FOMATPLAY okay. so thank you Magda for joining the project.
																			Our first question for you is um
																			about your journey. So what brought you here?
																			can you tell us a little bit more about your-,
																			travelling to Italy and your..?
																			Magdalena right so
																			I came here as a part of the Erasmus mobility program,
																			for staff um. I am currently full-time employed at  which is in Turkey,  Istanbul.
																			I have an agreement with the university here
																			um for exchange.
																			and for about three years now I've been trying to
																			use that opportunity. it work...
																			it didn't work for 3 places for various reasons;
																			there was a pandemic etc.
																			um also inflation and kind of prevented me from going,
																			coming, going anywhere;
																			and then this year I decided that I'll make it happen.
																			Together with the International Relations Office
																			um we kind of dealt with the the paperwork um
																			and of course
																			I chose the university and I connected with the professor
																			and as a result...
																			FOMATPLAY uh huh okay
																			uh why did you feel that you wanted to uh
																			move around in the first place?
																			MAGDALENA um
																			I think first of all
																			it was about the academic experience.
																			So I wanted to do something different.
																			Of course it's also part of, kind of,
																			because it's teaching mobility exchange
																			it's not training
																			so I knew that I will have to teach a number of hours
																			um...
																			however I wanted to teach something more faculty-related
																			in terms of evaluation of sources and academic skills,
																			rather than focusing on language development.
																			um so I thought I needed that um experience to kind of...
																			um build my identity as an academician as I thought that a side of me
																			hasn't probably kind of developed for for a while.
																			Even though I completed like master's degree um
																			a year ago;
																			um I thought that it was just kind of ticking the box
																			rather than
																			actually feeling that I developed as a person and
																			um ,
																			um to be more precise. secondly,
																			I thought that um
																			I needed an experience outside of Turkey
																			and difficulties that we have been facing for a while
																			and I felt disconnected from the European-. okay
																			it will sound a bit cheesy
																			but it's kind of a European,
																			pro-European spirit in a way.
																			in a sense of kind of community-wise
																			I guess...
																			FOMATPLAY can you tell us a little bit more about this community?
																			FOMATPLAY so obviously I go back and forth; go back to Poland,
																			like my home country.
																			I went there in April so that was not far off but um
																			but it still is kind of a kind of a family unit,
																			you kind of you know stay within the family;
																			it's, it's my own country. we,
																			we, we normally stay at home and kind of...
																			you know? limited in terms of the exposure.
																			I guess also my part of Poland,
																			you know?
																			I visited and they come from... they're not that um
																			touristic, kind of... it's
																			it doesn't bring people from different parts of Europe,
																			I would say. it's more kind of
																			these are places visited mostly by the locals
																			and Polish people.
																			of course we do get foreigners coming in and out
																			but it's not that that frequently visited.
																			um so I think I needed some kind of um
																			sense of being a part of...
																			it will sound very cheesy
																			but the kind of like European kind of identity,
																			I guess. And the fact that,
																			you know? the work that we did as a country, as Poland,
																			um joining the EU;
																			because I was in primary school
																			I guess when that happened.
																			And I remember the feeling of being proud and um
																			and the achievement, let's say, for us the country. um
																			and kind of breaking um...
																			again it will sound very pumped but
																			some kind of change that we were
																			kind of brought down with
																			for various reasons: historical,
																			political and such, right?
																			that have had been happening for,
																			you know? number of time and that,
																			you know? even though of course
																			you know some parts of it were brought upon us
																			from the western side;
																			um but I thought, but I think that's you know there,
																			there was some reconciliation happening and kind of um...
																			attempt to
																			FOMATPLAY what kind of reconciliation?
																			MAGDALENA um...
																			so, you know, from the German side,
																			you know? in the um 70s and 80s we had um
																			attempts from uh Germany to apologize for, for, for,
																			for, for the situation that happened uh
																			in the 30s and 40s and um
																			and what that brought about was,
																			you know, that we can't stay, basically. like another
																			um...
																			and that allowed another force
																			coming from the east to kind of take over
																			and the powers, also within
																			because of course we've had people that
																			from our own country that kind of gave in
																			our identity,
																			our principles and the history. that kind of um
																			provided our worth but kind of build our um
																			us as a nation;
																			uh and of course
																			had, you know, repercussions for things to come.
																			but still, you know? there was,
																			the work that has- had been going on prior to the
																			access. Before the European Union help um....
																			I think brings us a little bit,
																			you know?
																			together and understand the humanity part of it
																			and that um
																			there were attempts and
																			gestures that kind of helped
																			build some kind of formal um
																			um bringing us together despite the difficulties.
																			FOMATPLAY and for example?
																			MAGDALENA yes, so,
																			so, so there,
																			there were the priests, the bishops from Germany;
																			they were in Poland and came together.
