FOMATPLAY okay. So thank you Viktoriya for being here.
We're happy to interview you.
The first question I want to ask you is
to tell us about your journey.
So, what brought you here?
VIKTORIYA uh well...
I'm originally was originally... I was born in Russia,
in the south of Russia, in Bromwich. Then I did one
one exchange in America.
After this
moved to Moscow because it was, like,
more prestigious and everything. And after studying,
like, I always knew after America that I would emigrate
and in knew that it would probably be Europe so... because the political context
in Russia was really unstable
and I was working as a journalist for many years; actually and in
I understood that it was getting too dangerous.
So I was, like, torn in between wanting to, like,
stay and keep going forward with these
and agreeing that this is going to be my whole life or
trying to find some other more human way to exist.
So after that, I
quit journalism. I went to cultural management,
cultural production
and I worked in British and American embassies
in a cultural production.
And even our culture
when it started getting canceled for political reasons-;
so, that's when I understood that I needed to migrate.
First I moved to Greece for a bit.
Then, from Greece, after some time,
I arrived to Naples with my friend
and I decided to stay here.
So I came back to Russia,
studied Italian in, like, seven months together.
To get the paperwork needed; because it was
the easiest way to transfer, as a Russian was-; well,
apart from,
I guess, getting committed to each... was not really...
I don't think it was a great way.
So, I wanted to do it through the academic field
so I applied to studying in university
fo the things that I had already been working
for many years for the cultural management.
And that's how I went to Naples.
That's how I used to Italy.
FOMATPLAY Why did you opt for Europe
instead of, for instance, the States?
VIKTORIYA well um...
Actually when I left the States
I even took the ACTs
I couldn enroll into university
and I had really high score. But culturally America didn't seem-;
like, it didn't seem like as a match to me because,
I guess, from outside of Europe
it looks like Europe has stronger humanistic values,
protecting the minorities,
that it's all about the human, importance of human life.
So, yeah, so I wanted to move to Europe because of this.
In Russia I was really torn at what I was seeing politically and in terms of discrimination against the firends, against the colleagues. So, to me, it seemed that Europe was a sure way-;
obviously, when you compare to something really bad...
So, yeah. That's why it was Europe.
FOMATPLAY where your expectations met or not really
when you can came here?
VIKTORIYA um...
yes and no, I think. I mean,
we do tend to idealize what... I think also in America
I understood that
we idealize America and what... while I was living there. So I wouldn't say that I was idealizing a lot of things before moving to Europe. But I think the main
part for me was feeling safe,
like physically safe. And this for sure is a big thing;
like I feel this on a daily basis.
Like, I'm not afraid of police, it's a big thing,
but I also understand that my experience in Europe is really priviledged considering that I am white, european-looking. Because when I go to [Ufficio Immigrazione] to take the [permesso]
and I am in line with
people from Africa, people from other countries,
I really see the huge difference,
even in how the workers act
the me and with people who stand next to me.
so I understand that it's really...
the experience
might be a bit more positive because of how I look.
FOMATPLAY can you tell us more about this aspect?
VIKTORIYA well, it's actually a really interesting aspect,
I think. Because being a slavic woman
you also end up being objectified a lot,
in this sense. Because there is stereotype that a slavic woman is a trophee wife
or, like, the glorified escort or whatever.
So, there's also a downside to it because once you move,
for example, try to um...
grow somehow in the professional field in Italy,
especially,
even if you have a lot of experience
you will still be seen as like pretty Russian girl,
mostly. Like you are less likely to be considered serious,
I would say.
um...
which also brings to like why when you go to the police
or, I don't know, any kind of immigration officers they are more open to you, I would say,
because... especially, obviously, the male staff
like the way to um..
you know?
pass without waiting in line or there
and they see it happen..
so it's like also for others. For example,
also both Ukrainian and
Russian girls that would send to in line. So
you understand that this is a privilege
but you understand that there's any... like
it really is not such a great privilege
because it also goes with the people
not really seeing you for, like, a human
because it's still objectifying in some sense.
FOMATPLAY and did you ever had to face any bureaucratic obstacle-;
obstacles while being in Europe or in the States?
VIKTORIYA Yeah, I mean, a lot.
Well I obviously don't have a lot to compare with
considered
that I've never been born in another country.
But for sure when I was about to move to Europe
my decision on what migration path
I pick... and it was, once again,
it was conscious decision.
When I was choosing to move to Europe
it wasn't like okay
I go, maybe have some fun experience for two years
then I come back.
It was for me, like, an official decision that ...okay,
I'm migrating right now, obviously,
and I'm migrating for political reasons
and for reasons that are yet not
um... confirmed by other countries.
Because it was all before the war
and it has all been happening for a really,
really long time in Russia.
That it would come to something bad is just...
