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Related: About this forum'It Does Not Justify It': Peace Corps Guidance for Black Volunteers In Ukraine Causes a Stir
It Does Not Justify It: Peace Corps Guidance for Black Volunteers In Ukraine Causes a Stir After Being Exposed on Twitter
Nyamekye Daniel
Tue, April 5, 2022, 9:11 AM
Some corners of social media are in an uproar over the U.S. Peace Corps guidance on handling racism in Ukraine.
Peace Corps positions in Ukraine are currently not open, but Black Peace Corps volunteers who applied were warned to be prepared to be called the N-word and face other racist behavior while in Ukraine, according guidance on the Peace Corps website that is currently being discussed on social media.
The U.S. Peace Corps warns volunteers in Ukraine about racism. (Screenshot/UATV English)
The U.S. Peace Corps warns volunteers in Ukraine about racism. (Screenshot/UATV English)
The warning, which includes personal accounts from volunteers, calls for having thick skin and an understanding that the racial discrimination comes from Ukrainians lack of exposure to Black people.
It is not uncommon for Ukrainians to refer to African-Americans as [N-Word]. Volunteers of color may be called a monkey or may see childrens games with Blackface, one volunteer wrote.
Being aware of the history of dehumanization for people of African descent may help inform where this comes from; it does not justify it. It will be at your discretion to determine the intent.
The warning builds on the recent reports of discrimination against African students in Ukraine, choosing to study in the country for cheaper living and more accessible education. U.S. Peace Corps volunteers have been in the country since 1992, teaching English and helping Ukrainians with financial, media and civic literacy, HIV awareness and other community development initiatives.
The Peace Corps advised volunteers that as Americans, they may be considered the outsider.
The organization trains volunteers how to engage appropriately and effectively across cultures and find common ground with the people they will be serving.
However, Black volunteers may face far more complicated issues, according to an account from an unnamed volunteer. The organization blames the discrimination on Ukrainians lack of exposure to Black people and a preconception that all Americans are white.
Their understanding of African-American culture is fueled by the media and African stereotypes. You will generate lots of interest and curious stares, the volunteer wrote.
So, these stares can make you uncomfortable and annoyed. Ukrainians initial perception of you may be that you are from Africa; it may not. It does help if they understand that you are an American, and the training in PST will help you consider ways that you will engage with these assumptions.
The Corps also said volunteers could be mistaken for university students, which have suffered the social cost of racism in recent months, blocked from fleeing the country as tensions between Russia and Ukraine erupted into violence and chaos.
According to data, about 16,000 international college students in Ukraine in 2020 were from Africa. Even though the students contribute millions of dollars to the countrys economy through their pursuit of higher education, many reported being shunned by Ukrainian officials in favor the host nations women and children when they tried to leave the country amid Russian attacks in February.
Africans were barred access to buses and other forms of transportation to the border and stranded in the cold as nationals followed a Ukrainian-first policy, with Ukrainian men between 18 and 60 not being allowed leave.
Even when Africans made it to the borders, at times, from traveling miles on foot, they were often turned back by Polish or Romanian guards. Several videos of the harsh treatment went viral online. A new report shows many Black people fleeing Ukraine are being held in prison-like facilities across Europe.
History shows that the recent treatment at the countrys borders is just a fragment of Ukraines racist record. The U.S. State Department has warned against travel to Ukraine by ethnic minorities, and human rights groups have expressed concern about hate crimes for more than a decade.
The Ukrainian government adopted a law in 2009 that raised the penalty for hate crimes motivated by race and national origin following a series of racial killings of African and Asian immigrants in 2007. . . .
Peace Corps positions in Ukraine are currently not open, but Black Peace Corps volunteers who applied were warned to be prepared to be called the N-word and face other racist behavior while in Ukraine, according guidance on the Peace Corps website that is currently being discussed on social media.
The U.S. Peace Corps warns volunteers in Ukraine about racism. (Screenshot/UATV English)
The U.S. Peace Corps warns volunteers in Ukraine about racism. (Screenshot/UATV English)
The warning, which includes personal accounts from volunteers, calls for having thick skin and an understanding that the racial discrimination comes from Ukrainians lack of exposure to Black people.