																			It was in the 80s, I think. The 80s
																			beginning of the 80s,
																			um build some kind of bridge on the religious,
																			let's say. Christian grounds.
																			um
																			of um
																			reconciliation; and kind of,
																			you know? um making up for the
																			atrocities that did not happen.
																			I have used a loaded word there,
																			but...
																			that's it. um
																			so um
																			so yeah, and
																			and of course
																			it gave us the opportunity to see a better future,
																			I guess; financially as well because the economy has,
																			had been illegal um....
																			broke down a lot of times,
																			it wasn't for the benefit of the people.
																			it was for the benefit of another entity um
																			and uh....
																			in time it kind of gave us hope that,
																			you know? we can kind of rebuild and um hopefully
																			become more developed as a country and...
																			both in terms of, you know?
																			kind of um
																			identity-wise, as well:
																			being proud of who we are and kind of um
																			protecting our own identity against
																			things that we might not be necessary
																			okay with;
																			but also
																			we have access to to better education,
																			to better facilities, technology, sports
																			and also opportunity to travel. that's an aspect to it.
																			And because with that opportunity to travel
																			there is a sense of trust, right?
																			that is there, right?
																			that emerges between the nations across the borders.
																			FOMATPLAY okay so how would you define,
																			since you mentioned that,
																			your personal versus national versus European identity?
																			is this a separated even? or is this like a more of a...?
																			MAGDALENA I think they overlap, yeah.
																			I don't think that they kind of...
																			there is a clear boundary between these.
																			cause I think
																			despite the difficulties that we have been
																			gone through, right? even between the nation;
																			I think it's a shared history and I think it's a um....
																			something that, you know?
																			things can be build off. first
																			there are conflicts and then that they will happen.
																			that's kind of factual but um
																			and there are aspects to the,
																			you know?
																			European Union that needs need to be changed, developed,
																			and....
																			um
																			I guess the institution kind of aspect to it;
																			it's a little bit bureaucratic,
																			maybe not clear um... I don't know.
																			maybe it will be a bit selfish of me to mention
																			but you know
																			as somebody who lives outside of the European Union
																			in Turkey I used to kind of email the European Union
																			asking for help
																			because I thought some decisions that um
																			were made, were a bit contradictory to
																			what the European Union gives to Turkey.
																			of course, again;
																			I have complex relationship but um...
																			but I felt that, you know?
																			there is something going wrong
																			in terms of the agreements that they've made
																			and I as a person,
																			who kind of stands on the other ends of those decisions
																			but kind of... I'm affected by those;
																			so I thought that yeah the European should kind of
																			be aware of certain situations that are happening um...
																			FOMATPLAY they didn't reply to you?
																			MAGDALENA they did.
																			but it's quite generic reply. it's about,
																			you know?
																			that's, that's upon the decision of the national state,
																			national agency; and they don't have
																			any capacity to kind of interfere in their decisions.
																			which I thought was a little bit surprising because,
																			you know? the money is being given
																			and their agreements are made um...
																			it was about the healthcare system at some point
																			it was about the Erasmus Programme  as well;
																			because I didn't feel like these were working well um....
																			for us as recipients  those kind of.... um
																			decision, let's say....
																			right, so
																			in terms of identity as a national person and European.
																			I think yeah these are pretty much kind of
																			overlapping.
																			I don't think that there is a particular kind of line
																			I would draw between these.
																			um maybe in Turkey, I think, I...
																			because it's very easy to forget and kind of
																			and make the decision of assimilating into the
																			environment, and kind of going with the flow.
																			let's call it.
																			um
																			but I think, I think that's kind of maybe strange myself;
																			I think I am different in some sense;
																			that there is something else that
																			shaped me over the years
																			and it's not only about the history that I've gone
																			right through
																			in my education and childhood;
																			but it's also with my grandparents
																			went through, my parents etc.
																			they shared with us consciously and subconsciously so...
																			of course
																			some parts of national identity I have problems with. I don't identify with some parts of it.
																			I think some parts are quite controversial um....
																			to our national identity that maybe shouldn't be
																			emphasized as much as they do in the public discourse.
																			for some of it
																			I try to rationalize it and understand why,
																			maybe it's happening.
																			but for some of them I think, you know?
																			it goes a little bit too far and I guess
																			it is not something that I identify with,  personally.
																			so maybe I would draw a line there
																			but of course
																			it's about the politics as well and kind of um...
																			touching upon people's kind of fevers
																			I guess....
																			FOMATPLAY do you have something specific in mind?
																			MAGDALENA um so that,
																			that's the issue of migration;
																			that the government took a stand on...
																			I don't know what's going to happen at the moment
																			because with the new election,
																			you know, the government seems that is going to change maybe, in some ways.
																			in Poland, yes.
																			uh in a way I understand it because
																			we were not a colonial empire
																			and we have never experienced; we haven't had
																			the exposure to the outside world.
																			for us the outside world is bringing hmm
																			negative aspects, right?
																			because if you look at the history of the 40s and 50s
																			earlier than that
																			and then what happened after Singapore wars;
																			it's the outside that brings something negative,
																			it doesn't bring anything positive.