Once you wouldn't move out outside of Russia
and you would come to Europe
also with this expectation, like,
okay, I've been going to protests my whole life.
I have a lot of colleagues,
you know? in jail.
I have a lot of friends that are under house arrest
and then you come to Europe and they're like
are you from Russia, it's like
Putin is awesome, you were doing great.
And it's really like um...
you kind of..
it's like you ran away from an aggressor, from abuse and then you hear people saying he's like a good guy, you know? It's an awful thing to say but I don't want war to happen.
A lot of people in Russia wow if people saw him for what he is.
it took years,
you know? for leaving migration hearing this. That
you know? that we come from a great country, I would say. So...
So, yeah, obviously
bureaucracy to me it's not easy to do
because there is a lot more paper work than it will be
if I would come, let's say from, America, for example. Or from Eastern Eruope. So there are a lot of programs,
grounds that to Russians,
requirements of the financial side
to prove that you have enough finances fo this.
So yeah that was actually... I think that
when I just did it, like, seven years ago
it was really hard to get all of this.
Because there was no open information. whatsoever,
about the amount of paperwork.
So I've been gathering of the documents for almost
a year before moving.
Then until the very last moment
I still didn't know if it would work
or if it would be enough because you never know.
Also here's where Italian bureaucracy, let's say,
so you never know if it's gonna be enough. So yeah, it was hard and
because I was on student
residence for almost six years.
It was actually....
Do I had to renew the residence every year, the [permesso].
So... and so it's kind of towards service,
you send out all the paperwork for the [permesso]
and... according to the law,
it's supposed to take one month
and after they give it to you.
But, obviously, it takes like seven months,
eight months. So, by the time they give you out
the receipt that is supposed to work for a year
but obviously turns out in the next 3-
4 months,
you are
already supposed to restart all the process again the
next 2 months. So
you actually have
2 months of being able to travel around European Union or get
any kind of advantage that comes with you being
European resident. So that was, I think, the hardest part.
I was always really mobile
around Europe before moving here
because of... I had open visas and everything.
But now with all the paperwork,
I think ,in the last six months
I've traveled only once around Europe.
So now... and it's funny. Because once you move
you think wow!
it's Europe with open borders,
you know?
and everything but in the end
you're just stuck in this loop over and over.
FOMATPLAY but because of your Russian passport?
VIKTORIYA because of, No. because of the paperwork that comes when,
for example, if you want to be a student.
Now with a Russian passport...
Actually, I changed not so long ago to...
I got the partnership [permesso]. It's actually the thing that was common for
same gender couples and yeah.
They changed the law two years ago
so actually now the
be immigrants also can do this. And so I did this;
so technically you get like a family residence without
having to get married,
whatever. And this made everything a bit easier.
But there was also the paperwork removed
and was this thing that...
like, now obviously with the political situation,
for example, I cannot come back to Russia
because I used to be a journalist and
then they were like hmm... how do you call it?
like the government and the
secret services were harassing my family also...
so we kind of decided that it wouldn't be
the safest option.
so for this I haven't been there for some time. When I went to change the [permesso] to the family one,
my passport was supposed to run out in like
8 months or so. So according to the Italian law,
I sent out the documents just in time by the norms
but because of the state of bureaucracy goes longer,
it went on longer than expected.
So
we arrived to this point where we come to the office
and they're like okay
your passport turns out in months;
because they kept
rescheduling the date where I'm supposed to meet them,
and now we cannot do anything.
So you either have to go to the embassy-;
and in the embassy, the Russian embassy has the...
they need to register to do something with your passport,
like six months in advance.
sometimes a year because of the sanctions.
They sent out a lot of figures out and
the period has also completely changed.
So, this was not an option
because once I would get
the passport through the embassy then it would be...
once I will get the passport
but the thing that's the [questura] needed,
I wouldn't be able to register for permits
so they were like well
go to Russia and then... To Russia
we cannot go because of this and they're like
well, we cannot do anything. And
that's... like the whole point actually
I think that's what you
there's no... for now
there's no representation in Europe of Russian that,
for example,
ran away or for people who are safe to come back because...
uh we cannot solve the documental staff really easily,
we cannot enter the country... like we can,
but there's not a risk and u...h
there are no
representative offices of oppositional Russia,
for example, in Italy. So for now
you have to search for like long ways around.
In the future, possibly, I don't know,
there might be some groups that
are taking care of these
because there's someone to talk
about creating some kind um...
like, for example in Belarus,
because they have a different situation
where they have a president that uh...
is illegitimate, for example, in Europe.
So, they have no offices of
the public figure that is considered legitimate.
So, for example, if you're an oppositioner from Belarus
you can go to the
this office that is in each European capital in um...
with Russian one, it doesn't exist yet.
I don't know. Maybe it will be in the future.
