Gérard Luçon:
Je ne me sens plus vraiment chez moi quand je suis en France …. Comme si en 20 ans c’est mon pays qui avait changé et perdu ses valeurs, et comme si je les avais gardées en partant avec mes racines...
Carla Bancu:
Among the best lessons I’ve learned during my migration journey was the importance of tolerate everything. That people are different from one country to another. Not better, not worse, just different. That common sense is the most subjective thing there is and that one gets accepted only if they learn to embrace this difference between people. Once you stop comparing yourself and your culture to the new country’s people and culture, that’s when you become part of it.
Anna Eder:
I really can’t tell what made me choose Arabic studies but I guess it was the right thing as it brought me in contact with refugees from different countries. I heard their dreams and realized that this is what I wanted to do: help people to hold on to their dreams no matter how hard it is.
Ines Topi:
In light of recent events, we are again reminded that there happy travellers; those that migrate of their free will - for love, fun or money - and others, many more in number, who rise from hell and can each tell an unbelievable tale of survival. Then there are those who will not survive and whose stories will never be told, because all lives should matter, yet theirs don’t.