 How are you? Can we start? Well, that's it. Shall I say it with good morning? Hi. I'm Tagherid, or Tagherid. I study English literature. I'm from Palestine, Gaza. And this is my first time in Italy. I'm in my last year. I'm going to graduate. So you're already thinking about your thesis, I suppose? Yeah. You remind me. This is my first time out of Gaza, how to say, yeah. And I'm here as Erasmus Pulaski student at Siena. So I didn't know a lot about Siena. Actually, I searched on Google or on the web, something like that. And they told me that Siena was built on hills. And then when I came here, I've seen the ups and downs, ups and I said, OK, the hills now, this is the hills. And my university is in Nicolo. It's really close to my home here. And by the way, I love small cities. You can have your own life. I live in a university residence, Perandia. The very first days I came here, Siena was alone, not knowing anybody. The first people I've met, they were all Italian in my residence. So they say, OK, come down and talk to us. And the funny thing, I had a friend called Valeria. Me and her, we met before in a party. OK, Piacere Tagrid, Valeria. And then I was asleep and said, OK, bye-bye. But then in the class, in syntactical structures, I told her, OK, I've seen you before. And she told me, I've seen you before. And I was like, OK, where? Corti di Miracoli, yes. And then we became really close friends. We have funny, funny moments together. And then she introduced me to other friends, like Dario, Carlo, Elinora. These guys make it easier for me to adopt this situation. And then I start to know more people, yeah. This is like a funny story, because every time I say, I study English literature at Siena. And they told me, Siena, English. What the hell exactly? So I keep saying, OK, this was a little bit a problem, if you could say, because I specialized in my university in English. I had a contract between the University of Siena and my university, QOU, Kotsoba University, back in Gaza. So even that was in Italian, I followed one literature course, like as a challenge for me. And I got 26 in the exam, so quite a success. And I only expected to learn Italian. Like, after six months, I wouldn't say that I speak Italian. I normally say umbo, when people start to speak really fast in a fluent. I told them, OK, non-barlo Italian. I was joking, umbo. And they were saying, you're in Siena, you're in Tuscany. Tuscany, Tuscany. And like, this is the origin of the Italian. Do you see how you could not speak Italian? My family is really happy to be in here. And they encouraged me to be here, too. And they told me, OK, you have to consider a master in Siena here. How do you find the people? Really great people. Now I could say the Italians, they're really nice. They're really helpful. And the Siena for me, it was like, a really, really great opportunity and a chance. When I went to Rome in October, and I found that chaotic city. So the first thing I said, I want to go home. Siena, you know? The funny thing, I've been involved in the Italian community more than the Erasmus community. You feel like important. You know, I'm international. I'm not European. But to live a daily life of the European thing, it was really different and really interesting. The people, they're interested to know your culture, especially your religion, for example. This makes good conversations to follow. What else do we need more than conversations, you know?