So right now,
almost two years after the war has started,
there still this problem and it's,
I think, it really reflects what,
what I was talking about before.
That it also reflects how in Europe
for many years
there was this kind of flirtation with Putin
because we are two years after the war and still
we kind of don't confirm the rights for,
you know? people who run away to exist, so...
FOMATPLAY Are you able to apply for political asylum if you wanted to?
VIKTORIYA well...
it was my conscious decision not to. Long time ago. Well,
first of all, because I moved long time ago. Second
because,
obviously, there are frustrations that come with this
because if you need to come back really urgently
you cannot.
to Russia, obviously.
Because you're waiting... because it is political asylum.
Third and it's a funny thing that
a lot of Russian journalists, actually, say the same.
I think that someone might need it more than me
and it's a paradox because I've seen a lot of
Russians in Italy,
for example, that never went to protest in Russia.
They would move to Italy,
start going to anti Putin protests here
and they would apply for political asylum.
And here there are the journalists and the political actvists
who say no,
like,
I'm sure there's gonna be someone that needs it more,
you know? so um...
no, it was a conscious choice
because I didn't want to create extra problems if something could happen back in Russia and I would have
fly back. But also
I didn't wanna leave all this victim card, you know?
I'm... like I took, I.. uh
moved many years in advance
so I took many years going to grade here
so I want wanted to get residence
here as person who has already integrated and not,
you know?
FOMATPLAY Are you also planning to apply for citizenship once..?
VIKTORIYA yeah.
FOMATPLAY and would you have to give up your Russian citizenship or?
VIKTORIYA no,
well...
for now in Russia you can have two citizenship.
We don't know what's gonna happen in the future
but I can have it all for now.
FOMATPLAY okay. Going back to what you were saying about this
safety in Europe.
Well, what else are you experiencing while being here?
the positive side but also the negative?
VIKTORIYA yeah, well.
I think the positive side is...
even if I see-; even if I meet people who are racist
really being bigots in some sense-;
I don't know how politically correct this say-;
it is to say this. Or who,
like, who are being pretty discriminative.
I feel like the whole, compared to Russia,
at least to me,
or at least I had this feeling the first few years
because Italy
has changed a lot in the last seven years here;
before I had this feeling that even though you might be
racist for anti LGBT, for example, you
hmm...
like... there is this air that it's not really approved of
if people say it out loud,
at least compared to Russia
I had this feeling
that there's way more disapproval on this side.
So um...
I liked that feeding that at least people know that if they want to judge something it is wrong.
Like they're not in the place
or that they might come off as less educated
if they say this thing aloud.
I do think that political signals has changed
and now people
may be more free to say really scary things.
This I noticed. So...
But before the attack, I had this feeling that at least,
for example, with politicians
having extramarital affair,
they are noticed in corruption,
they noticed in harassment cases. They, at least have to respond. They can't just brush it off or ignore it
There is this procedure that needs to be respected,
connected to public opinion in some way.
This is also the dynamics
which for Russia would be weird.
Because we were doing so many investigations in....
journalists like...
you just feed them out into the public
and then public creates...
but there's no reaction, whatsoever,
obviously, from the government or politicians.
All this being said, it's,
it's interesting to notice this, about sometimes...
we saw political changes, also in Europe, like...
for example,
with Italy becoming more conservative politically.
Sometimes you ask if it's really
that much of a difference.
Because the difference is like still
more public reputational, I would say.
So it's more the difference of an impression, so...
FOMATPLAY besides being objectified,
have you ever experienced some other
kind of discrimination or hostility
when you arrived or even now
in everyday life?
VIKTORIYA well, first of all I think
it's both uh....
like, there's an upside and downside to it,
but I don't really look Russian.
People most of the time, especially the ones here,
they think that I just come from northern Italy.
Maybe sometimes Spain, France, whatever. Uh so they,
they wanna; they, they feel something they have some...
they cannot quite put their mind to it.
So.... but obviously they ask where you from.
So you answer and there's always this dynamic,
this like,
this whole coming back to identity because obviously I,
I used to,
even before the war, not really like the question
where are you from? because it's hard for me-
Like I have the Russian citizenship.
I grew up there but I also lived in America.
I also lived in other countries. I've...
I wouldn't say
that my experience is really typically Russian
so it's always like
you don't always wanna answer this question.
To be put in a box that you need to be put in a box but you need to be put in a box.
So um...
No, I think um...
hmm I think the first few years it wasn't well...
the objectification was there,
people getting excited that you're from Russia
and saying wow
communism is awesome,
you know? that was also... so like,
I would say, projecting the political scene on you.
Because, like,
if you come from the country that has this huge trauma of communism that actually has never
worked through and that's why the worst is also happening.
Even a part of this conversation, you knwo?
