Volume 42 winter/spring 2009
FLEX 15th Year Anniversary: Reflecting the Past, Projecting the Future Olena Fomina ’03 Kotsubinske, Ukraine/Lowellville, OH ofomina@msn.com For many of us, the FLEX program was not just an exchange program, but as Hlib Pronskikh ’07 from Kirovohrad said, “FLEX is a ticket to an independent life.” At the age of 15-16, we found the courage to leave our protected nests – families, friends, schools, and communities – to go live in a completely different world. How courageous, adventurous, and passionate we are! Reflecting on how much we all learned in less than a year won’t fit into one book. Over these 15 years, thousands of lives have changed due to the FLEX program. What experiences we had: met and made life-lasting friendships with so many wonderful people, learned a new culture, started to appreciate our own more, became so patriotic and passionate about bringing change to our own countries. In the true essence of the FLEX word, we have became FLEXible in adjusting to any situations and solving any challenges our lives have to offer us. What was supposed to be an initial cultural and educational exchange grew into enormous intellectual and spiritual power that shaped, shapes, and will continue to shape brand new generations of young, proactive, smart and responsible leaders of our own lives and countries. I remember receiving the issue of The Bradley Herald devoted to the 10th anniversary of the FLEX Program five years ago. It is hard to believe
that time flies so fast! On November 28, 2008 in honor of the 15th anniversary of the FLEX Program, the Public Affairs Section of the U.S. Embassy in Ukraine, with support from American Councils for International Education: ACTR/ACCELS, hosted the forum “FLEX, 15 Years: Results and Future.”
FUTURE LEADERS E X C H AN G E ALUMNI NEWSLETTER
FLEX Start-Up Legislation Nearly 60 FLEX alumni from all 15 years of the program and all regions of Ukraine participated in the celebration. The “father” of the FLEX program former U.S. Senator Bill Bradley and U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine William Taylor were special guests of the event. The forum was aimed at highlighting the efforts of FLEX alumni as individuals and as a community over the years, as well as the impact alumni have had on Ukraine’s development. This gathering, quite different from the celebration of the FLEX 10th anniversary, had a more “personal touch,” according to alumni who attended. The forum started with a welcome from Bill Bradley. He invited us to look back to the origins of the FLEX program, to the FREEDOM Support Act of 1992, which the U.S. Congress passed to support the FLEX program. “The program started in 1993 after passage of the legislation allowing the program to happen. The Cold War was over and I thought that the best way for young people from just newly independent countries to get to know America is to go and live there. The program was designed to be a two-way street: for you, the young generation to learn about the U.S. and for American families to learn about you
Contents: 14
Theme of the issue: FLEX 15th Anniversary Ukraine Forum FLEX is My Second Nationality!
45
FLEX Alumni Grants Program Arts and Crafts Classes for Disabled Kids American Institute on Political and Economic Systems Street Law Summer School
6
FLEX Family News
7
Memoirs of a Dinosaur
8-9
Colors of FLEX
1012 Bradley Bits 1314 News and Essays Russian Managers’ Association America, Motherhood, and Beef Production Euroclub in Sambir 15
Profiles
Anton Borisov ‘02 Kharkiv, Ukraine Dmitry Plyushev ‘95 Moscow, Russia Marzhan Doszhanova ‘07 Almaty, Kazakhstan
Senator Bill Bradley (wearing Ukrainian traditional scarf “rushnik”) and U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine William Taylor celebrate FLEX at 15 with active alumni in Kyiv