From
September 16th to September 19th, 2014, Monika and I were in a place near
Vilnius, called „Vila Nora“ for our On-Arrival-Training. This kind of training
takes place for all EVS-Volunteers shortly after they arrive in their host
country and is organized by the country‘s national agency of the European
Union.
In our
training, 19 volunteers from 10 different European countries took part: 4
French, 3 Spanish, 3 Austrians, 3 Germans, 1 Latvian, 1 Georgian, 1 Hungarian,
1 Italian, 1 Irish, and 1 Romanian.
Of these
volunteers, we had just two met before: Marie and Javier from the Youth Day
Care Center for Disabled People in Panevėžys. It was great to meet so many
other volunteers for the first time and to get to know where they come from,
what they did before their EVS, which project they chose, and why they decided
to come to Lithuania. All of them were very open-minded and nice from the very
first encounter. Nevertheless, Monika and I were surprised that shortly after
everybody‘s arrival, volunteers of the same country grouped up and started to
talk in their mother tongue. But our worries, the group would stay split for
the entire time of the seminar, soon were forgotten, since all of us grew
together within just a few hours of that same day.
A great
contribution to that fast mutual approach were the team-building games, literal
„ice breakers“, chosen by our course instructors, Akvilė and Sandra.
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| The Schedule of the 4 days |
Hightlights of the Training:
Throughout
the seminar, we dealt a lot with our motivation for the EVS and our personal
goals for the upcoming years. We also had the opportunity to discuss our own
questions concerning our projects and stay in Lithuania. I think, the tasks
were always well chosen and everybody could draw his or her own conclusions
from the exercise. For my part, I got to know more about myself and a lot of
ideas and energy for my work at the special school. At the beginning of the
training, every one of us got a little book on which cover it says „What have I
learned today?“. I think that is a great way to document our experiences and
personal development throughout the year.
The first evening: Sauna
The place
„Vila Nora“ had a Sauna in a wooden house in the area. In its lounge we spent
all evening, talking, dancing, and playing card games. The cooks had prepared
„Kepta Duona“: fried bread pieces which were spread with garlic afterwards. A
national delicacy. The bravest ones of us jumped into the frosty lake after the
Sauna.
When we went into the forest...to pick
mushrooms.
In the
afternoon of the second day all of us went into the forest to pick mushrooms,
which is very common in Lithuania. Akvilė and Sandra knew a lot about nature
and told us, which mushrooms were eatable and which were poisonous. Having had
a lot of practice throughout the years, they were also the only ones who
discovered mushrooms beneath the leaves. Those, we gave to the cooks of Vila
Nora.
The second evening: Fire night
In the
second evening we made a big fire at the fire place. It was a great atmosphere,
everybody chatting about their projects, life back home, and plans for the year
in Lithuania. At some point, the cooks brought in aluminium foil wrapped
potatoes that were put beneath the fire to bake: another Lithuanian custom.
After a few minutes we could eat them with butter and salt.
The trip to Kernavė
On Thursday
morning, all of us drove to Kernavė, which is said to be the oldest city
Lithuania‘s and used to be the Capital city before Trakai and Vilnius. In
Kernavė, we visited a museum about the city‘s history and afterwards enjoyed
the beautiful landscape behind the town: The hills of Kernavė and the river
Neris.
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| Volunteers from Panevėžys |
After having
had a nice picnic on top of the hills, we talked to a former volunteer who came
to Lithuania for her EVS three years ago and decided to stay and live here
afterwards. It was very interesting to hear her story and to talk to someone
who could look back on her EVS, while we were just at its start.
Thereafter,
our task of the day started: We should walk around the city in pairs and ask people
on the street about different subjects provided by Sandra and Akvilė or that we
could think of ourselves. Those subjects included the Soviet Union, politics in
Lithuania, traditions, and more. My group‘s topic was the Soviet Union. It was
a great experience to do that task, because all the people stopped and took
their time, when we introduced ourselves in Lithuanian, which we had already
learned, and asked our questions in English. Since many of the people,
primarily older ones, did not speak English, we had to try our best in
Lithuanian: most of the time they understood our topic, while we just
understood a few words of what they were answering. All of them were very nice
and tried their best, e.g. with sign language, to make us understand.
Our cultural evening
Our last
evening was a cultural evening: Sandra taught us two traditional Lithuanian
dances, which was a lot of fun for everybody. The Italian volunteer, Matteo,
also taught a few of us Salsa. The rest of the evening we danced and talked.
For me, it was the first time to experience that a group of people became such
a great team just within a few days. Everybody knew everybody.
The departure and one more day: in Vilnius
Every one of
us would have liked the training to last a whole week instead of just 4 days
because we enjoyed a great program and met great people. To have a little more
time together, most of us decided to stay one more night in Vilnius and spend
the evening together. This was a good way to round off the seminar.
Fine