This is also completely different. But big topic about this, I'd say, um...
the last few years, for sure.
the bank account now. It's kind of
it's not prohibited officially
but there are a lot of uh.. internal documents
that prohibit opening accounts for Russians
so..
there's a group of international activists that
ran away from Russia and we
have centers in different countries,
that try to come up with ways to integrate.
Because, for example,
this thing that you cannot open a bank account in Italy
it's actually against the anti-discriminative laws
so that's why there's no official circulation
about it. And.. SO they won't tell
you be straight to your face
and we'll just say that we cannot,
the system doesn't let us. So, obviously,
it creates a lot of extra steps for months for you
when you have to connect with anti
discrimination association.
Then the bank start calling you back. You have to gather all the,
you know? documents to prove
um... because they say Russians are under sanctions.
But there are certain Russians that are the sanctions.
Oligarcs, politicians, not like
you know? students that run away.
so um...
for example,
this is one of the things that's extremely common.
FOMATPLAY okay, so
you would maybe label these as administrative
hostility or..?
VIKTORIYA yeah, I would say that
it's... I don't know, it's weird
because I can't understand if it's because
Italy has a lot of ties with Russian culture somehow or
it all gets really distorted.
So, for example, when the work has started
it was me and actually my friend
who was also a former journalist.
He had already moved away from Naples.
We were the first ones to
organize ther anti war protests in Naples
and which, together with our Russian friends
and also Ukrainian friends who wanted to come. So we started the protests next to the [Consolato russo] in Naples
and then we organized a group that was helping the
refugees,
the Ukranian refugees that were coming to Naples.
so um...
during the protests there were also, obviously,
because the Ukrainian anti war protests are growing,
growing, growing and
the Russians not as many in Naples.
So I would go to the protest and
there would be a small group of Russians doing that
or protesting, in the part of a Ukranian,
Ukrainian protest.
And it would always be an interesting dynamics
because sometimes
it would be nice and they would say like
you know? it's not your fault.
We're not against, we are sympathetic.
And then they would start saying something like
but we also know that Putin had no other choice
and all this. So it was like, some,
like, the time you grow to be really aware of support
you kind of grow. Even to push the support away
because you're afraid of all this thing
that will come after the battle,
you know? so um...
we had, in the protest group had some cases. The car that one guy brought from Russia would get destroyed, for example. But this...
you would never know if it was made by Neapolitans or
by some more ethical Ukranians.
Because it's also justified that,
you know? they had a lot of frustration obviously.
So...
you know? we never took it to the police or anything
so there would be dynamics like these.
Um... I think,
I think it was hard;
probably only the first year of the war
because I felt that a lot of
Italians that were supporting Putin up to the point
they kind of felt now that they would be marginalized
too much to support out loud.
So they would as aggressively start saying about how Russians are all terrorits and alll of that. So, for example, as a Russian, I would hear
at parties and most of the times it would be from,
you know? Neapolitans, for example,
that hadn't finished university yet or,
you know? that have not really evolved in the social life.
so it would be, like, just...
you would say really ignorant thing to look smart
and this would be also the dynamics,
sometimes. I would meet even the realtives of my partners, considering they have known me for
many years. So um... I would say that, yeah,
like for the first year
it was just really unstable and people just, you know?
let it go. so...
FOMATPLAY and how do you think the situation is now?
has it improved?
VIKTORIYA I don't think it's improved.
I think I got used to it a little bit more. I think people, usually uneducated people, who are eager to talk about, you know? That there is a whole nation of terrorists. They also want to change
topic because ususallly those are people who don't know the context really well so, you know?
obviously they don't talk about those things anymore.
So, yeah. I think administratively it hasn't changed.
I think that until there's some kind of uh representation,
um... it's not gonna get easier. I think it's gonna get
worse for now, yeah.
FOMATPLAY why so?
VIKTORIYA um well...
first, for sure,
because the war is gonna be going on for a long time.
Then, if... whatever happens to Putin,
it's not gonna get better, for sure, straight away.
I think it's gonna get worse.
But we are already talking about
the levels of collapse of the Soviet Union or, you know?
it's just gonna be something that's gonna take years.
it's gonna take it. And I think also...
I know, I feel there's still.. Europe hasn't
made up how much they can help Ukraine
so it is... like it keeps dragging on.
So, like they keep sanctioning a lot of...
they keep penalizing a lot of people that run away. But they are not being stern enough with the
people that have the power and the money in the war,
the oligarchs, the politicians.
Like for them the door is still open.
So it keeps going on for a long time
and I really feel like many,
that many European political parties use this
Russia-Ukraine question to their advantage in the elections. So I, working as a journalist I met...
it was actually part of
my material that I still haven't published.
That there are actually a lot
of ties between some artists in Italy or in France to.. pro Putin movement in Russia so..
like, it still, somehow, exists after two years of the war.
so yeah...
and it's just really scary that it's acceptable
and that's why I think it's just not gonna be a fast decision.
