Students in Kuwait for fall term as part of a longstanding 天美麻豆 partnership with the American University of Kuwait say their time there gave them a better understanding of the region, including its diversity.
Amen Salha 鈥26 traveled a circuitous route to spending last semester in Salmiya, Kuwait, as part of the 20-year-old . Salha, who is interested in Middle Eastern studies and global health and is from Michigan, applied for the exchange program but was put on the waiting list. Since there were two applicants ahead of him, he figured going to Kuwait wasn鈥檛 in the cards.
鈥淏ut then they weren鈥檛 able to do it and I got in,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t was like destiny.鈥
Along with four other 天美麻豆 students鈥攕ome participating in a for-credit academic exchange and some working as interns at the private, liberal arts university鈥擲alha spent the fall semester taking classes at AUK, exploring Kuwaiti and Middle Eastern history and culture, and, finding himself on top of his studies and with extra time on his hands, completing a fellowship with an organization dedicated to the rights of migrant workers in Kuwait.
鈥淢y father came from Lebanon to the United States, and as a first-generation American, I felt like I was starting to lose the culture,鈥 Salha says. 鈥淎t AUK, I wanted to take classes that taught me about my history.鈥
He did, studying subjects like Fundamentals of Arab Society and Kuwait history.
But he was struck by how much of the cultural learning he experienced happened as he walked the streets of Kuwait or joined acquaintances for meals or conversation.
鈥淚t was as if I was always in the classroom,鈥 Salha says. A highlight of his cultural explorations was 鈥渆xperiencing Arab hospitality,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t was amazing how people treated us, welcomed us.鈥
The 天美麻豆-AUK Program began in 2004 with the opening of AUK as a private university devoted to an American model of liberal arts education. Since 2005, more than 50 天美麻豆 and AUK students have traveled to Kuwait or to Hanover to engage in cross-cultural internships.
And since 2019, the academic exchange program, administered in partnership with the and the , has sent five 天美麻豆 students and four AUK students to Kuwait and Hanover as part of the for-credit exchange program.
Despite a two-year suspension during the COVID-19 pandemic, the exchange program has been approved for another five years. A faculty exchange has brought 14 AUK faculty fellows to 天美麻豆 since 2009 for collaboration and joint research opportunities.
, the 天美麻豆-AUK program鈥檚 deputy director for the last three years, has been actively involved in global experiential learning at 天美麻豆 since 2008. She says that the program with AUK is distinctive on campus and in higher education.
鈥淏ecause it鈥檚 open to all majors, we see all different kinds of students participating,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 exciting and unique.鈥
She describes two recent participants, one a government and Middle Eastern studies major who seemed a 鈥渘atural fit鈥 for the exchange, and one a computer science major who was 鈥渏ust intrigued鈥 by it. Matthew Pfundstein 鈥24 has since accepted a job in Dubai as a strategy consultant after graduation while Nicholas Luikey 鈥24 will travel to Guinea with the Peace Corps.

The benefits of cultural exchange are far-ranging, Laufer says. 鈥淚t develops critical thinking you can鈥檛 get anywhere else. It gets us away from 鈥榰s vs. them鈥 thinking.鈥
鈥淪trong partnerships like the one we have built with AUK over the last 20 years are particularly important,鈥 says Laufer, 鈥渂ecause they contribute to students鈥 feelings of safety and well-being in parts of the world that are completely new to them.鈥
Although it was tense in parts of the Middle East following the Hamas attacks on Israel on Oct. 7 and the subsequent Israeli invasion of Gaza, Kuwait is not involved in the conflict and students were able to continue their studies there.
Ana Torres Rodriguez 鈥24, a sociology major from New York, spent her fall working as an intern at AUK and says that she loved exploring Kuwait and neighboring countries and discovering the diversity of the region鈥攁nd among her fellow participants. 鈥淲e all brought distinct experiences to this place,鈥 she says.
Torres Rodriguez worked in AUK鈥檚 Offices of International Student Programs and Alumni Affairs and Career Development creating resources for international students, researching possible partnerships with other universities, and working for AUK鈥檚 alumni magazine, which included writing an article on the importance of internships.
One of the things that will stay with her from the experience is the emphasis on work-life balance and relationships in Kuwaiti society, in contrast to life in the United States.
鈥淚 saw the model of a different life,鈥 she says. 鈥淩elationships are so important and your relationships are really a part of your work life there too.鈥
It was also a revelation, she says, to discover through travel around Kuwait and in the United Arab Emirates that attitudes toward the situation in Israel and Gaza were not the same across the region.
Salha also says that he found that being in Kuwait deepened his understanding of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. 鈥淚t made me ask, 鈥榃hat is the solution?鈥欌 he says.
Salha says that one of his main takeaways was 鈥渉ow diverse the Arab world is鈥 and he can see himself living and working in the Gulf region, a major crossroads for the exchange of goods and ideas, after graduation.
鈥淎UK is such a hub for diversity,鈥 Salha says.