{"id":47284,"date":"2016-10-12T18:04:10","date_gmt":"2016-10-12T18:04:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/alumni\/?p=47284"},"modified":"2020-01-24T17:33:01","modified_gmt":"2020-01-24T17:33:01","slug":"47284","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.augsburg.edu\/alumni\/2016\/10\/12\/47284\/","title":{"rendered":"Alleviating the Unsettled Nature of Resettlement"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Katia Iverson \u201912<\/strong> has come to embrace her not-so-common desire\u2014an inexplicable desire\u2014to be around people unlike herself. Likely related to her curiosity about culture and her passion for service and diversity, this desire has been nurtured since childhood by parents who she says are \u201cfaithful givers with incredible hearts for service to others.\u201d They are her strongest encouragers in her chosen field\u2014work with refugee resettlement\u2014which she still sees as her \u201cdream job.\u201d<\/p>\n Drawn to Augsburg by the authenticity of her first campus visit (less than glamorous, she says), and because she perceived \u201cno barriers between the school and the city,\u201d Iverson became immersed in service-oriented thinking early, particularly as part of the first Augsburg group of Bonner Leaders<\/a>, a national student leadership program.<\/p>\n She was amazed at how her Bonner placements (internships with community organizations) informed and reflected the learning in her classes. By the time she was a senior, she knew it would be important that her placement that year look like a job she\u2019d want to do in the \u201creal world.\u201d Grateful for help from advisor Kristin Farrell, Iverson was pleased to be placed at the Minnesota Council of Churches (MCC) Refugee Services as a bus mentor. In this capacity, she met newly arriving refugees from Nepal, Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, and Thailand, and rode the bus with them to the refugee services office, cultural orientation class, their child\u2018s school, and English classes. Some of the refugees spoke English well, others not so well, so communication ranged from hearing their poignant refugee camp stories to being present in semi-silence and exchanging gestures and occasional giggles as they tried to understand each other.<\/p>\n