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My name is Luke Fisher and I have just returned from a 4 months Leonardo Da Vinci Mobility project in the north of Sweden. The project was based in an organisation called IDEUM in which I worked in the carpentry and metal workshop. Before I went as preparation to a taster day and I completed an induction in carpentry in Bradford with my sending organisation.

While I was there we worked on everything from rest cabins for the mountains and ski runs and outdoor BBQ’s to prayer benches for a physiotherapist. Prior to this project I had only done wood work in school so it was quite different to anything I had done before. I was trained how to use all the different tools around the workshop and aloud freedom to make mistakes and learn from experience. One of their sayings was ‘you learn from your mistakes’ another phrase you will hear allot in north Sweden is ‘fika time’ but that just means coffee break (unless you speak Italian).

Lunches where a communal time of the day where everyone sat together around a big table and had a chat. It was a great time to get to know everyone who is working in the building even if you don’t work with them.

In your free time there was allot to do as you are surrounded by snow or ice. During the winter most activities are more extreme like skiing or snowboarding and snowmobiles and ice hockey (which is bigger than football over there!) to skeet shooting and ice fishing all of which I tried while I was there. The organisation also put on activates like visiting a new town or to go watch an ice hockey game and team building games which help you get to know the other volunteers. But if that wasn’t enough you can always go to them and ask to do an activity and they will sort it for you, like me and a group wanted to go visit a town for the weekend and stay in a hostel so they gave us a car and said ‘enjoy, just don’t enjoy it too much as we need the car back in one piece’.

The night life is very different, the village is about the same size as the village I live in, in England but where we have 8 pubs in our town they have 1. It is very expensive to go to the pub so most people drink at home then go to the pub a couple of hours before closing just to meet people and arrange to go back to someone’s house for a party.

The people in Sweden in general especially the youth of the population can speak English as they get allot of English tv and video games, but I found they are very shy and don’t often like to speak English (unless they are drunk then they will speak to you for hours!) but all in all I found them very friendly and welcoming being welcomed into many people’s houses weather it was for a party or just to go and chat with their family and eat tea with them.

I think from this project I have become a lot more confident which is in no small part down to my carpentry mentor who was very encouraging and always very helpful. I have also learnt a lot of skills in carpentry and I am trained to use all the heavy machinery from the workshop thanks to this Leonardo Da Vinci Mobility. I also feel more ready for work as before I went I was on benefits for over 6 months and didn’t really want to work but now I feel like I am ready to work and allot more confident that I could get a job I desire not just something to pay the bills.

 

Luke Fisher, Leonardo Da Vinci Mobility trainee.

 

Click here to discover the project.

 

Leonardo Da vinci Mobility project part of Gaining  Through Training
and supported by ECORYS UK
and the Lifelong Learning Programme
of the European Commission.

 

Bonjour! After a 14 hour overnight flight from London Heathrow, with a change in Mauritius, we landed into the airport in St. Denis, the capital city of French island and our Leonardo Da Vinci Mobility home for the next few weeks, Ile de la Réunion!

Very tired but very happy to have arrived, we stepped off the plane into the mid-day 30 degree heat and were greeted warmly by Philomène, our contact here for Mission Locale – the charity we will be working for during our stay. The journey wasn’t over yet; a two hour drive taking us to our hostel in the southern city of St. Pierre followed. We skirted by the sea along a coastal road, mountains of indefinite height towered over us from inland, their peaks obscured by thick clouds. We pass deep ravines coated in green foliage, forests composed of trees we’ve never seen before, men selling exotic, multi-coloured fruit stacked in piles by the roadside.

We make a quick stop for food by a busy beach, white sand and turquoise blue crystal clear water, a marina filled with well-kept boats, hundreds of holiday goers eating in a plethora of restaurants.

One of the things that first strikes you about Reunion is its multi-cultured-ness and variety of religion, and more so, the mingling and mixing of those religions and cultures. People from many different backgrounds have settled on the island and live together with little segregation. Indians, Africans, Malagasy, Chinese, Europeans, Christians, Muslims and Hindus alike have all made this place their home and it’s common here to see families and groups of friends made up from a mixture of all the above.

We awoke early after a welcome night’s rest at our hostel Pension Ognard and gathered our things to move to our accommodation for the next two weeks. The hostel we had originally planned to stay at was full due to the touristic season, and by a stroke of luck, Mr. Ognard, the owner, offered us two spare rooms in his home in the nearby city of St. Joseph. The house was wonderful; we didn’t expect to live in such luxury – a garden surrounding a swimming pool, our own bathroom and rooms with two very big beds.

On Monday we were introduced to Mission Locale South for the first time, everyone here at the office has received us with a warm welcome and we’re already feeling at home. We have to give special credit to Philomène for being such a fantastic host, she has guided us through our first days here with incredible patience, taking us to places, introducing us to her culture, and she always manages to do everything with enthusiasm and a smile on her face.

The Mission Locale charity has 5 branches all around Réunion and works with young people in difficult circumstances, helping to arrange opportunities to work, to volunteer locally and abroad, to get involved in various activities and to give them a space where they feel free to follow their pursuits.

Before our arrival there was a major concern about how useful we would be, especially for Fin with his limited French. The previous two volunteers felt that their time here wasn’t as fruitful as they would have liked, and there were worries that we would face the same problems. We soon realised that our fears were ungrounded; there are many opportunities to do something good here – from English lessons, multimedia workshops, designing and creating promotional posters and videos, to helping to write CV’s in English.

On Thursday we worked with Mission Locale at a huge event, AKS (Alon Koz Santé – Let’s Talk about Health) at St. Joseph’s School of Sport and Culture, attended by various charities and organizations and with over 700 young participants from local schools.

Stands were erected to promote healthy diet, sexual health awareness, drug and alcohol responsibility, road safety and more. A mass-scale Zumba took place in the auditorium, tournaments were held for a new sport named Franc Balle, taekwondo black belts sparred, drumming Maloya acrobats showed off for the crowd, a theatre group performed a play about responsible living. Aurélie’s role was to present the Leonardo organization to potential trainees; Fin spent the day taking photographs of everything (almost literally) for use in promotional material.

Our weekend included a difficult 7 hour hike to the 2600m top of one of the most active volcanoes in the world, Piton de la Fournaise. We hiked uphill following white dots painted on rocks over the wrinkled and furrowed lava flows from the previous years; the last eruption was only 10 months ago. A sign in three languages told hikers not to stray from the marked path, as vaults created by lava could be hidden under a thin layer of unstable ground. We reached the summit safely, (except for being a little sweaty and sunburned) to find an incredible view of the volcanic crater and the surrounding caldera.

It’s the end of our first week here in Réunion and we’ve already fallen in love with this island. We’re feeling very optimistic about the work we’re doing and the weeks to come, our only concern is that there isn’t enough time to do everything!

 

Aurelie and Fin, short term Leonardo Da Vinci Mobility Trainees.

 
Leonardo Da Vinci Mobility project part of Gaining Through Training
and supported by ECORYS UK
and the Lifelong Learning Programme
of the European Commission.

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