Many residents of Kenwood Retirement Community in Minneapolis once traveled the world. Now that they no longer can, that exhilarating world is coming to them.
One afternoon every summer, more than 100 international students from the University of Minnesota's English Language Program (MELP) spread out to visit four Twin Cities assisted-living facilities. Watching the animated multigenerational, multicultural exchange at Kenwood Thursday, it was hard to tell who scored the better deal.
The students, hailing from the Middle East, Czech Republic, China, Mali, South Korea and more, get to practice their conversational skills with the world's most patient listeners. The residents, many of whom are retired teachers, get to take a happy walk down memory lane.
And there's bingo to boot.
"I worked in Jamaica and Uganda," retired librarian Jim Wellvang, 68, tells Ahmed Al-Bulushi, 19, and Alkhalil Alkindi, 18. The two young men, on scholarships from Oman, lean in to listen, then politely ask their own questions:
"Did you volunteer?"
"What kind of work did you do?"
Retired special education teacher Barbara Linde found her way to a student from China, carrying a charm given to her long ago by a friend who traveled there. She lights up when he tells her that it means "long life."