FOMATPLAY okay, and maybe going back to the notion of identity,
you mentioned something there.
Can you maybe tell us
how you feel in terms of your personal
national identity?
VIKTORIYA oh um...
this
is also like a bigger talk
that got even bigger because of the war.
Because now. Like Russia...
there's not fully ethnicity which is called Russia,
you know?
Russia is a really big country and has like um...
over a hundred of ethnicities.
So many Russians call themselves Russians.
They actually do so because they're
[cittadini], citizens of Russia
and not because they ethnically Russians.
My whole life I have been identified as Russian.
It was just something that came automatically
because you are born there.
I never...
to you know,
the point of moving to Europe
would not think about what it means because
you're just white skinned and you're Russian
if you were born in Russia. But also because, for example, I come from the Southern part which is not far from Ukraine.
It was common in the area, but in general
it was common in a,
like, normal store of Russia to, kind of, hide your roots
to stay safe. So um...
for example, I don't even know my [bisnonni].
I don't even know my great-grandparents. I don't even know where they are from. I don't know their nationality.
I understand Ukrainian,
I know all of my grandparents understood Ukrainian,
but it doesn't mean they were Ukranians.
So, this is actually
the thing that's really important to understand
about Russian identity. There's no, there's no identity.
It's there because you grew up there
and it was made, like, this historically.
Because it was just artificially created.
Families requires an identity on purpose
so... um... actually my father, just a year before he passed,
he started going around
searching different archives in different cities;
historical archives.
And that's what's really common in Russia now,
especially in the anti-Putin movement. Is that people go
to look for their family history in historical archives
and different cities
to understand what their roots actually are.
My mom did the DNA test a few years ago
and they did it for fun.
The DNA test is like 70% Slavic
and they, used this umbrella of Slavicness
like Ukrainian, Belorussian,
Russian; like all the republics.
And then after the war started.
So obviously
because the question of identity became more...
brought out of hurt with it. Became more painful so they started dealing with the data.
She checked out again and it was written like
out of the 70% slavic,
67% was, like, central Ukraine. So...
I don't know. I guess once the war is over
we need to search for the archives in there so um...
so yeah, I've been,
I have identified myself as Russian my whole life
but it also has been because historically
it was just made. So...
you're Russian because you were born in Russia.
I think... that's... probably if you ask me this question
even in two years my answer may be different
not because I don't wanna be Russian
but because we were just brought up not to know the
tones to identity.
Because the government was really afraid of,
like, movements so...
it was... like,
this whole topic of the identity was pressed onto
through all the time.
FOMATPLAY and do you also feel you have a Neapolitan,
Italian slash European identity or?
VIKTORIYA I think I surely have a stronger Neapolitan identity.
No, it's actually funny because I was always,
I was always more concentrated on Spain.
I was studying Spanish at university
and I always thought that if I would move to Europe
it would be Spain. And then, when I came to Naples
was completely by chance.
So I was living in Greece and I had some
Neapolitan friends in there
and one of them decided go see his family.
and because he was afraid to fly,
he decided to go with Vespa from Greece.
So, we came here together with a Vespa from Greece in a week
and I was always really judgy towards Italy
because the people that I met in Russia,
they are very into Italy. Those were like...
glorifying the concept of northen Italy
like expensive cars, expensive fashion, these kind of
consumerism way of looking at Italy.
Or more, like, beautiful men and beautiful fashion week.
So it was like.. to me,
it's always seemed to be superficial;
well, also are.. it's not superficial
but it was always portrayed in the really
consumerist way by people that like Italy.
so I was never really interested.
And then, when I came to Naples,
I was really mesmerized and I said okay
I want to live here.
it wasn't, like, living in Italy, I wanted to live in Naples.
So...
In Russia I started to work really fast
to be able to enroll into university
and I think, yeah, I think um...
um it has influenced me a lot.
I also lived in the northern Italy for over 2 years,
two and half.
I lived under Bologna, in Modena, a small town.
It was really,
not really encouraging experience for a foreigner.
Actually, also, especially for a Russian
because I think they're in a small city.
There's Russian girls, for sure.
you know?
There are housewives that moved after an Italian guy or something. So,
yeah. Actually in 2 years and half
I don't think I managed to find Italian friends,
or other natives.
Like, that really didn't work for me.
So I think Naples has brought
way more things to my identity than northen Italy.
FOMATPLAY and what
were you mesmerized about when you arrived in Naples?
VIKTORIYA well the openness of people.
I think the sense of community is really strong. I think... unfortunately in many
marginalized areas it's really common uh...
because when I talk to my Russian friends that moved to,
let's say,
Rio De Janeiro or to Glasgow in Scotland,
they also say like
those areas that are considered really,
you know? scary,
dangerous. And yet
you come and you find the friendliest people there.
