It was a very important and
exciting day, the first day of my first job in my new career. Changing careers hadn’t been easy; in fact,
it was one of the hardest things I’d ever done.
Two years earlier, I’d given up everything – my house, my income, the
middle class Florida lifestyle where my children were happy and thriving, and
moved us all to England so that I could finish my degree and find a new
career. Some may say this was selfish of
me, and maybe it was; there are worse things in life than not liking your job,
after all. And I didn’t even know what
this new career was going to look like. But I did know I was desperately unhappy
working long hours in a job completely wrong for my personality, and I wasn’t
getting any younger. Starting again was scary, yes, but even scarier was the prospect that I might wake up one day
and be ten years older and find that nothing had changed.
So I’d moved to England with my
children, ages 15, 14, and 2, and started a degree in publishing and English
literature, with the idea that I might like to be a journalist. Gradually, and somewhat accidentally, I
happened upon English language teaching, and decided to take a course so that I
could get a summer job at one of Oxford’s many language schools. By the second week of the course, I knew
beyond a doubt that this was what I was always meant to be doing. I had found my career.
Now here I was, in the summer of
1999, about to start my first proper teaching job. The first day of my new
professional life, and I couldn't have been happier, or better prepared.
However, when I walked into the
shop, there appeared to be an incident in progress. An unhappy group of people was standing at the till (that’s cash register for my American readers), and the
cashier, a usually easy-going local girl by the name of Wendy, looked distressed. When she saw me, she was visibly
relieved. ‘Oh, I’m so glad you’re here’
she said. ‘You teach EFL, don’t
you?’ ‘Um, yes’, I said, guardedly,
since technically, I didn’t, at least not yet.
Furthermore, I couldn’t imagine any predicament involving a Co-op cash
register having the potential to be resolved by a teacher of English as a foreign
language.
Wendy apparently thought
otherwise. ‘They want to exchange dollars’ she explained. ‘I’m trying to explain that we’re not a bank,
we don’t exchange money, this is a shop and we only take pounds.’ I nodded, evaluating the situation and my
possible role in it. Then, ‘they don’t
understand English,’ she added, satisfied she had successfully clarified the position.
I surveyed the group doubtfully. They appeared to be a family. A man in his mid-30s, about my age, a woman I
guessed was his wife, an older woman who may have been the mother of one of
them, and a couple of children -- a young teenage boy and a toddler. They were all dirty and
disheveled, and the man had a desperate look in his eyes as he continued to
proffer the unwanted dollars, waving them around hopefully in all directions.
In his other hand was a piece of paper with a London phone number written on
it. With that hand he was pointing
animatedly to the phone box just outside the door. ‘They want change for the phone’ said Wendy,
unnecessarily. ‘They’re refugees’ she
added.
We’d been hearing a lot in the
news about Kosovan refugees smuggled into the UK in the back of lorries and
then either taken to the detention center in North Oxford or dropped off on the
A-40 somewhere between London and Oxford.
We were in a small village just outside Oxford, right off the A-40. Wendy must be right; these people were refugees
from Kosovo. They had nothing except
each other and two small plastic carrier bags of clothes. And … a big fat wad of 100-dollar bills.
‘Can you explain it to them?’
asked Wendy again. For her, the problem
was straightforward; the solution simple.
All she needed was someone to explain to the Kosovans that the Co-op
didn’t do currency exchange. But how did
she think I could help? Did she believe
that teachers of English automatically know all other languages? Or perhaps she imagined I might conduct an
impromptu lesson right there in the Co-op, teaching them just enough English in
the next ten minutes to enable them to grasp this crucial point?
All I could think of was to try
some other languages. So I tried French
and German, the only other two I had some ability to communicate in at that
time. I addressed myself to the
teenager, thinking he might have studied a foreign language at school. But he shook his head solemnly to everything
I said. I tried to remember where Kosovo
was – wasn’t it somewhere near
Italy? Maybe they learned Italian at
school. ‘Italiano?’ I asked. As soon as I said it I realized it was pointless;
I didn’t speak Italian, so what good would it do to know that he did? Well, I could have phoned my mother for help
in that case, I suppose. She spoke
fluent Italian. But, the enquiry about
Italian met with the same negative response, so I was now all out of languages
and ideas.
Wendy and the Kosovans were looking
at me eagerly, hopefully, having apparently concluded, despite
clear evidence to the contrary, that I was capable of sorting everything
out. Even the baby was watching me, expectantly.
