FOMATPLAY okay um
so thank you very much for allowing us to interview you
um let's start with some questions um
can you tell us about your journey?
how did you get here?
and what prompted your decision to move
to Italy?
YAELLE ok, so I study at the university
in Strasbourg and I study linguistical mediation.
And I had the opportunity to go on Erasmus,
which uh was a
a program that really inspires me
because I really like to travel; and studying abroad
for me is an opportunity.
so I took it and I chose Napoli because um ...
I had other choices of cities
but Napoli is a city that
intrigued me
because it has like a good and bad reputation
and it
permit me to see a little bit more of southern countries in Italy
FOMATPLAY okay
are you happy to go back to your home country?
will you go back to your home country?
YAELLE yes, but for example
I went home for Christmas and festivities
but I was happy to go there
because I know that I will go back here
and I really enjoy here
and I'm thinking about do a master ,
a double master:
one year in France and one year in Italy.
because Italy is a country that I really enjoy
and I don't know if I came back to my home country
it will not be in my home city because, I don't know...
I grew up there and I've seen enough
so I want to see other things
FOMATPLAY okay
uh did you come to Italy with your family or alone?
YAELLE like the accommodation?
but it was more like a personal decision.
It was my family, was just a support
but they accompanied me in my journey to go here;
but it was more like...
FOMATPLAY okay, and how was it for you to adjust?
YAELLE um... in terms of general life,
everyday life... it was uh
easy because people here are really friendly
and they like helping people.
And they are also very welcoming
so I was really well welcomed a
but not the same thing with the scholar thing.
It was a little bit more tricky
because we had a lack of information
and we have to do a lots of
things in research alone. So it was complicated
but it's formative, I think
FOMATPLAY so besides the locals also
of being very welcoming and helpful,
did you find some sort of a support network?
like other French people, I don't know,
moving to Italy?
YAELLE yes because on the Erasmus program
there is a lot of association like ESN for example uh,
which helps students who want to study abroad
and it's an association which is recognized in Europe,
maybe,
uh outside of Europe,
but Europe for sure. And it's-; for example, they organized
events where I can talk to other people,
not only French people, but also Italian,
English; and all the people that I
can meet and I can also visit
other cities; who went on a trip in Tuscany.
And we-; so I have support also from them
FOMATPLAY okay.
so good support. um,
okay.
what aspects about
primary or secondary education in your host country
do you appreciate the most?
YAELLE French school system is really exigent
and we have a lot of retain exam and exercises.
So, for example, my accent in English is really bad.
So I'm better at writing English
instead of speaking it but um..
I'm really good um...
educated on the theological thing and in France
there is a lack of like too much theory and
no practice
FOMATPLAY no practice.
what about in Italy?
YAELLE in Italy it is completely different because, for example,
the exams are mostly oral and I really,
I'm really not used to it.
So,
it's a little bit complicated for me to express myself
other than writing.
but it's a different exercise that I appreciate;
but at the same time I find it complicated.
FOMATPLAY hmm okay um.
what do the people in your host country
think about EU citizens?
so what do the people in Italy think about
EU citizens based on your experience?
EU citizens living or working here?
YAELLE okay.
so,
I'm not quite sure I understood the question. okay.
that's I think that's EU
and people is also a form of humanity
a lot of differences inside but, for example,
if I have to compare with the non-EU people
there are more like stereotype
there are more um bothering yeah
those people
so I feel a little bit more included
as a EU citizen here than if I was not
FOMATPLAY okay
um...
and um how did you-,
how do you feel about the attitudes to migration
in Itay?
have you ever experienced-, sorry.
I'll continue with the questions
have you ever experienced any kind of hostility
from people here because of your different nationality
different linguistic background cultural background ,
hate speech, for example?
YAELLE Yeas and no. because, for example,
people can recognise that I'm French
because of my accent. So sometimes I'm like okay
but let me express myself please I can do it and..
but there are a lot of stereotypes about French and
other countries so sometimes people before
really being interested in you are like...oh wow
but they put you in a special case of your culture
and you can't...
you are judged on what you represent of the country
and not the individual.
FOMATPLAY: like in a box
okay um...
have you ever experienced hate speech
in online or offline conversations?
YAELLE for example,
I have a friend who is from the association ESN
he sent me some memes on WhatsApp
and one of them was
oh what's the best thing to do in France?
leave
okay
and so for me it's funny, so that's not really hateful.
it's more like kind of joke that
are oh your country
sucks a bit but we accept you
it's ok
okay
FOMATPLAY: now let's talk about Brexit
do you have any memories of the Brexit referendum
in the UK in 2016?
um did this affect you in any way back then?
were you surprised about the results?
YAELLE I was not really surprised
because it made a lot of noises in the
EU space .
but it's not something that really impacted me personally
it was like okay
good or bad for them but maybe on the
EU culture,
maybe because
United Kingdom was part of the culture.
so I think that on the economic factor ,
political is totally different
that we cannot really
detach themselves from the cultural aspect of EU.