That's like... they may not have a lot
but they are always ready to help you out with something.
After moving to Naples
I started understanding that I am more southern Russian,
myself, than just Russian.
Because I really understood.
He brought up a lot of southern things as well.
So, yeah, I think that was actually the first thing why
I decided to move. Is the people.
Because I didn't see this openness anywhere else
in Italy. I didn't notice it. Well,
higher in Italy, I would say. So...
that's also-; back then,
as for journalist or cultural producer
that works always with people
to me that was really important.
FOMATPLAY hmm...
and
is there anything that you cannot really put up with
in Naples? or something that you don't like?
something that..?
VIKTORIYA I think.
Well, I think in Italian culture, in general,
but I think in Naples it's even more exaggerated
and that's why sometimes I'm not sure if I'm
the right fit to work here
if I'm more.. if I would like to work more in an international country.
I see more sexism than there is in Russia.
in the work environments, for sure.
And I think those are the things that really depend on one another. So
family boundaries and ageism.
I
really...
the thing that I cannot put up with is
why 30 year olds are seen as kids?
why they're also seen as kids in the professional area?
like, you know,
in the work area, for example.
Because in Russia, I mean,
you start working already from the third year of
university if you're doing the [specialistica].
So, I think, from your twenties you are already working. Frist part-time, the 21 is already full-time already. So, by 30 you
already have a career.
I understand that you will expect to die at 16...
so you can die, you know?
time schedule there... but,
yeah. I think that's...
and it's really like the question of chicken on the egg
because I think that in many situations in Italy
it's really blamed on the young generation. You know? They don't want to do anything. But at the same time
I also feel the young generation-;
I saw it for myself, you know?
Like I was...
I also had this idealization of my experience;
like, I'm a person with really rich professional backgorund, I moved to Italy,
you know? I found a job in here.
I would go to job interviews in another-; northen Italy,
for example,
and I will have already 10 years of experience
by the time and they will all try to tell me "look,
you have an experience of a 40,
45 year old person we cannot take you on this position
because people won't understand"
you know? and you feel like you came here to develop
and at the same
time you have to sit it out for the next four
five 10 years to wait
so that
your age looks more appropriate on the resume
because it's not...
because your experience is already there.
You know? so I
felt, for sure... we often,
when we would do the university projects I would go to...
museums owners, for example.
People that work in culture, work with art. and you know?
I would do it from the position of students
but with the background of already... like,
six years working in art and culture.
So I already knew the practical side of it
and I would call and I will see how they answer to me
thinking that I am a student.
We were supposed to do a project where we would um... invite different museum owners, to collaborate
and I would get a lot of answers like "why would I do it?"
like "how can you be useful to me like the students?"
it's... like... because we're famous, we're really big.
Do you understand that you're talking to the owner of,
I don't know, of the archaeological park that is like...
I don't know, took some awards two years ago.
And I come listening to this and I'm thinking "you
really don't know that you're actually
talking to a person that has been organizing
huge festivals. Bigger than usual in this part". So, it was really interesting to see how
me-; like how many..
uh.. how to say it in the right way without hurting?
So how many things, actually,
the students or the young people face,
you know?
how many things that they have to ignore. The people say- tell them in all this professional fields
while they're not... like while actually
they are gate kept from this field on purpose, you know?
At the same time I really feel that um...
you are not emotionally separated from your family step by step.
I feel that it also... I have seen many examples around. Some people that don't want to search for a job at 30 years old.
Or they don't want to take on too much responsibility,
so... and I understand that, maybe,
you know? those people also
may seem like they represent the of our generation,
in some sense, when the generation is being criticized.
Like this whole concept that,
you know? Kids do no wrong. Kids cannot do wrong. The norms of when you are supposed to move away from your parents; the norms of
when you are with your partner; when you are supposed to have a job. so all of this is really different
because the family ties are really strong also.
And I don't know
if this is much of an influence to this ageism
that 30 year olds are seen as kids
when they're not. It's like
are they being made kids, you know?
by the
fact that there are no,
not a lot of work opportunities for them?
or is it because,
you know?
parents in their 60s don't want to feel emptiness
even though they are actually supposed to let go.
it's like a really big dynamic that... I mean,
I still haven't made my mind about it and I'm not sure.
I'm not sure I'll be able to make my mind
anyway. um...
FOMATPLAY okay something different, maybe, regarding your um...
experiences of mobility around Europe
or around the globe.
Since you've experienced different things,
different contexts, can you tell us something about this?
and also in relation to Brexit?
if you if that has impacted you as an historical moment?
VIKTORIYA hmm...
Well, I would say the Brexit
probably to me was more of an impact
because I used to work in the British Council.
The Twitter
became a department of British embassy in Russia
before we got closed by Russian government because of...
as an answer to British sanctions.
