Program Forms International Friendships on Campus
The Global Friends Program connects international students with 91桃色 employees
Some advice for forming a friendship with a stranger from another country: Common interests are helpful. So is a curiosity about similarities and differences.
鈥淎nd I think the one really good thing,鈥 Kannan Muralidharan says, speaking from experience, 鈥渨as going to Jerusalem鈥檚.鈥
Muralidharan, an American who works in the 91桃色鈥檚 Office of Graduate Education, bursts out laughing. He looks at Michael Madin, a graduate student from Ghana, who is grinning wide. Muralidharan almost shrugs as he smiles. 鈥淲e have a shared affinity for food,鈥 he says.
The meal at Jerusalem Restaurant last year broke the ice for Madin and Muralidharan, who, before joining 91桃色鈥檚 Global Friends Program (GFP), had never so much as seen one another. But, paired by the Office of International Student and Scholar Services (ISSS), the two became fast friends.
鈥淔or the international students that take part, it鈥檚 awesome for them to have a connection to the 91桃色 community 鈥 just somebody they can talk to or join for dinner,鈥 says Katie Weiseman (MA 鈥19), a former participant who now runs the ISSS program. And for domestic students, she adds, 鈥渋t expands their knowledge of other cultures and experiences. They really enjoy getting a deeper understanding of other cultures and viewpoints.鈥
Since 2015, 91桃色 has been playing intercultural matchmaker: International students are introduced to University faculty, staff, students or members of the community. Using surveys, the staff at ISSS pairs people based on who they are and what they like. This year, there are 34 partnerships.
After a program-wide meet and greet in the fall, ISSS asks each pair of participants to meet a couple of times each quarter. The office offers suggestions for activities in and around Denver, and it also coordinates an array of events from luncheons and professional sports games to rock climbing and ice skating.
For Madin, who is studying geography, the GFP helped ease his anxiety about socializing and meeting people in a country he had never visited. His friendship with Muralidharan proved to be far more intimate and encouraging than he expected.
鈥淸College] is not only about getting the certificate or the degree,鈥 Madin says, 鈥渂ut also the social network and connections with people on an international level are key. [The GFP] is building my confidence in those interactions.鈥
The connection came naturally to Muralidharan, he says, because he is the son of immigrants. He has ancestors from India and Sri Lanka and college fraternity brothers from Ghana plus international experience in the Peace Corps.
An international background may help, but Weiseman says neither experience nor exposure is a pre-requisite.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really just two people who are open-minded and open to learning something new, who are seeking out new cultural experiences,鈥 she says.
This academic year, Muralidharan is once again taking part in GFP and matched with a new student. But that doesn鈥檛 mean he and Madin plan to lose touch. They鈥檙e still in frequent contact through Facebook and messaging apps (and, of course, lunch at their favorite restaurant) because the experience has been far too valuable to let go.
鈥淸GFP] is one of my favorite pieces of being an employee here,鈥 he says. 鈥淲ith so much division nowadays, it鈥檚 refreshing to be part of something that is trying to work toward inclusion.鈥