																			And I think that's the reaction that people have
																			and when they see certain um
																			news pieces um
																			in the media, they-;
																			and of course it's mostly the negative that comes up;
																			so they get attached to those
																			and they don't see the kind of,
																			you know? the other aspects to it,
																			the positive aspects to migration. um
																			although I,
																			I think deep inside there is an interest in people
																			uh in the other;
																			like in other cultures and that the...
																			and Polish people like to travel,
																			they want to experience,
																			they're not really like, you know? um
																			living in a box
																			and kind of separating themselves;
																			but I think there's a general- genuine fear um
																			of the outside
																			because of the lack of experience in the past.
																			I think it's-, it doesn't have enough yeah
																			there was just not enough exposure. like this,
																			this were just bits and pieces,
																			pieces at the end of the day.
																			You know? the Orientalism movement and um in art and um
																			in litterature maybe;
																			but these were just just elements so...
																			and the other aspect to it is also the political
																			kind of playground of it
																			that it's being used for some kind of political gain
																			and....
																			in the current, you know? situation and that um
																			there is a fear that it's,
																			it's, again,
																			kind of causing the weakening of the state and our,
																			us as an identity, which,
																			you know? the identity that has been
																			able to come up in a free way just, just recently;
																			so that's been like....
																			it started in the 90s and then um
																			with the bringing down of the
																			the wall,
																			Berlin wall and the collapse of USSR and then um...
																			but I think it was really like the end of 90s
																			at the beginning of the 2000,
																			so that's basically 25 years maybe.
																			FOMATPLAY okay just to uh,
																			just just to clarify. When you say migration,
																			you mean migration from uh
																			within the European countries or without-,
																			I mean, out of- outside Europe?
																			MAGDALENA out of.
																			I think you know within it's,
																			it's kind of accepted.
																			Because it's a part of the system.
																			FOMATPLAY okay
																			MAGDALENA but,
																			and it's kind of understood better... I mean
																			when I'm saying it right now I see, like,
																			maybe there is a clash there
																			between what I'm saying and maybe the reality but...
																			I think the within is, yeah,
																			kind of accepted as a part of the system.
																			FOMATPLAY the European system?
																			MAGDALENA yeah, that we have,
																			you know?
																			and since the historical kind of background is more,
																			kind of
																			known,
																			and maybe better understood...
																			that's why it's maybe more accepted;
																			but you know I can never speak for the others 100%.
																			that's kind of my way of um
																			making
																			make my own understanding out of this  intuition and while certain
																			occurrences mught happen.
																			FOMATPLAY okay.
																			uh so,
																			um also just to uh
																			expand what you were saying
																			at the beginning of the interview;
																			so when you when you are in Turkey,
																			you feel you are in a different place than Europe, right?
																			MAGDALENA yes, and it wasn't that obvious to me.
																			FOMATPLAY in what ways?
																			MAGDALENA it wasn't obvious or?
																			FOMATPLAY no, in
																			what ways you feel different? yeah, you are
																			in a different place?
																			MAGDALENA I think it's the...
																			I think it's the history.
																			I think it's the history um....
																			that we can't find that bond on the deeper level.
																			FOMATPLAY social? Affective?
																			MAGDALENA I think it's affective. I think
																			culturally as well
																			because I can't understand certain things,
																			certain nuances,
																			it's a little bit hard for me to kind of get it
																			um...
																			also some stances that, you know?
																			I see, I experience, you know? um
																			hear about, you know?
																			I can't kind of
																			see how those stancecs are being rationalized
																			against other stances. I am kind of like conflicted
																			in why
																			um certain ideas are
																			not being seen in the kind of wider context...
																			um but I guess
																			is the history and what shaped Turkey and other country
																			and what shaped us as country. I think
																			there's the culture;
																			I don't get certain aspects of their music,
																			humor;
																			I am kind of totally kind of separated from that because
																			I don't have the background.
																			As far as I understand,
																			I need to assimilate because I'm a foreigner
																			and I need to accept the situation.
																			I mean, because it was my decision
																			and
																			I need to respect the laws and kind of social nerves;
																			but at some point
																			I understood that there is a part of me,
																			which doesn't accept the social norms
																			as they're being prescribed on me
																			and I have to
																			um just basically say no to them. um
																			because it would jeopardize myself as an individual
																			and I'll just have to, kind of, forget, refuse,
																			you know?
																			whatever has happened shaped me as a person both
																			in terms of my respect words,
																			my parents, grandparents and um...
																			giving some parts of me would just um
																			show kind of negligence to that and
																			I don't think I would be...
																			FOMATPLAY can you give us an example or is this too personal?
																			if it is, never mind.
																			MAGDALENA um....
																			yeah I guess I can give some... So it was about
																			some of it is about religious ground-,
																			you know? religion.
