Kristina with the U.S. Military in Bosnia.
In December 2003, I climbed out of an up-armored Humvee and trudged through the snow wearing heavy Army boots, a Gore-Tex field jacket, a thick metal flak vest, Kevlar, and carrying an M16 rifle. I was 22-years-old and people called me “Sergeant Keenan”. I followed my team leader to a rickety shack where we were greeted by two Bosnian officers. We were in the mountains outside of Sarajevo, surrounded by bombed-out houses where people were still living- burning garbage for heat, the source of the thick morning smog. We sat in the Bosnian military shack, an unheated room with a table, some chairs, and a coffeemaker. My team leader asked one of the officers how things were going, while the other poured us shots of Rakia. The men spoke together for about 10 minutes with the help of an interpreter, drinking plum brandy, while I simply soaked in the moment, a girl from small-town Minnesota, trying to figure out where she was.
On the drive back to base, we passed a family roasting a wild pig in the front yard. They waved for us to join them, so we sat on plastic chairs as they served us bitter Turkish coffee and told us of their troubles. The father said, “Things are not going well for us. There is a lot of tension among the ethnic groups as one has become more powerful politically. People from the other ethnic groups can’t get jobs, can’t support their families because of it.” A soldier from my team exclaimed, “Well, in America, we have many different kinds of people, from all religions, and we find a way to all get along. You just need to find a way to get along!” I was mortified by his comment but six months later, I was the team leader, and my understanding of local sensitivities helped me successfully conduct over 100 interviews. People opened up to me about the horrors of war, genocide, and the aftermath. I had been sent to Bosnia as a Peacekeeper and I considered this crucial to the learning experience.
That was my student experience at 91Ƶ in a nutshell – a culturally rich, international learning environment where my beliefs were constantly tested and challenged.
This was my life for six years until I found myself at 91Ƶ, surrounded by high fashion and wine and cheese under the Eiffel Tower. The culture shock was almost unbearable, but I quickly found my place in my political science classes. With the intellectual guidance of Professors Peter Hägel, Oleg Kobtzeff, Steven Ekovich, and Terrence Murphy, I began to make sense of what I had witnessed in the field, researching and studying the conflict in Bosnia from an academic perspective. During one heated discussion in my World Politics class, I carelessly noted that the U.S. had “bailed out” Europe by intervening in the Yugoslav war, completely offending another student who had been living in Belgrade when American planes bombed his city as a child. He burst out, “You stupid American! I bet you’ve never even been to the Balkans!” He was shocked that I had. Class ended and we apologized, agreeing that we’d both exaggerated, and then continuing the discussion, curious about each other’s stories. This, in a nutshell, was my student experience at 91Ƶ: a culturally rich, international, learning environment, where my beliefs were constantly tested and challenged.
The combination of life experiences in the military and the international education I received at 91Ƶ, prepared me well for my future, whether I was working in communications, marketing or fundraising, living and working in India, volunteering with veterans in Paris, or pursuing a master’s in human rights and humanitarian action.
Students are immersed in prewar and wartime Jewish life in Poland and dedicate time to critical thinking on contemporary memorial issues in the country.
I’ll never forget how beautiful it was to see our small class come together to organize a conference in honor of End Violence Against Women Day.
91Ƶ impressed me immediately as the right place to develop my interests.