DV Sydney Boyer |
Our latest blog post comes from Dominican Volunteer Sydney
Boyer.
Sydney serves at the Opening Word, a literacy and job
readiness center for immigrant women in Amityville New York and shares how her personal experiences
with her students have reshaped her understanding of immigration.
When I talk about my year of service, friends and
family are normally fascinated by my living with religious sisters. Questions
typically include, “Do you have to pray every day?” and “Do you have to wear a
habit?” Our conversations become so hung up on this aspect of my year of
service that I hardly have the chance to talk about what I actually do and the
impact my job has had on me. My year of service has been much more than living
and working with the Sisters of St. Dominic (although that is a large part of
it). When I leave, my fondest memories of this experience will come from the
women at my job, who have inspired me to do more.
I have had the amazing opportunity to work with the
Opening Word Program. The Opening Word is a literacy program that teaches
English as a second language to immigrant women. My role is to empower these
women to achieve higher education and/or a job by teaching them basic computer
skills. In my role, I am able to work with immigrant women on a daily basis to
not only forward their education, but more importantly, to walk with them on
the journey of becoming a part of this country. During this year, I have
encountered the pitfalls of the immigration system and have developed a passion
for helping the migrant population. However, these values were not always
rooted in me.
I come from a small rural town is Ohio called Canal
Winchester, population: 7,905. Like any small town, I can walk into the local
grocery store on Gender Road and run into at least a handful of people I know,
which does not include my former classmates that now work there. In the windows
of the local pizza shops hang posters of high school sports teams with kids
that I have known since elementary school days. And every fall, on Friday
nights, every person in the town is gathered in the bleachers to watch our
Canal Winchester Indians take on another local football team from the
surrounding area. And out of the 7,905 residents in Canal Winchester, 86 are
Hispanic, 361 are Black and 6,459 are White. Not only that, but the median
income of my town is $83,639. Sounds pretty diverse, right?
Until college, much like my peers, I believed in the
stigmas surrounding immigration. This was because I was only ascertaining my
knowledge from the news and from the people around me in Canal Winchester.
These stigmas would still be part of my beliefs without my experiences at
Xavier University that exposed me to diversity, privilege and marginalization.
My experiences at Xavier are what ultimately led me to Opening Word, which has also
played an important role in my understanding of immigration. This is because it
has put faces and names to the struggles of immigrants we hear about daily. I
feel blessed and privileged to work not for these women, but with them. They
have shared with me stories that will forever be engraved on my heart. They are
the ones who have inspired me to go into social work, and they are the ones
that I will never stop advocating for.
Sydney and her students |
Sydney and her student |
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