																			It's about you would fit better if you were a Muslim.
																			um so that wouldn't work for me.
																			it wasn't always kind of explicitly said
																			but um
																			the undertone was there;
																			and certain behaviors, in terms of hierarchy,
																			also was kind of um
																			put upon me and um....
																			uh and I said no to that;
																			because I thought that I would lose my freedom and,
																			you know?
																			without freedom there is no kind of creative side to
																			and it puts you in a difficult situation,
																			not only in terms of your relationship,
																			you know? family and
																			you know? the background story that family carries;
																			um but also health.
																			so I thought that, you know?
																			that would be um
																			too much to handle.
																			it was basically following rules of obedience,
																			of acceptance
																			uh and also that kind of,
																			now I see it; like it was first-, it started like,
																			you know? religion
																			cause that was the most obvious one. um
																			because often the first questions that are being asked
																			like "what religion
																			do you follow?"
																			and that was the kind of the first one that I faced
																			and then there was a family
																			because obviously I'm married to a Turkish person
																			so that was part of it
																			and then I think I also started to see it also in,
																			in my professional setting.
																			I think I also started seeing it at work;
																			that things are as they are
																			except things, you know?
																			for what they are kind of a situation and...
																			um
																			this would be like three layers.
																			FOMATPLAY um
																			um have
																			you ever felt some kind of hostility towards you
																			in Turkey? but also while travelling around Europe?
																			MAGDALENA um...
																			no, I would apologize sometimes.
																			you know there are those misunderstandings.
																			like I say like staying until
																			it's kind of a test of your character
																			because you have to accept that
																			you're not going to satisfy everyone.
																			like even, you know,
																			crossing the road going shopping and I don't know...
																			like yesterday
																			I Learned that I had to put money into this machine for,
																			for it to give me the change and the lady got upset to me
																			because I didn't know that where I had to put the
																			money into the machine.
																			but it's...
																			but it's kind of...
																			I see it as a kind of a test of character;
																			I don't see it as invasive;
																			like it doesn't um
																			put under threat my identity per se,
																			it's more kind of a test on my character
																			maybe a way of, you know?
																			cause I'm quite an assessive person,
																			I take things very personally;
																			sometimes too much um...
																			but I see it kind of a
																			kind of the power balance here, it' is kind of equal;
																			so I can kind of maneuver that;
																			I can deal with it with humor
																			etc. etc.
																			whereas in Turkey I think sometimes I feel
																			that it does um...
																			it is a threat of my
																			identity. It's a threat for my kind of personality: I don't know maybe
																			subconsciously
																			it's because I'm outside of Europe and that's why... how I...
																			that's... because I perceive it this way.
																			but um...
																			I don't know. I think, generally, sometimes it
																			is... it can be aggressive and it's,
																			it kind of attacks my sense of security. Cause here,
																			you know? with the examples that I gave, just now
																			being here in Italy and
																			uh even if it happens to another country
																			or somebody mocks me for my accent or etcetera;
																			I don't see it as invasive; sometimes like this or...
																			um because it's about my freedom of choice,
																			my freedom of being secure
																			and not realizing that what's,
																			what's being done to me it's
																			it's it's very dangerous on those levels.
																			FOMATPLAY how come you say accent?
																			so when you speak Turkish in Turkey
																			they they mock you? or when you?
																			MAGDALENA I don't know, like, even here in Europe;
																			like if they speak in English
																			they sometimes, you know?
																			point out different things but that was very very rare.
																			it's,
																			it's... or the choice of words that they make but that's,
																			that's....
																			it's not that common in Turkey.
																			it's more... it's actually very funny.
																			so my surname is pretty funny
																			when you say it in Turkish;
																			it's not really the spelling,
																			it's really the pronunciation.
																			when you say it in Turkish it sounds like Adam chick,
																			which,
																			which means like small-, because [Adam] means "human" in,
																			in Turkish so it's like  "small human";
																			the "chick" makes it like, you know?
																			um
																			infantilizes the word.
																			um so they kind of a little bit,
																			you know?
																			they always want to learn how my surname is pronounced.
																			I said "you know?
																			maybe we'll talk about it later".
																			it's not that important at the moment,
																			those are the students, most of the time.
																			but then like the Turkish surnames are really,
																			really, like...
																			they really stand out because it could be a flower,
																			like chick flower or...
																			like [Solre], my second surname after my husband
																			it means like "somebody who speaks a lot".
																			you know?
																			They're kind of... meaning-wise quite old.
																			um or... I don't know [Akhmeth]
																			so it's kind of um...
																			interesting that, you know?
																			my surname becomes an issue
																			in something to kind of make...
																			that's a little bit to make fun of;
																			whereas the surname that, you know?
																			the Turkish people have are also quite-,
																			and when you translate them
																			they're quite, you know?
																			also they kind of stand out it's not like...
																			um and I gave like softer examples, to be honest;
																			some of them when you really translate that thing uh
																			it does sound like interesting. um
																			but again maybe because it's different,
																			it's not kind of usual...
