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Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta job search. Mostrar todas las entradas

lunes, 27 de mayo de 2013

Fatou’s wanderings



Author: Mariama Badji
Researcher in History of Social Communication
* Series: Stories about skilled immigration and foreign professional women

Shattered from the loneliness and weariness, Fatou was going back home after working as a cleaner for nine hours.  She had been working in a clinic for nine months. This job arrived as a blessing after several months of job-hunting. A friend who she met in the library was the one who found it for her. Even though it had nothing to do with her education and the degrees she had obtained with great sacrifices, it would help her handle her new life.

Today, all that Fatou could think of while opening the door was the silence that would wait for her inside. That frightened her. As soon as she went in, she noticed the incessant tic-tac of the clock. There was no laughter, no bird singing, nor any noise that one would find in a typical happy home. The windows were closed, the curtains were drawn.
               
Not even thinking of it for a second, she walked towards the windows and drew the curtains open in order to gaze at the garden.

It was a sad Saturday in November. Suddenly, she found herself shivering. She warmed up with her jacket, tightening it, and, absentmindedly, she gazed into the mirror and sighed. There was no way back. Back. Her memories are flowing.

She remembered that tall woman. She was always cheerful, with bright eyes, despite her difficulties and challenges, willing to fight for her people. As an assistant in a communication company, she worked in collaboration with important NGOs, as well as politicians and professors of the university in the capital city. She had participated in almost every struggle on gender issues and she had been extremely active in the fight against the genital mutilation, a plague that persists until now in the country regardless of its legal punishment. She cared about the most painful aspects of poverty and helped those people to achieve a more dignified future.

Fatou enjoyed every single achievement and arrived home tired but happy to meet her family – her children’s smiles, her mother’s tender gaze behind a quiet appearance, almost trivial, that camouflages a passionate woman; and her husband’s grumpy tone, worried about his health, encouraging Fatou to carry on. She felt loved by her family, by her neighbours and almost all her surroundings. Because the vast majority of them knew that she fought for freedom and good causes. The casserole’s noise disrupted her reverie.  

She woke up so she wear her pyjama on “wax patchwork” (this is a colorful fabric made in various countries in Africa) fabric. Her grandmother had given it to her as a present as soon as she knew that she was travelling to Spain.
Fatou arrived in Spain three years ago anxious to study, especially to improve her knowledge in the area of Communications. Thanks to her desire for perfection, she managed to surpass numerous boundaries in this alien country.

She adeptly practiced her limited Spanish in a way that allowed her to gain the respect of her peers at university. She had courageously confronted the ignorance of certain people about Africa. She learnt how to enter a pub, how to answer wisely to any sort of cruelty towards her. Yet she especially made really good friends. That prompted a better understanding of Spanish people and above all, facilitated her integration into a society that, at the end of the day, cared little about Africa and African people. Not only was her task to learn but also to show, through literature, poetry, dance and the joy, what Africa really was.  

Fatou, unlike most of her countrymen and countrywomen, used to go out to discover new places. She participated in several events and she had no fear in intervening and sharing her point of view. Because she was lucky to have grown up in an open-minded family, where both her mother’s and grandmother’s advice had always been –“if you have a dream, you need to protect it, keeping always in mind who you are and where you come from. Keep your eyes open to life and give always before asking for anything”. This is the reason why she would always answer to those who asked her why she travelled to Spain – “I came here to discover another reality, but I keep my roots strongly tied to my land”.

Her memories are flowing again. As previously, she was overwhelmed by happiness instead of sadness. Streets full of red sand from her grandfather’s hometown, with all those strong, modest women, and mothers and heads of family with very few rights. Greetings, laughter despite poverty, convinced that “in life, every single good thing comes out of a very little thing that grows afterwards; only misfortunes are born in a big scale”.

On this occasion, a song by “El Barrio” interrupted everything. She loves flamenco. Fatou carried the rhythm in her blood and she loved dancing. She had really liked Spanish music since first encountering it. It was an authentic performance to see her moving with the Andalusian rhythm, which made her younger neighbours laugh. She lied on the bed face up and enjoyed the moment… What else could she do?

Oh! By the way, the day after tomorrow is Monday and Fatou is having an interview in a very important company. She had prepared really well to face this new opportunity.
Determined to fight in order to smile, to defend her choice and to show that she could make it, she was certain that her horizons were newly broadening. Therefore, she decided to hold on to her memories preciously and carry on, since she had already struggled against her traumas, anger and phobias.

A smile floated on her lips, and when she overheard the clock striking midnight, she simply thought that somewhere in the world there was an angel that had approved of her decision.  

Brief career summary
Mariama Badji is researcher in History of Social Communication at the Universidad Complutense in Madrid, where she is doing her PhD. She has already finished her university specialization in Communication and Political Management, Communication and Armed Conflicts. Additionally, she has an active participation in various associations; she is the representative in Madrid. She is member of the International Observatory of Afro Women and she has participated in different conferences about gender, migration and politics.

 

martes, 30 de abril de 2013

Rose's story



Author: Rosario González Salguero
Nationality: Bolivian
Specialist in Preparation and Evaluation of Projects
* Series: Stories about skilled immigration and foreign professional women

When we leave our origin country we think that there are many lucky opportunities waiting for us, which will help us to develop as persons, besides of making economic resources.

