this
																			that I have a passport.
																			I'm representing the country too.
																			so it's complex. I mean,
																			you cannot blame the media or,
																			or anybody in particular
																			because everybody's working on a stereotype.
																			FOMATPLAY okay I wanted to go back to the linguistic barriers
																			that you encountered when you arrived.
																			Can you tell us more about your experiences
																			in relation to the language that-;
																			the new language
																			that you have to learn in order to integrate?
																			FOMATPLAY I learnt a little bit of Italian a few years ago;
																			maybe 10 maybe more;
																			just out of pleasure
																			because I was coming to Italy very often,
																			almost every year for holidays
																			and I thought
																			it would be nice to be able to communicate,
																			at least at this at this um
																			basic level with the locals;
																			especially, I was going more and more to the south
																			and then
																			it would become complicated to communicate in English
																			and I thought...
																			I found it a little bit snubbish to,
																			to, to,
																			to be requiring everybody to communicate in English
																			with me and I thought "okay,
																			I'll, I'll make the effort and uh if I'm here so often
																			why don't I just bring my respect to to the nation?".
																			So that was um
																			that was the motivation and then I learned the basics
																			uh just to, you know,
																			be able to organize myself around towns.
																			So I, so I had the basics when I came here.
																			So
																			it was easier for me to want to develop the language
																			and that was also the purpose;
																			because this scholarship is not only
																			professional development but also linguistic development
																			and here it's enough to uh,
																			to give a sign that you speak a little bit of Italian
																			and people stop speaking English too;
																			and uh but that's good.
																			But that's the only way to learn, uh to learn language.
																			and uh now I have after almost 2 years.
																			I have many friends and
																			quite a few friends speak to me only,
																			only in Italian.
																			I developed a project with an artist who spoke to me
																			Italian all the time. At first it was challenging but uh
																			now we're communicating quite well
																			so for me it's always something enriching, something that I am always proud of.
																			FOMATPLAY and uh did you learn the language um
																			while attending like a school or by yourself?
																			MARTA I've just had some privare lessons. uh
																			at first we we had this, uh,
																			little group of my best friend and my mother
																			and the three of us er for a year or two, I don't remeber,
																			I don't remember er, had one, once a week
																			attended a lesson, a private lesson
																			with a colleague from work of my friend
																			because the colleague lived in er
																			Italy; she was brought up in Italy so she,
																			she knew the language quite well and she,
																			she was a good teacher and...
																			but it was entertaining and um
																			that's that's how, that's how it all began. and uh
																			now I'm now I'm taking lessons again because I...
																			I uh
																			I found out that uh
																			one thing is to be able to communicate
																			another thing is to be able to communicate correctly.
																			And this is
																			this is what I would like to do.
																			FOMATPLAY and have you perceived that the
																			that knowing the Italian language is uh
																			um an efficient way to get accepted and welcomed
																			in the Italian society? so
																			what kind of linguistic capital
																			do you think that the Italian language has in the
																			in the country?
																			MARTA it's very, it's,
																			it's very important.
																			I mean of course there are nations
																			that understand that
																			it is almost impossible to learn the language like,
																			I don't know the Hungarians;
																			the Polish also have to accept the fact that... well,
																			many Polish people don't accept the fact that
																			the tourists
																			or whoever comes to Poland doesn't speak Polish
																			that's the way it is.
																			So it's not an international language.
																			But here,
																			Italian is not an official European language,
																			right? of communication.
																			Nevertheless um....
																			it's not that I would have been excluded without
																			Italian in Naples.
																			I don't think so. but I wouldn't have made
																			so many friendships or such;
																			I wouldn't have been able to enter such,
																			in such good
																			relationships and contact with many fantastic people
																			I met without being able to communicate with them
																			in their own language. okay?
																			so
																			I accept the fact that I'm the one who makes mistakes
																			so that they can express themselves better with me.
																			so I also accept it because my priority was to learn,
																			to learn the culture, the character
																			the nature, also the language;
																			so I assumed the role of the listener.
																			Now I'm becoming slowly also the interlocutor but uh
																			that's, that's the way,
																			that's the way it functioned.
																			And it functioned well because also
																			people who I met have been very generous with me
																			to share their impressions,
																			their knowledge about the city;
																			so
																			if I had been only around the community of immigrants,
																			non-Italian speakers,
																			the experience of the city would have been very
																			superficial
																			and this this is not the reason why I came here.
																			I came here to become part of it
																			and that becoming part of it
																			means you have to be able to communicate in Italian.
																			The the next step is to learn the proper term.
																			ha ha ha ha ha ha. but first I have to master it.
																			FOMATAPLAY so do you feel satisfied with the uh
																			social network that you established in Naples?
																			MARTA absolutely.
																			people have been very generous with me;
																			very open, very generous,
																			very welcoming.
																			I have established a network stronger and more exciting,
																			more interesting, more fascinating
																			than in my own city where I lived for 14 years.
																			Also because the character,
																			the personalities are different.
																			FOMATPLAY what about them?
																			MARTA people are willing to share.
																			people.... if, if you, if you are receptive,
																			if you are open enough to ask
																			they they will share their world with you;
																			at least the people I met.
																			so um
																			I feel very welcome here; I feel very good.
																			I, I,
																			I really... after not even two years I,
																			I really feel accepted.
																			Even though sometimes happens
																			that people are offering me a kind of job
																			as a polish person but uh...
																			among my friends, among many other people I meet;
																			because I'm meeting people all the time;
																			there is this warmth; there is this, this openness.
																			not to idealize Neapolitan people because
																			they can be very unpleasant,
																			as everybody does.
																			but uh all in all I feel I feel absolutely at home here.
																			FOMATPLAY mhm.
																			so you didn't have to make um
																			an active effort to uh make friends;
																			was it like a spontaneous process or did you actively
																			um,
																			I don't know, maybe join the something? the chorus or uh...
																			MARTA I don't, I don't do that.
																			As you, as you as you heard
																			I don't even do group lessons
																			of a language. I...
																			my luck was that I came here and
																			to be installed within institutions;
																			so my first contact persons where the people who worked
																			in those institutions.
																			The other side of the luck is that I work in the arts;
																			this is a very international community,
																			very open community, very flexible community, so to say.
																			It means that there are no rigid,
																			strict rules of behaviour
																			because this world needs to be open all the time
																			and needs to be fluctuating,
																			needs to be spontaneous.
																			that's why it's easier
																			within the world of arts and culture to um
																			establish this,
																			this, this network; because it's based on the network.
																			Not just professional. first thing professional
																			but then here
																			it happens that it becomes also very personal.