Sabaoot Esho, an
international student from Erbil, Iraq, made a 6,841-mile trip to small-town
Arkadelphia to attend college at Ouachita Baptist University at the mere age of
17.
Before moving to
America, Esho had only seen Ouachita’s campus through a computer screen. From
her first steps on campus, Esho immediately felt welcomed and seemed at home.
When reflecting on her
first few moments on campus, Esho, a sophomore graphic design and psychology
major said, “I thought Ouachita was beautiful. The people working with the
international students, the Grant Center, the office for the internationals,
are great. They adopt us as their babies. They were very welcoming, and they
explained a lot. The students here were also very welcoming. WOW week, I
remember, was so easy to plug into things, I did not feel like an outsider. The
Ouachita community just kind of enveloped me into it.”
Although, from the
surface, it may seem the United States would have been a culture shock for
Esho, Esho always felt she was familiar with American culture having attended
an American high school in Iraq and spent summers in Michigan visiting family.
“All throughout my life
I was prepared to come to America,” Esho said. “I exposed myself to American
culture, read young adult fiction like Divergent, Twilight, Harry
Potter; all the normal books American kids read. I watched Victorious and iCarly;
I knew what I was I was signing up for. I knew what to expect.”
Despite the ocean
separating Arkansas and Iraq, Esho said southern culture is very similar to
Iraqi culture. Iraqi’s emphasize hospitality, food, and family. Esho has fond
memories growing up of families gathering outside to eat and be in community
with each other.
“Middle easterners love
to stay up late,” Esho said. “At midnight second dinner would start. Because it
was a Christian part of town, it was very safe. Everyone knew each other so you
would see families pull out their barbecue and they would bring out salads and
food. This was starting at midnight and we would just continue bike riding
around the neighborhood.”
Esho hoped Americans can
learn from Iraqi culture. In a fast-paced society, she wished Americans would
slow down.
“I've noticed
here, in America, time is looked at differently than back at home,” Esho said.
“When I came here, I felt like I was running 24/7, I needed a planner. I was
thinking ‘What is a planner?’ Every minute was important, every hour counted.
Everyone here is running and rushing and doing their thing. Everyone is super
busy. I felt like I was not enjoying it and I would have to force myself to
take a break and enjoy. Back at home it was all very leisurely slow, and I
enjoyed that. I wish people here would cherish that.”
Later on, in life,
Esho plans to return to Iraq to offer mental health services through art
therapy. In a war battered country, she sees the importance of mental health.
“Mental health isn't really a [point of emphasis] back home,” Esho said. “It's kind of looked down upon. We need mental therapy right now. Yes, medical needs are important, but they have been traumatized and no one is helping them, and they don't know how to deal with it. I want to go back and help my people.”
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