																			FOMATPLAY and how about the working environment?
																			so what kind of working environment
																			have you found here in Italy, Naples?
																			uh what kind of working environment are you used to
																			back in Turkey? or if you also worked around Europe?
																			MAGDALENA I think it's welcoming... It's,
																			it's kind of being...
																			it's kind of being a part of the group;
																			but maybe again it's kind of my subconsciousness
																			speaking at the moment;
																			because I want to be a part of the group
																			and I want to create that space for me;
																			but I think
																			um
																			there is no wall, you know?
																			or line being driven. is kind of
																			we are collectively trying to create something better,
																			beneficial.
																			um and there is that sense of
																			we are connected through the....
																			and here
																			institutionalized kind of forms of the European Union um...
																			sometimes, you know? it's kind of...
																			it'a bit also... um
																			interesting, in some ways; maybe controversial, you know?
																			because when I say, you know?
																			Turkish person asks me "are you,
																			is Poland part of the European Union?" and I say "yes";
																			"oh that's good for you" or "how lucky you are".
																			and again
																			maybe it's kind of my defensive mechanism at the moment
																			but my first thought is like:
																			yeah, because we,
																			we have been building this
																			continent for four years now
																			and we have been intertwined
																			as nations' countries,
																			you know? in different ways.
																			Some of them worst, some of them  better. So
																			it doesn't seem to me something that I'm,
																			should be lucky,
																			feel lucky about. like it's something that I think is
																			it was an actual consequence of certain events.
																			so when I was crossing the border, I felt,
																			you know?
																			holding the passport without feeling proud that,
																			you know? I can just
																			move freely without being...
																			There is this sense of trust,
																			as I said before, among us.
																			although I also see the situation
																			which people are being rejected
																			or being um
																			scrutinized morre at the border. that, that is an issue
																			and also it makes them feel...
																			hmm I don't want to say worse
																			but um
																			yes vulnerable,
																			not accepted.
																			and I saw it with my husband,
																			when we were applying to the UK visa.
																			that was a mess, on another level.
																			but um
																			he was basically rejected on the premise that it was
																			Brexit time so they didn't want to have trouble
																			that, that's what they call it; and also
																			because we didn't have, we didn't own a house;
																			there was another reason that we were given.
																			of course that wasn't listed,
																			you know?
																			in the requirements. it was the money,
																			it was the invitation letter...
																			later we learned that we made a mistake. that we should,
																			we shouldn't have said my brother
																			lived in the UK because the fear was that, you know?
																			my husband would stay, or whatever.
																			and we were going there for his wedding, basically.
																			um so
																			the idea was that we should have applied for a normal
																			touristic visa
																			and probably that we would have received it
																			but I don't know... but,
																			you know? it made,
																			made us feel a little bit-, and I felt
																			felt  for my husband as well; that he felt like
																			on what ground are you rejecting my application?
																			I'm not a criminal. I didn't commit any crime in the UK,
																			I didn't break any border laws.
																			you know? I have,
																			I had a job at the time, you know?
																			stable job at the good university.
																			um and they probably they saw
																			my university because it's quite well established,
																			let's say.
																			um and then he had---
																			it was during the pandemic
																			so it was a bit-. for him it was a bit difficult job-wise,
																			but still he was, you know?
																			he was working and we had,
																			you know? the financial means to support both of us;
																			and there was no issue.
																			my brother also took care of many things
																			um so I understand the feeling of,
																			you know? kind of rejection on the ground of travel,
																			right? how that feels.
																			and I know right now in Turkey
																			there are lots of uh rejections from the European Union side.
																			and sometimes I feel like
																			because it's being expressed to me
																			and sometimes in an open form
																			and I don't know how to react.
																			but, you know?
																			for now I haven't said anything
																			but at some point I say no.
																			you know? cause
																			I've tried to understand that
																			there are too many applications
																			so people, they break the rules;
																			so the European Union is trying to kind of
																			take control of the borders;
																			even for people who, you know?
																			technically would just go back
																			because they work in academia
																			these are researchers, these are instructors,
																			lecturers etc.
																			but I understand the situationis is sensitive,
																			especially in the Easter border with the war in Ukraine.
																			but there is the sense of, you know?
																			dissatisfaction, maybe;
																			not accepting that there might be different powers
																			to play.
																			but then at the same time
																			I feel for them because it's not a  nice feeling to have your application rejected
																			for unknown reasons, right?
																			or their reasons are being added later.
																			FOMATPLAY do you think there is some kind of institutional,
																			institutionalized prejudice
																			that is operating there or?
																			not really.
																			MAGDALENA no I don't think so.