Their faith in me was genuine and affecting, but it was unsolicited,
undeserved, and, if I’m to be completely honest, annoying. What could I do? I had to be somewhere
important! It was the first day of my
new life! I’d earned this; I deserved
it. Everything I’d given up was finally
going to be worth it; all my hard work was finally going to pay off. I wanted nothing more than to shrug my
shoulders, say ‘sorry, I can’t help you’, and walk out of the Co-op. The door was open and the way out was clear. But that just wasn't going to cut it. Someone had to help them. I didn’t want the job, but I was all they had. It had to be me. The universe had spoken, and you don’t argue
with the universe. So I pointed to
myself, and said ‘Sarah.’ The man
pointed to himself, and said ‘Ditmer.’
We were in business.
I beckoned them out to the phone
box and took the piece of paper with the phone number, feeling in my pockets
for change. I didn’t have any. So I rang
the operator. I’d heard that operators
would allow you to make a free phone call in cases of emergency. ‘Hello there’ I said, in what I hoped was an
authoritative voice. ‘I’m here at a
phone box with a family of Kosovan refugees who just got dumped off the back of
a lorry on the A-40. They need to make
an emergency phone call to London. Can
you help us, please?’ The universe must
have spoken to her as well because she put the call through. A man answered. I handed the phone to Ditmer. There was enthusiastic, emotional conversation
in a language I didn’t recognize, but which I now know was Albanian. Ditmer handed the phone back to me. The man on the other end spoke English. ‘Please help my people’ he pleaded. ‘They need go London. Victoria station. I meet there them.’ ‘But what can I do?’ I started to
protest. “I’m on my way to work...’ This
feeble attempt to extricate myself was completely ignored. ‘Please, help my people’ he repeated. ‘OK’, I said, ‘OK’, and put down the
phone. Ditmer and his family were
looking at me trustingly, waiting to see what was going to happen next.
‘Right then’, I said. ‘Come on.’ A plan was forming in my mind. I needed to get them to the bus stop for the
Oxford Tube – a bus that ran from Oxford to London every 10-12 minutes and went
all the way through to Victoria Station.
But it didn’t go through the village, so I’d have to drive them to the
park and ride. Plus, they needed money
for bus fare. I only had 10 pounds on
me, which wasn't going to be enough to buy five tickets to London. I went back into the Co-op. ‘We need some pounds’, I told Wendy. ‘If I
buy a bottle of water with my bank card’ (I’d forgotten about the Wispas) ‘how
much cash back can I get?’ ‘50 pounds’,
she said. ‘That’s so nice of you’ she added, gratefully. I took the 50, added my 10, and showed it to
Ditmer. ‘Bus’, I said. He eagerly offered his wad of dollars to me. ‘No, no’, I said, ‘just give me one
100 dollar bill. That’s a fair exchange. Keep the rest’. I took one of the bills and gestured at him
to put the rest away. ‘Now, come on’, I
said. ‘Come with me’. I turned around and headed for home, in the
opposite direction from the language school, but I tried not to think about
that.
My car was parked in the driveway
and I knew that to fit five passengers inside, I’d need to take out the car
seat. When I took the car seat into the
kitchen, they all followed me. They must
be starving, I thought, frantically looking around the kitchen to see what I
might have. A half empty box of
biscuits, a loaf of sliced bread, and a jar of peanut butter were all I
could come up with, but they devoured these humble offerings gratefully.
But enough was enough! I needed to get them out of the house! My new life was being sabotaged! And their friend was waiting for them at
Victoria station. How to get them all
into the car was the next dilemma. There
weren’t enough seat belts for everyone, there were people on laps, a baby
without a car seat – who knows how many laws we were breaking, but what could I
do? It wasn’t far, and surely if we were
stopped by the police, the officer would be sympathetic if I explained the
situation? But we weren’t stopped. We made it safely to the bus stop. The bus arrived. I gestured them to go in, paid their fares
out of the 60 pounds, gave them their change, and then, because the driver
looked kind, took him into my confidence.
‘They’re refugees’ I told him.
‘Please make sure they stay on until Victoria station; they’re being
met.’ ‘Don’t worry, love’, he replied.
‘I’ll take care of them.
Everything will be all right.’ Sometimes
in life, you run across people who, when they tell you everything is going to be all
right, you know you can believe them. The universe
had sent one of those people to drive the bus that took the Kosovans away to their
new life.
In 1999, only a few people had mobile
phones, and I wasn’t one of them. So I had no way to contact the language school to let them know I was going
to be late, and in any case, what could I have said? I ran into some Kosovans at the Co-op? In the end, I arrived twenty minutes late, having
surrendered my fate to the wisdom of the universe. The director looked at me. ‘Oh good’, he said. ‘There you are. We just finished the placement tests. They went on a bit longer than expected. We’re getting ready to start the classes
now. Yours are the upper intermediates,
room 5-A, upstairs and turn right.
I went upstairs, turned right,
and walked into the room marked 5-A. A room
full of smiling, expectant faces were looking at me. I took a deep
breath. ‘Hello everyone’, I said. ‘My
name is Sarah, and I’m your teacher.’