So it did influence me
because it was like close to my heart.
The whole, you know'
the whole area, in general.
the whole culture.
I think that
in Italy it
maybe didn't necessarily influence me directly
but I think that it did create some president...
where countries... like
where also different areas
in different countries
started seeing this as a possibility.
because, I think, that the talks about
being safe outside of European context;
thes talks became way more common and I think that's
um... it was kind of a sign of a legal divide.
And I think that now all the conflicts happening;
not just, you know? Russia
Ukraine but also with Palestine and the Israel.
Many other-; completely different topics.
Even in terms of discrimination
I think that
this whole idea that we don't wanna be part of Europe
or we don't wanna be part of Italy,
you know? uh...
it became even more,
you know?
encouraged, somehow, in
talks, you know? about what's happening.
I...
well, to be fair,
even before the Brexit, Russian would,
Russians would need a different visa to enter Britain.
European, like Shengen,
European visa would not work for us.
I should say that in this sense
I don't see a big change. It's more that Europeans
got a step closer to the Russian experience, in this sense.
But obviously, now, for Russians
it's even harder to get the British visa,
to enter London
I guess.
There are some extra steps in paperwork in this sense
but
in terms of mobility around European Union,
I would say that
it does mesmerize me how
this whole effect that you can move
and work in another country without having to, you know?
do a lot of paperwork for taxes in your country.
Like... to me
this is just something unreal.
And to me it's unreal
that many people take it for granted.
Because very often uh...
especially the first years,
when I just moved from Russia,
many people will be like oh
I'm gonna go visit Russia. Wait you need the passport to do this!
but for this you need the visa!
why do you need to do all those things?
so, obviousl,y this would be just the people that,
you know?
travel all around to Europe with a driver's license,
somehow, and it is just...
it was so weird to me that this a
thing that is a normality
but also that times brings to some kind of
beurocratic confrontism. more so because you're used-;
not you, but people, when they say, you
understand that they see it
because they got so used to this European ability
that they traveled only around Europe, let's say.
When you come especially from an Asian country,
you know?
this really seems like progress of humanity, somehow.
and it does seem like this.
But with the whole conflict happening,
I don't know if it works. I don't know... like,
I don't know if it works as an idea,
if... like, I moved thinking that,
you know?
Europe is this big territory that is protecting the dignity of being human. And then from inside of Europe
you look at what is happening on the outside,
in being part of the outside.
When you're being inside the European Union
and see everything happening in the world
um like...
being inside the European Union
and knowing what's really like,
for example, happening in Russia um..
you um sometimes start feeling that this big territory that was all about the
dignity of humans,
helping out democracy or equal opportunities uh..
whilst being a part of another country,
into another culture
that actually started the aggression in the conflict. You start questioning if it is really true. Or to which extent it is true.
Because you understand that there are diplomatic boundaries, in some sense. But also priviledges that has sometimes...
you stopped wondering if they are happening
because
the other countries are on the outside,
you know?
so if it's, like, the system that reproduces itself
and if the system is an idea with everything happening
in the world, is it able to solve those things?
that won't to solve those things, you know?
FOMATPLAY yes.
Something, maybe ,about your language learning path.
So how has it been, for instance,
with Italian or other languages that you have learned?
VIKTORIYA well, Initially, obviously before I moved to Europe,
I already knew English really well.
By Russian standards that was... really,
really well because that's why I had the
grant where I lived in America for one year.
And I've been also studying Spanish and German before I
decided to move to Europe.
So I already had this background of understanding
how languages work.
So, when I decided to move to Italy
I was studyingcompletely by myself um..
because I was in tight schedules,
I didn't have a lot of money for the tutor
and I studied it by myself up to level B1
so that I could enroll to university.
The first... um, well...
the first year was for sure really hard
because I'm not... like, I was going to the course
that was fully in Italian, with Italian students and um...
it just... it was hard to-; not just even credit for exams
but it was hard just to navigate
the system in the university because there were no
foreign students, support department like,
you know... I would just start going to lectures and that's all.
It was expected that I know how exams work,
I know how
registration and [segreteria] works.
Like... I didn't know any of this
because its system is completely different from Russia,
is completely different from America, when
I stayed in America so...
I think the worst part in language was not
just studying, but actually the whole fact that
no one understands it. You really need a lot of time
to understand the structure of how daily things work.
A lot of problems. For example, if you study technical sciences like algebra, mathematics,
um... even the way
you write down equations sometimes may be be different.
I mean, I already saw it in America
that it was a bit different
how you mark some, you know? things in different languages.
So that was hard um...
I... also it was especially difficult
because Neapolitan language goes into the scene
straight away. It feels completely different at first.
And the first two years
I was living in Forcella, within the area that's...
is speaking mostly Neapolitan,
not in Italian.