																			I mean I heard, I think poor Estonia
																			I'm going to call it because many structures are our institutions
																			have been protected by Estonia, you know?
																			because they couldn't eneter.
																			but again I'm trying to understand because, you know?
																			the situation is very fragile;
																			something
																			I saw some in the Turkish news with Estonians
																			application like a lot of them being rejected
																			or a lot of applications being made so something... Maybe people were trying to get to the Estonian border to get to other countries
																			and they tried to kind of um
																			invading-,
																			maybe they're more sensitive to the topic.
																			um I know there are lots of Turkish people coming in.
																			there, they live here, they work here it happens.
																			There was the coup in 2015-14,
																			I can't remember being here at the moment um. So I know a lot of academicians,
																			you know? scholars, they moved to Turkey.
																			so, you know? I am,
																			I know that they functioned in the European Union quite well
																			but I think instead maybe the amount of people,
																			maybe they really-,  do yeah
																			in the current circumstances, like in the UK
																			it was Brexit...
																			but again it's the
																			the reason for the rejection that is also causing like
																			kind of discomfort; like for my husband
																			it was uh not not only house;
																			and for them it was,
																			I can't remember now what they wrote,
																			I think
																			that they didn't provide a substantial reason
																			to travel even though the travel was on the basis of..
																			there was a conference in Estonia,
																			I guess. And they had the date,
																			you know? the invitation from the conference body etc.
																			um but that was the reason that was provided.
																			so that gave them the feeling of, you know?
																			disappointment
																			FOMATPLAY okay.
																			what else did you think of Brexit when it happened?
																			Did it affect you in all the ways, apart from this?
																			MAGDALENA um, I mean, from my brother, because he moved there,
																			he lived there in Brighton um...
																			I know, you know?
																			it caused some difficulties for,
																			for those
																			residents that didn't have natural nationality
																			and they had to
																			deal with the documentation there:
																			the new processes and,
																			you know? because it was a new thing,
																			new situation and the processes were
																			also sometimes unknown to the clerks etc.
																			for me, I'm still... you know?
																			I don't have problems crossing the border,
																			I don't think I need the visa;
																			I think that's still the case. we can...
																			um the problem that I faced was work
																			because I wanted to do like a summer
																			period working in the UK,
																			I got, I had an interview;
																			I got accepted at the university of Notthingam,
																			it was one month, one and a half month kind of um...
																			um
																			because there was this warning "eligible for work";
																			and my understanding was that yes,
																			I can apply.
																			there is nothing in my criminal record or um
																			wherever
																			that would prevent me from applying for the work.
																			but the way they kind of put it forward is that
																			you already have the work permit,
																			and you already can work in the UK.
																			so I was a little bit pushing...
																			is there I guess because I was trying to tell them yes
																			okay I don't have... I think it's called skill skill visa...
																			yeah kind of skills basically... like you
																			you can go to the UK now for
																			I think in limited periods of time
																			and deliver certain type of work
																			but you require sponsorship.
																			so there's an invitation coming from an institution,
																			or employer, any kind of an employer.
																			I make sure they have to pay for it as well.
																			they have to, you know?
																			make an extra expenses but um
																			but I even said I would pay for the entire visa
																			everything but they told me no
																			you really need to have
																			a work permit in order to come and work with us.
																			so that was kind of difficult maybe that I have faced personally.
																			which was a bit of a bummer because I felt like oh yes,
																			that's a nice experience;
																			that'd been nice experience for me.
																			but it didn't work out.
																			And I had worked in UK prior when I was a student
																			I went there to work in a hotel
																			and there wasn't an issue apart from the Home Office
																			registration.
																			um yeah
																			FOMATPLAY okay um
																			and what memories do you have about the Brexit moment?
																			so when you heard that
																			most of the
																			voters..?
																			FOMATPLAY I felt sad,
																			I felt that it was a wrongly informed decision;
																			I thought that the public will sway
																			into thinking that it would provide some kind of
																			a solution to a problem that,
																			I think, comes within
																			in the UK rather than from the outside.
																			and um yeah
																			as strange as it may sound
																			like I felt, I felt sad
																			because I felt like
																			that shouldn't have happened.
																			Even because they were on the different terms,
																			they still had some control over their borders,
																			I guess. it wasn't like a full Shengen participation,
																			but yeah... I,
																			I, I felt sad, disappointed, kind of...
																			and we actually had a friend,
																			like, he's from the UK,
																			he's still with us, working with us;
																			and he said he cried.
																			The announcement,
																			so... I know it hits some of them pretty hard,
																			especially that it was a very close call;
																			it was like 51-49,
																			I guess.
																			52-48
																			um but
																			you know? at the end of the day
																			it's a sovereign country
																			and that's the way that they decided for themselves.
																			FOMATPLAY hmm
																			okay um...
																			maybe something else about your belonging.
																			so where do you feel you belong?
																			or where do you feel your home is?
																			MAGDALENA this is a tough one.
																			I think...
																			when I have contact with my family;
																			not necessarily-, sometimes being with them,
																			cause that's hard,
																			because of the employment situation.
