Some people say you could replace all the TEFL volunteers with 25 well-trained specialists, and they’d be partially right. At times it is difficult to justify our presence here in Ukraine. Explaining what we do is even more difficult because no two volunteers share the same schedule, responsibilities or skills but here we are.

When asked, we mumble something about teaching English but it’s a cheap, easy answer that doesn’t do justice to the service that we provide even if we can’t describe it. We can mention that by the end of our service we hope to have taught this many hours and completed this many projects but truthfully, we are beyond statistics.

We come in waves, armed to the teeth with optimism and excitement, ready to change opinions and open minds. Some of us experience success and some of us fall short.


At the English lesson with an American volunteer

We mark our victories with physical manifestations of our accomplishments here, grant materials, lesson plans and certificates for participation. Each object gives us the self esteem to say what we do is important and those certificates hang pinned to our wall demonstrating that we did something. However, there is no certificate for why we’re really here. We are beyond certificates.

When I arrived at site I started an English club because that’s what I thought I was supposed to do. We’d meet twice a week, play games and practice our English. At first my students were shy, not sure what to make of this bearded foreigner.

I asked if they had any questions about America or me and they remained absolutely silent. We’d play games and once they got the hang of it, they loved guessing who the killer is in Mafia or trying to guess what celebrity is taped to the back of their shirt. For weeks we played these games until one day they started talking to me.

Ira told me about the dance class she and her sister attend, so I taught them about swing dancing. Roma said he liked the band Megadeath, so I brought in my computer and I gave him all of my metal music. Sasha said she’d like to read the twilight series in English, so I made a couple of calls and now she has read the first one and will read the next one when she picks it up from the resource library I set up at my school.

Each time they talked to me, I tried to pique their interest in English, American culture or the world. We talked about anything and everything until they started asking questions. They asked why I wasn’t married and I told them I hadn’t found someone I loved. They asked why I was here in Ukraine and I told them I wanted to see the world.

They asked if I missed America and I told them I did but I also believed what I do here is important enough to be away from the people I love. These answers had never occurred to them before.

This post is written by Sam Johnston, an American Peace Corps Volunteer (PCV) currently living and working in Ukraine, Kirovogradska Oblast, Haivoron.

To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Peace Corps, an American volunteer program run by the United States Government, the U.S. Embassy hosted a competition among all Ukraine-based PCVs and will be posting the top three over the next week, beginning with the overall winner, followed by the two runners up. Today U.S. Ambassador John F. Tefft swore in the latest group of PCVs at a ceremony at the historic Teacher’s House.

The Peace Corps traces its roots and mission to 1960, when then Senator John F. Kennedy challenged students at the University of Michigan to serve their country in the cause of peace by living and working in developing countries. In 1961, President John F. Kennedy established the Peace Corps to promote world peace and friendship.

The Peace Corps’ mission has three simple goals:

  • Helping the people of interested countries in meeting their need for trained men and women.
  • Helping promote a better understanding of Americans on the part of the peoples served.
  • Helping promote a better understanding of other peoples on the part of Americans

Peace Corps volunteers work at the request of other countries to help develop better opportunities for their people, living and working with people in remote villages and burgeoning cities in the developing world.

Since 1961, more than 200,000 Americans have served as volunteers in 139 countries, teaching English, helping people improve their families’ health and nutrition, working on HIV/AIDS issues, encouraging entrepreneurs to build their own businesses, introducing new farming techniques to bolster crop yields and protect the environment, and providing leadership to the young.

To learn more about 50th anniversary of the Peace Corps please read E-journal.

To learn more about Peace Corps in Ukraine please visit official website.

Blogs of the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv can be found at http://usembassykyiv.wordpress.com/