It is not uncommon for Ukrainians to refer to African-Americans as [N-Word]. Volunteers of color may be called a monkey or may see childrens games with Blackface, one volunteer wrote.
Being aware of the history of dehumanization for people of African descent may help inform where this comes from; it does not justify it. It will be at your discretion to determine the intent.
The warning builds on the recent reports of discrimination against African students in Ukraine, choosing to study in the country for cheaper living and more accessible education. U.S. Peace Corps volunteers have been in the country since 1992, teaching English and helping Ukrainians with financial, media and civic literacy, HIV awareness and other community development initiatives.
The Peace Corps advised volunteers that as Americans, they may be considered the outsider.
The organization trains volunteers how to engage appropriately and effectively across cultures and find common ground with the people they will be serving.
However, Black volunteers may face far more complicated issues, according to an account from an unnamed volunteer. The organization blames the discrimination on Ukrainians lack of exposure to Black people and a preconception that all Americans are white.
Their understanding of African-American culture is fueled by the media and African stereotypes. You will generate lots of interest and curious stares, the volunteer wrote.
So, these stares can make you uncomfortable and annoyed. Ukrainians initial perception of you may be that you are from Africa; it may not. It does help if they understand that you are an American, and the training in PST will help you consider ways that you will engage with these assumptions.
The Corps also said volunteers could be mistaken for university students, which have suffered the social cost of racism in recent months, blocked from fleeing the country as tensions between Russia and Ukraine erupted into violence and chaos.
According to data, about 16,000 international college students in Ukraine in 2020 were from Africa. Even though the students contribute millions of dollars to the countrys economy through their pursuit of higher education, many reported being shunned by Ukrainian officials in favor the host nations women and children when they tried to leave the country amid Russian attacks in February.
Africans were barred access to buses and other forms of transportation to the border and stranded in the cold as nationals followed a Ukrainian-first policy, with Ukrainian men between 18 and 60 not being allowed leave.
Even when Africans made it to the borders, at times, from traveling miles on foot, they were often turned back by Polish or Romanian guards. Several videos of the harsh treatment went viral online. A new report shows many Black people fleeing Ukraine are being held in prison-like facilities across Europe.
History shows that the recent treatment at the countrys borders is just a fragment of Ukraines racist record. The U.S. State Department has warned against travel to Ukraine by ethnic minorities, and human rights groups have expressed concern about hate crimes for more than a decade.
The Ukrainian government adopted a law in 2009 that raised the penalty for hate crimes motivated by race and national origin following a series of racial killings of African and Asian immigrants in 2007. . . .
https://www.yahoo.com/video/does-not-justify-peace-corps-131100283.html
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'It Does Not Justify It': Peace Corps Guidance for Black Volunteers In Ukraine Causes a Stir (Original Post)
rogue emissary
Apr 2022
OP
Sounds familiar here in the US as well. All good people must stsnd up agaisnt hate.
Kittycatkat
Apr 2022
#5
brush
(57,272 posts)1. Oh, well. There goes the Ukrainian's halos.
Beakybird
(3,389 posts)2. I briefly dated a Kenyan nurse who lived in Ukraine.
Unfortunately, her account corroborates this Peace Corp document. She said the vast majority of Ukrainians were wonderful, but the minority who weren't made life there unpleasant. She said that racism was a primary reason she left Ukraine.
Hoyt
(54,770 posts)3. Seems a number of European countries have had a resurgence of hatred
in recent years.
Kittycatkat
(1,734 posts)5. Sounds familiar here in the US as well. All good people must stsnd up agaisnt hate.
Hoyt
(54,770 posts)6. No question.
abqtommy
(14,118 posts)4. Racism/Ethnic Bigotry is a world-wide problem. We sure have our share here in
the U.S. and it's something we have to work at to eliminate.
Marvin Marvin
(43 posts)7. Really no place free of racism, is there? n/t