																			Being next to my husband;
																			cause I think we kind of create the bond that kind of,
																			you know? wherever we are the home is.
																			but I can see a very easily change
																			because of the current economic situation.
																			so I'm always kind of worried about,
																			you know?
																			the economic situation is going to be too tough on us
																			that, you know?
																			it will kind of affect us a lot, as a unit.
																			I am in a place when I feel safe and appreciated
																			and valued and
																			hurt.
																			I think,
																			that is it and also, you know?
																			I need to have a kind of a sense of connection
																			and historical, I don't know,
																			artistic, communal...
																			um because I used to travel around the Middle East
																			when I was students, quite a lot.
																			I went to kind of Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco,
																			Tunisia, Egypt
																			and I felt quite well there.
																			I don't-; but, you know,
																			these were short stays so I cannot say um
																			too much about that um because I felt some kind of a...
																			because of my interest.
																			I think I felt that connection a little bit
																			but I don't know if that wouldn't happen because..
																			you know with Turkey
																			I don't have much interest in that; like personal
																			curiosity is not really involved in it;
																			because I was never interested in Turkish language,
																			Turkish culture. it was a little bit bought upon me;
																			so kind of not that
																			faith, let's say. um
																			so I I never felt that connection with that.
																			but yeah I think it's family,
																			family aspect in a sense of, you know?
																			the ideas that I mentioned like being valued, secure,
																			appreciated,
																			um understood.
																			um yeah
																			FOMATPLAY mm hmm and um something that maybe involves your...
																			um
																			sort of a sense of being in Turkey or in Europe. so um
																			how active do you feel you are when you are in Turkey
																			in terms of uh
																			your social contribution to the country?
																			MAGDALENA In Turkey, none.
																			almost zero.
																			I tried...
																			okay so I am...
																			I tried, in terms of like NGOs,
																			so kind of social work;
																			but then I got a bit scared because of...
																			there was a situation like
																			when you are a foreigner  in protest in Turkey,
																			you are immediately, like, labeled as conspirator
																			and you are an agent of the
																			European country
																			and try to change the course of politics
																			in Turkey.
																			so I know some people were... despite these kind of labels,
																			they still were pursuing their activism in Turkey.
																			but I kind of... I decided that it would
																			be too big of a threat for myself and family so
																			um I thought that
																			that that wouldn't work;
																			and I thought about working with migrants,
																			with Syrians, you know? When the war started;
																			but then I thought, again,
																			I might get myself into some shaky grounds and just um...
																			jeopardize my, my security there. Cause, you know,
																			I'm on a kind of work for my visa residency permit
																			so it's very easy to cancel these things um...
																			even though I am married to a national.
																			At the beginning when
																			when I was a student, as ERASMUS sudent,
																			I was quite social, yes.
																			but then because of certain kind of events happening
																			I decided that the work,
																			the social aspect of work is enough for me.
																			I'm okay like with-, without engaging too much,
																			let's say. Because I I also thought that um
																			it might cause attention, or me feeling uneasy,
																			or there might be some lack of understanding
																			and maybe I will, again, kind of
																			letting some parts of me out that I wouldn't like to
																			counsel, let's say.
																			and, you know, in Turkey
																			you have those groups which are more kind of weird thinking,
																			groups that,
																			which are more conservative as in every country but um...
																			I know these are like things
																			maybe that also put me off.
																			like I used to work for this family of lawyers;
																			I would teach them English, at the very beginning.
																			and they said um
																			"you know, you're a foreigner.
																			we are surprised that your future husband",
																			because we were kind of in a partnership at that time,
																			uh "we are surprised that um,
																			you were, you were,
																			you were actually accepted to the family
																			because even though we are this
																			European kind of forward thinking family
																			and we are lawyers, well educated,
																			we wouldn't have that.
																			or because you lived in Turkey
																			you have to behave like a Turk".
																			FOMATPLAY it's very strong.
																			MAGDALENA it's very..yeah. So, I felt again,
																			like
																			a little bit... like understanding for the Constitution,
																			for the law; I cannot break the law.
																			I cannot, you know?
																			behave in an unruly matter and I have to respect
																			the workplace and I have to kind of
																			represent my workplace in a certain way because...
																			but,
																			but it sticks to these kind of things...
																			FOMATPLAY um okay
																			maybe the last two questions. I think I will just...
																			I could go on forever with you.
																			but... it was very pleasant to um
																			be here, listening to you. um
																			so how do you,
																			how have you experienced freedom of movement in Europe?
																			and also outside of Europe?
																			since you have this kind of experiences.
																			MAGDALENA so within the borders just,
																			you know? travelling around, not not having to um
																			being questioned at the border...
																			because I also see like, when it's my husband and it's-,
																			when it's me.
																			so when he crosses or I cross or the customs agent
																			they see we have a relationship. so one time
																			it was in Slovenia;
																			they took us in together. because they saw like
																			we were a little bit like,
																			we were happy, you know?
																			kind of feeling like a young couple at the time and,
																			you know? everything was okay;
																			we had the visa and we took it from the polish
																			consolate, in Instambul for him and...