FOMATPLAY okay, okay.
um and um...
what was your personal reaction to the fact that the UK
was willing to withdraw from the EU and
reject the possibility of freedom of movement
for their own citizens and the rest of the EU citizens?
YAELLE hmm
I didn't have a reaction like
oh no. but it was a little bit
bad for them.
it's limitating like the rise of circulation
and it's,
it's a shame that people cannot be free to move
in the EU space but I understand also
because
they want to detach themselves
so it's normal
FOMATPLAY okay um...
okay let's move on
how do you feel
EU institutions
may have a bearing or influence on your everyday life
as a citizen in Italy? in Italy?
YAELLE I don't really know
but I can answer that by comparing it to Strasbourg,
the city I came from
because there is the European Parliament there.
So there are a lot of, for example,
activities of sensibilization about that
but here it's not the same spirit
because I don't know really how to describe it but eh..I don't know
FOMATPLAY that's okay, that's okay.
but do you think you can trust the EU institutions?
because you are a European citizen
do you trust the EU institutions?
YAELLE yes I trust them but
it's not like if I want help I will not come okay
okay okay
clear enough.
um which values
FOMATPLAY which values of Italy
did you find it easiest to assimilate to
or to accept?
YAELLE the love for food, good food.
it it was really easy to accept uh...
I'm happy and but at the same time
there is a weird competition between France
and Italian... culinary
FOMATPLAY the cuisine.
YAELLE hat's not like food or there's a lot of,
for example,
my roommates is really attached to his mom and family
and Italy is
more traditional, I think,
than friends
and we detach ourselves more from our parents
so I can understand it
but for me it will not work
FOMATPLAY okay
so this is something that is different.
YAELLE Yes,
the difference is a richness for me so it's great.
FOMATPLAY okay,
how active are you in your contribution to
or participation in the community you found here ?
in the network you found here in Italy?
YAELLE I participate a lot
because without my contacts here.
I'm alone to begin with and I want to
live the life like uh...
the same way a person from here can live it
to live my experience of Erasmus fully
and I want to go back home and say ah
I lived in Napoli for one year
but just not in figuration
I was participating in random events and like that
FOMATPLAY like a real citizen in a way. um
so do you feel you can rely on your network
of relationships here?
YAELLE yes
FOMATPLAY: and how do you define yourself as a person
meaning how attached or unattached
do you feel to your home country?
to your host country?
so here and more generally to Europe to the EU?
YAELLE here I found myself a little bit surprised with my behaviours
regarding my home country.
because in my own country I'm not really uh
I'm French but here it's like not a real vindication
the word is a little bit too much
but it's part of me that in French I tend to forget
and I don't know my nationalism or love for my country
I don't know it's showed more here than in France
hmm okay
but it's not something that define my personal being
just like I'm French it's part of me
so here it's more obvious to say than in French
FOMATPLAY okay um...
which languages can you speak?
um and can you speak Italian?
YAELLE I can speak English,
a little bit of German; but just a little bit;
and Italian. I can speak Italian but because I study it
in my uh university
FOMATPLAY: oh you studied Italian
in your university
YAELLE it was also why I choose Italy to go for an Erasmus
because it makes sense when you study languages
to also know
part of the cultural thing that do these languages.
FOMATPLAY: why did you decide to study Italian?
YAELLE um
I had choice to study between Italian and Russian
as a beginner and I chose Italian because first
it's a beautiful language
and when my teachers spoke Italian. I was wow!
so beautiful.
and it's a language that is easiest to learn than,
for example, Russian.
and I can actually speak it and use it in my future
professional life after.
FOMATPLAY: and do you speak it with an accent in your opinion ?
YAELLE I think so. I work on my accent
but I think that
maybe my Italian accent is better than my English, okay.
FOMATPLAY: and how do people react to your accent?
YAELLE here it's also different because
in Napoli
there is another accent
which is not the same as the regular
or standard
Italian.
So, sometimes they are not even understanding me
because they have a whole different way of speaking
and pronouncing the same language.
but I also struggle to understand them
but it's interesting
FOMATPLAY: and how do you feel when you speak French here?
YAELLE um
I'm feeling like I'm being
a little bit stereotyped
if I understood well the question is what's other
FOMATPLAY: no what do you feel for example here you
I don't know
you speak French with your other French
Erasmus students I guess?
how do you feel when you speak French here?
if the question makes sense to you
YAELLE it's a strange question
maybe it doesn't make sense to you
but I I can try to answer.
but I'm not feeling like I'm more feeling
like a tourist when I speak French than Italian
and I don't know for me when you are in the country
it's important also to respect the culture
and also try to learn the language
and practice it
and when I feel like guilty when I'm speaking French
because I can speak Italian so why I don't do it ?
FOMATPLAY: okay that's, that's interesting.
speaking of which,
what makes you feel you belong to a country
or a community?
