The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta families share traditions

College programs give internatio­nal students a seat at holiday tables.

- By Vanessa McCray vanessa.mccray@ajc.com

Jingjing Li had a vague idea of how Americans celebrated Thanksgivi­ng.

There would be turkey, certainly. Served at home — not at a restaurant, probably.

The Emory University graduate student from China admits to holding a stereotype, gleaned from the cornucopia of fast-food places she saw here.

“American ladies are not very good at cooking,” Li had surmised.

Then she was invited a couple of years ago to share her first Thanksgivi­ng feast with a local family.

The host set a beautiful table with candles, delicate dinner plates, and dishes prepared from recipes passed down through generation­s.

“How can you cook so good?” Li said. “It was really mouthwater­ing. Her turkey is so tender, so juicy.”

The secret, she learned: deep frying.

Across Atlanta on Thursday, internatio­nal students and American hosts will break bread together — or pass the drumstick — thanks to programs that serve some of the estimated 20,000 foreign students studying at area colleges and universiti­es who might otherwise be stranded on empty campuses.

At Georgia Tech, the Home for the Holidays program has surged in popularity. This Thanksgivi­ng, the Student Government Associatio­n matched 80 students with 55 host families, a nearly 100-percent increase in student participat­ion since the program started three years ago.

A similar effort to pair up faculty and internatio­nal students started this year at Emory University after another program lapsed.

And for many of its nearly 40 years, the Atlanta Ministry with Internatio­nal Students — or “AMIS,” the French word for “friends” — has linked internatio­nal students with an American host to share Thanksgivi­ng.

This year, AMIS has placed 53 students with about 19 volunteer families for the holiday, said executive director Irene Wong. The experience broadens everyone’s perspectiv­e, she said.

“I think it is a wonderful opportunit­y ... to spend time with someone from another country,” Wong said. “The students especially enjoy getting to enjoy the American tradition of Thanksgivi­ng.”

Many students tell organizers they want to experience a Thanksgivi­ng meal like

they’ve seen in the movies, said Evie Owens, a fourthyear Georgia Tech student from Illinois who is chief of staff for the student government associatio­n.

And since the university

only has a three-day break this week, it would be difficult for students to return to their faraway homes.

“It makes them feel less lonely and welcome,” she said.

Wendy Kohn has hosted a Thanksgivi­ng meal for internatio­nal students at her Atlanta home for about five years. She and her husband, who works at Georgia Tech, have gotten to know many of their guests who return year after year, and not just at Thanksgivi­ng. They come over for other big holidays, summer pool parties, and family dinners.

On Thursday, she’s planning a time-honored menu of turkey, green bean casserole, sweet potatoes, stuffing, pecan pie, and pumpkin cheesecake for a dozen students. The guests, who hail from China, India, Germany, and Taiwan, will play a little soccer and badminton. Everyone will get a chance to say what they’re thankful for.

“It’s really taken off, and these kids, they become like my kids,” she said. “They call me their American mom.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Wendy Kohn (kneeling) and Paul Kohn (far right), pictured in 2015, have opened their home to internatio­nal college students on Thanksgivi­ng for about five years. Today they again share food, conversati­on, and tradition with about a dozen students from...
CONTRIBUTE­D Wendy Kohn (kneeling) and Paul Kohn (far right), pictured in 2015, have opened their home to internatio­nal college students on Thanksgivi­ng for about five years. Today they again share food, conversati­on, and tradition with about a dozen students from...

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