So I had to study this as well. And I should say that,
well, it got resolved kind of by itself
because...
well, I was pushing myself really hard to learn Italian.
I had this rule that I would
never ever speak English to Italians.
So if I'm not able to explain myself in Italian
I'm not able to explain myself.
This really helped me
because some of my Russian friends that moved here,
like, the same amount of time ago that I did,
but they moved to their partners, let's say. For example
they... some of them still don't speak Italian much
because they would talk to Russians,
not Italians. So this was a really harsh rule but it helped.
um... I did start now after 7 years,
I'm trying to get the CILS certificate.
it's the International Università di Siena certificate. Of C2
level. Just so that they have it because... I actually with
my Italian...
whilst most of the Italians I met on a daily basis
they are very encouraging, they are very supportive of how
I speak, that my mistakes not that bad.
But in the professional field
as a woman and a foreigner with a big experience,
I was actually nullied for my Italian by my own colleagues. So I
thought, when I was working in journalism. I straight away
knew that it was because they were intimidated
that I have a lot of experience,
international experience compared to them.
So I actually was in a lot of situations, for example,
at the work meetings I start speaking in Italian and I would
get interrupted over and over, like no.
here you put the-; here you put this and here you put it.
So it was more like
kind of trying to bring you down
so that you cannot bring your idea to its point
because they were scared that maybe I would
get promoted.
I once
applied to a job,
also, in some really famous agency in Naples
and then I found out that
the guy that was interviewing for the job was actually,
like, a common friend.
When he found out that I was applying for a team...
he saw the CV, he saw
that I had a lot of experience compared to him.
And the job was actually the native English speaker,
or the fluency in English.
Because you're supposed to work in English
and he said yeah, yeah,
but I don't think we can accept you because you're not
native Italian speaker.
it was actually just because-; later on he told me, like,
it's somebody that, well, you know?
but I'm gonna take personal as the one who has
more experience than the one who
is doing the interviews,
but I just decided to get this certificate,
you know? to stop talks like this because
this is something that is really common in these
progressive agencies in Naples that say that they have international clients
and
like a person with international experience counts
and they are really scared
because you can take their place.
I don't know why it's happening so.
FOMATPLAY really interesting.
okay. I'm gonna ask you now like a set of questions.
You can answer with a brief answer.
okay, so define freedom of movement in one sentence.
VIKTORIYA like if it's high or not to me in Europe?
FOMATPLAY Yeah, like I said as you perceive it,
as you feel it. As you have experienced it so far.
VIKTORIYA I think it's pretty high, yeah.
FOMATPLAY okay. And how would you sum up your
freedom of movement experience,
or your mobility experiences across the EU so far?
VIKTORIYA I... considering that before I had the student residence,
which was.. created a lot of problems with bureaucratic work.
I would say that it's lower than normal, for sure.
FOMATPLAY okay.
how would you feel if your freedom of movement
was revoked?
VIKTORIYA hmm...
but revoked and I would stay in Italy or?
I think they were too terrified, yes. I would feel really scared to .
FOMATPLAY where's home and where do you feel you belong?
VIKTORIYA that's really-; that's really a painful question. I think it's Naples, yeah.
I went to Russia. Last time I was-;
when I went was three years ago. It was during the second wave of Covid and...
well, it was a big shock for me to be in Russia
and how Covid was perceived. And I think after that trip,
I kind of fully accepted that it's
not my home there anymore.
FOMATPLAY what do you... how do you feel in your host country,
that is Italy?
VIKTORIYA comfortable in general, yeah.
FOMATPLAY And what do you miss the most about Russia?
VIKTORIYA my family and understanding that
I grew up there.
FOMATPLAY and would you take the same decisions today? why? why not?
VIKTORIYA to move?
hmm... I think uh...
I would do it a bit earlier, for sure.
uh...
but for the rest, yeah, I would take the same decisions of
studying for... either through work if there will be the possibility here. But that would not be because all Europeans are
moving from outside of Europe for positions.
So, yeah,
I think I would just change the time frame to do it.
even before.
FOMATPLAY okay.
who are you and could you define yourself
using three or four words?
VIKTORIYA oh.
haha.
um... well.
I am...
for sure, an immigrant.
I don't define myself an expat because...
yeah, I'm for sure an immigrant.
Caucasian, as a race. Because I come from Russia.
Still my ethnicity...
you know? brought me a lot of privilege
that helped me to create it here.
Russian and.... this, as I said, would be very hard. Not because
I'm proud of my citizenship,
but because I think that
it's part of collective responsibility
that Russians, that grow up in Russia,
especially in , let's say,
that they are Russians originally. So it was immigrant, Caucasian, Russian
but of course Neapolitan, I would say.
FOMATPLAY Ok, wonderful! thank you Viktoriya for your time