YAELLE for me
it's a lot of cultural aspects of the way of speaking
for example in my region Alsace
we also have a dialect which I do not speak
because it's something that is fading but,
for example,
I use some words which are specific to my region
so it makes me part of that region and that community
but also the culinary taste or so and
I don't really know
YAELLE but
there's some random thing you do
that make you part of the community
even if it's like unconscious
hmm but it's not that you act like this
so you're a part of this
but I feel like I belong to that community
because I learn a different
like linguistic variation, specific vocabulary, grammar structures and also cultural things
FOMATPLAY: okay do you feel you belong to the EU? and if so how?
if not why?
YAELLE yes
because I was raised in a EU country
uh more in Strasburg which put the accent of the
open minded
the way of thinking
EU and France as part of something bigger and I,
I don't know, I don't like really, for example,
I don't find myself like some common
I don't think with American culture
it's really different.
FOMATPLAY okay, okay.
um...
was there a specific moment in which you felt you
belonged to where you are now?
do you feel you belong here in a way?
YAELLE here right now?
here no
but yes because I studied to go here and
like I said, before in my formation I,
I tend to know more about languages
so for me it's normal
it's part of my job to go and see by myself
and have my own experience with that language
FOMATPLAY okay
um what do you know about uh
your freedom of movement rights as a European citizen?
YAELLE um I know that in the Schengen space
I have the rights to move freely and staying also
because, for example, if I was not a EU citizen,
I had a lot more procedure to stay here in Erasmus
and for me it's really a liberty of..
yes,
just a liberty and I like it
hmm
FOMATPLAY: and how would you feel
if somebody told you that
your freedom of movement is to be revoked?
YAELLE like the UK citizens?
FOMATPLAY yeah. like the UK citizens.
YAELLE yeah um...
I will not be happy and I think they are not happy
no
FOMATPLAY: okay um uh...
how would you describe freedom of movement?
what image comes to your mind when you think about it?
YAELLE it's...
for me it's to encourage the intercultural community
for example, to be more aware of the other
and to create some connection
in Europe to be more united, to create a NEW
mindset community
FOMATPLAY okay.
Have you ever felt
mistreated here or discriminated against?
YAELLE no,
just my friend's jokes.
FOMATPLAY: nothing more than that okay
do you think it is easy for a foreign
person to get a job in this country? in Italy?
YAELLE yes because
if I remember well,
my lessons about Italy and work world
and as a young person
I struggle not because the active population
the people who are working are in the...
in French we say uh
in the flower of age they are really mature
so all the posts are occupied
and people have to go find other job,
other opportunities outside of Italy.
so I think that if for the Italian people
it's complicated to get a job for the foreign
almost more.
FOMATPLAY: what are your experiences of everyday
bureaucracy?
YAELLE um oh no
a nightmare, I don't like it .
no
no no.
and
I was
speaking on French administration before
but I came here
and I realized that French administration is
okay compared to here because there's a lot of...
I just have the experience of university
so I think it's a little bit different
if I was not a student. But
I have to go to one place who in the person there
told me
I have to go to another place
and it's just like
there is so much thing for one little paper
and with no information. it's complicated to just deal with all of this
FOMATPLAY so bad experience
YAELLE bad experience
FOMATPLAY okay,
can you please define freedom of movement
in one sentence?
YAELLE I'm supposed to *inaudible*
no it's a it's a chance to
have the liberty of movement
FOMATPLAY: okay how would you sum up your freedom of movement
experience across the EU
so far?
YAELLE nice.
easy and practical.
FOMATPLAY okay, in a few words
how would you feel if your freedom of movement
was removed?
YAELLE um I think
I will not be happy but I feel like my rights is like
you give me rights and then you
no. ogive me my rights I want to move freely
FOMATPLAY: okay
where is home and where do you feel you belong?
YAELLE home in the first sense is where I was born
where there is my family but uh
for me home is a place where I feel welcome
and I feel at ease. For example,
I feel like home because I like the city.
I like the people and I also find myself great with the values of here
and enjoy it
FOMATPLAY how do you feel in Italy?
YAELLE I like it, you know ?
I really like Italy it's...
compared to France it's
less strict and I think people are a little bit nicer
stereotypes about French
but it's true
it's true.
FOMATPLAY: okay and
what do you miss the most
about France?
YAELLE food
FOMATPLAY you miss food.
YAELLE yes oh okay
FOMATPLAY would you take the same decision today to come here
and why?
YAELLE um because I think traveling and most
and and most importantly
when you study it's a way of building your own opinion
and discover some things about yourself that you
weren't aware of.
For example, my capacity of finding information or
I don't know... but no.
I will do it again for sure
FOMATPLAY last question.
who are you?
could you define yourself using three or four words?
YAELLE it is not an easy question
this one and...
I don't know, it's complicated to define myself with
no not with three or four words.
In general it's complicated to...
because
I could say that I'm a young student girl who wants to discover
the world and be a little bit more human.
I don't know if that makes sense
FOMATPLAY yeah it does,
it does. okay,
I think we're done thank you very much for your time.
we really appreciate your contribution to this project.
thank you
FOMATPLAY: okay
okay