																			He saw that we had a relationship
																			and that we were a little bit like..
																			I mean, I don't know.
																			the way we behaved when we were too happy at the time
																			so he kind of took us into the room
																			and started checking the system.
																			I think, you know,
																			it was quick
																			and I didn't make a big deal out of it and I didn't make much of it
																			because it can happen.
																			like I also accept that sometimes,
																			you know? these things can happen at the border and...
																			but other than that, you know? it's just,
																			you know? just moving from one country to another
																			and it's quite free, pleasant.
																			um
																			outside, so... In Turkey, I try to follow the rules, not to cause problems with the borders
																			and making sure that, you know?
																			the deadlines are met. one time I didn't,
																			I overdid my stay. but it wasn't my fault.
																			there was this issue with my
																			word documents.
																			they weren't processed on time;
																			and it was election time in Turkey as well
																			so there was this issue that,
																			you know? suddenly... and just was thrown to the system.
																			so I was left without insurance,
																			without the work permit, without the residence permit.
																			I tried to reach my end of the
																			consolate; I tried to talk to my employer.
																			of course
																			I couldn't stay working because, you know?
																			without permit
																			you can't stay at the... and the consulate, they told me that,
																			you know?
																			if they catch you,
																			they catch you; see you at the border detention center.
																			but then it's kind of...
																			so I was also asking around people,
																			you know? instructors,
																			teachers with similar experiences;
																			but in the end it worked out well.
																			I think they started a bit stricter
																			but at that time
																			you paid some kind of a fine
																			for each day that you overstayed;
																			so I paid that fine and then I crossed the border
																			for one day and then came back. we chose the
																			airport because we thought
																			it would be a little bit better to get the visa
																			touristic visa;
																			um it was an issue because it
																			normally they don't allow you to do it in 24 hours
																			like
																			you should stay outside the Turkey more than 24 hours;
																			um but since I had I collected a lot of documents,
																			you know? to show the customs and I said,
																			you know?  "this happened, this happened.
																			this is a really kind of unusual situation for me.
																			it was kinda out of our control".
																			um so so so we got a bit of a help there um.
																			but normally there's no issue.
																			now I have like two permits. one from work,
																			one individually because I just thought that um
																			on the basis that I'm married to a national,
																			because I thought that it would be safer for me,
																			because I lose my job, for example.
																			and I would still need to stay.
																			because I think that after you,
																			your work permit is constantly have like 2 weeks
																			to manage your situation.
																			it's either like either leaving or,
																			you know, applying for another type of visa.
																			I mean the worst experience I've had
																			I think it was in the STATES. that was yeah
																			FOMATPLAY okay um...
																			okay so we have reached the edn of
																			the interview and now I'm gonna ask you um
																			a set of short questions you can answer uh
																			in one sentence, if you want. yeah?
																			so how would you sum up your um
																			freedom of movement experience
																			across the EU so far?
																			MAGDALENA I think without any issues and fears, or concerns
																			prior to the travel.
																			FOMATPLAY um how would you feel if your freedom of movement
																			was removed?
																			MAGDALENA yeah I think disappointed, crushed and um
																			I will feel it would be unjustified.
																			FOMATPLAY uh where's home and where do you feel you belong?
																			MAGDALENA um
																			yeah next to my family
																			and the place where I feel that I am being valued
																			and appreciated and
																			heard and that I
																			I feel like I've Learned something from that experience.
																			FOMATPLAY mm hmm um
																			how do you feel in Italy?
																			MAGDALENA I feel welcome, I feel um a part of a community.
																			FOMATPLAY and what do you miss the most
																			um of Poland,
																			your home country?
																			MAGDALENA seeing my family; being there for them.
																			when there is a problem, or an issue,
																			deal with um
																			places that I have feelings and memories from.
																			FOMATPLAY how do you feel in Turkey?
																			MAGDALENA I feel scared.
																			FOMATPLAY would you take the same decisions today?
																			why? why not?
																			MAGDALENA about the?
																			FOMATPLAY everything, yes. Moving...
																			MAGDALENA on a personal level, in terms of meeting my husband,
																			I would make the decision. On a personal level,
																			in terms of me as a perso,  professionally,I don't think...
																			FOMATPLAY and who are you?
																			could you define yourself using three or four words?
																			MAGDALENA member of my family. I was shaped by my family
																			and I represent the values and the struggles and the
																			bad sides of my family;
																			as well the good sides of my family. um
																			I feel European
																			and I wouldn't like to forget that part of me.
																			and I think that's now
																			a stage in my life that I have to..
																			FOMATPLAY okay, wonderful!
																			thank you Magda
																			for sharing this with us.