This is a real story, almost a novel with some lines of irony, humor and charm; very subtle tricks that we immigrant women use to invent so we can overtake the sadness of being away, far away of our land, our family and our children.

This is Rose's story: When she arrived to Madrid on a hot July, when the sun seems to never rest and day are so long and bright, as the illusions of arrive to a new country looking for challenges and goals. what she did not know was that there was a big difference between arrive as a tourist and living as a worker, but She was determined to pass any barrier, achieve their goals and integrated in old Europe, being an active person in this new country and society.

When Rose went through the door of the employment office she had to hide the title under the arm and instead of showing up her studies and profession, she had to show up her kindness, patience, a little of psychology and a lot of cooking and cleaning skills. This will open the doors to generate her economy, besides of give her a decent life and give support to her distant family.

Rose didn’t hesitate, any place of Spain, any job for women (cleaning, cooking, children care, elderly care), after many years of college, after so many classes and seminaries, she had to choose the iron and dishwasher, besides of accepting the new reality, she didn't have a name on the working house, she was nothing but the maid.

Anyways, she was optimistic and happy, people on the streets were kind, for example: if she ask any direction of places she doesn’t know, a bunch of kind people shows her the way with many details, people were always asking her, where is she from, and she always answered that question explaining that she was only a maid.

Rose lives in Spain five years ago, three of those five years she worked with a family in which there was a disabled five years old boy, with an unknown disease and without diagnostic, he was charming, he didn't speak, he didn't walk, only jump around as a frog, he was extremely restless and naughty, he wasn’t paying attention to the dangers close, so Rose had to be very careful with him, very patience at lunch time, bath time but she really understood him, they were good friends. The disabled boy knew who loves him.

Two years went so fast, and Rosa requested to the family to help her with "the papers", they accepted. Few months later when Rose was finally legal in Spain, the boy's family came up with a radical change, they were asking for nonsense favors, for example: They asked her to take the bad humor at midnight, after Rose took care of their kids all day, gave them the breakfast, lunch and dinner, helped them with school chores, went to the pool with them, eat with them, going to the park with them and being all day very dedicated to their kids. Is it normal to ask for taking care of two extra little girls that live in the neighbor? Rose is a very responsible person; she knows that with three little girls in a pool is a risk for everyone, for them, for Rose and for irresponsible mothers that went on shopping.

Anyway, the conditions changed since the day that the family helped Rosa with the glorious "papers". Rosa disappointed left to Madrid looking for a better destiny. Madrid City is a place with a lot of cultural diversity, an unstoppable activity in every way. There is a place for everyone, genius and no genius. Madrid City is a place that catches the attention of everyone, it generates illusions, imagination, generates art, but at the same time is the capital city with all the problems of a cosmopolitan city and there is the problem of immigration.

How many people like Rose had to pass through the CIES (Internal center for foreigners), how many others got an expulsion letter and they walk with fear on the streets, there are policemen everywhere, uniformed and dress as civilians it doesn't matter if it's day or night, they love making raids late at night, with the time difference between the cities the best time to communicate it's from 10 at night on forward. And the people that are in a very irregular state debate about satisfaction of having some good news from their families, but at the same time with fear of being trapped by the police, for a very common activity like missing family.

For immigrants life in Madrid is hard, the heads of the employee offices think that the working girls are like robots, restless, without feelings and no emotional needs. Give a job contract or pay social security it's their obligation, but they don’t do it, so immigrants have to pay that for themselves.
In the past year, Rosa had experience with elderly of Spain; it's dramatic in every way. Elderly is abandoned in this country, family is bored of them, and so they have two options, the residence for elderly or the immigrant attention.

At this time, Rose arrived to a lost neighbor of Vallecas, for her surprise, most of the people were elder. Rose, besides of accepting her economic conditions and very unfavorable job, past trough very maddening experiences specially with the old woman, in her crazy mind, turns aggressive, refuses to eat, sleep or taking the medicines, and Rose as many other women in her conditions, must search in the psychology bag any persuasive tool to apply on the old woman who's bored of life, because if the old woman is conscious about something, it's about the love absence that her family has on her.

Working with people, children or elders it's decent, but are the conditions decent? Intern jobs with endless schedules, insufficient payment, and if you don’t like it they kick you out, 'cause there are many other immigrants dying for that job.

The illusions are like an alleyway, some of the gained experiences here in Spain are marks of the best laundry products and a mastering title washing dishes; an experience with unpaid jobs.

Go back? That's the main issue that many others ask themselves as Rose, to go back with a broken illusion, no money, no future, no life plan, Rose is not a young girl, and she’s fifty. But this last year immigrants decided to go back.

On February, she filed her application for residence by "rooting", which would allow him permission to live and work in Spain, after six months without response the result is “negative", she doesn’t know why, but the letter didn't arrive yet, in the mean time there's nothing she can do, but she has to survive, make some money.

In Bolivia, Rose's children need money every month for school. She's been almost a year pending the processing of immigration, to try to get a work permit that ultimately fails.

Right now, Rose is a worker women, immigrant, she looks for domestic jobs, she could be decided to work on the bad conditions with no sufficient payment, no security, but with kindness, patience, good at cooking and cleaning skills and washing dishes even to midnight if it's necessary.