Foreign Policy Magazine

Language Haven

BALTIMORE—On June 29, 1987, Jermin Laviera attended her first English-language lesson still wearing her wedding dress. Though she had just arrived in Baltimore from Venezuela eight days earlier, acquiring the ability to communicate in her new home was so important that she went straight from her nuptials to class. Laviera still has a photograph of her 28-year-old self in the white patterned gown, a look of exhilaration in her brown eyes as she proudly holds her most valued treasure from that day. “Not a ring,” she says with a smile. “It was a book.”

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Foreign Policy Magazine

Foreign Policy Magazine2 min read
Multidisciplinary Curriculum and Career Planning Foster Flexibility and Public-Private Sector Transitions
Amid the ever-changing terrain of international affairs careers, Julie Nussdorfer, associate director of global careers at Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), has observed several transformative trends. Notably,
Foreign Policy Magazine2 min readPolitical Ideologies
From The Editor
2024 IS THE YEAR OF A RARE PLANETARY ALIGNMENT. The world’s biggest democracy, which has parliamentary elections every five years, will go to the polls within months of the world’s second-biggest democracy, which has a presidential vote every four ye
Foreign Policy Magazine8 min readInternational Relations
What South Africa Really Won at the ICJ
For those with long memories, the seed of South Africa’s case against Israel—accusing it of genocidal acts in the Gaza Strip—might be traced to a spring day nearly 50 years ago. On April 9, 1976, South Africa’s white supremacist prime minister, Balth

Related Books & Audiobooks