GLOBAL COLLEGE
by Robin L. Flanigan
Eric Eggleston '03 at a health outreach program in Lagos, Nigeria.
Eric Eggleston â03 recently spent two years in Lagos, Nigeriaâs largest city, interviewing people who wanted to come to the United States. They had family to visit, schools to attend, theme parks to explore.
As a U.S. Department of State Foreign Service Officer helping to grant visas to travelers, Eggleston developed a profound appreciation for the African countryâs vibrancyâin its bright fabrics, in its arts scene, in the resolute work ethic despite difficult economic conditions.
âI always say you canât help but leave a piece of your heart in Nigeria,â he says.
But thatâs part of the job, moving from assignment to assignment, becoming enmeshed in the culture of one country then another.
His next stop: Turkey.
In the U.S. since September, Eggleston leaves in May for a two-year tour in Istanbul. There, as a political officer, he will be âthe eyes and earsâ of the U.S. government, gathering and sharing information for State Department reports on foreign policy issues such as human rights and religious freedom. Until then, he is taking Turkish language classes to become conversationally fluent, and learning more about Turkish history and customs.
But that general knowledge base will take him only so far.
âEven if you know something from books and you follow the news,â he says, âthereâs a different level of knowledge needed once youâre on the ground.â
In Nigeria, for example, even though most of the people he interviewed spoke English, Eggleston learned from local staff and experts that his questions werenât always received as intendedânor did he always accurately interpret the answers he was given.
âThey helped me put those pieces together and understand the full picture,â he recalls. âYou have to ask âWhat just happened and whatâs the backstory? How does the countryâs history come into play?â You need a deep context of whatâs going on.â
That context made working with a yearlong youth fellowship program there all the more meaningful. Eggleston helped select and mentor young Nigerians wanting to make a positive impact on a society affected by limited educational opportunities, crumbling infrastructure, and corruption. The group he worked with met with community leaders and created leadership development materials to effectively engage with local governments.
âI was blown away by their dedication and outcomes, and wonât soon forget how they overcame so many challenges,â he says.
Eggleston says the liberal arts education he received at Nazareth College, where he majored in religious studies and sociology and minored in literature and honors, âis what allows me to see whatâs in front of me through different lenses, and allows me to turn those lenses for different perspectives. Thatâs what you need to do to have a complete understanding of a complex situationâand then react to it.â
Eggleston is looking forward to his time in Istanbul, where he vacationed briefly years ago and was taken with one street in particular, which had âsweet shop after sweet shop. Weâre going to have to make the gym a central part of life over there,â he says, referring to himself and his wife Faith, who telecommutes for the international relief and development organization Save the Children.
Turning serious, Eggleston reflects on the difficulties that come with his far-flung posts. He misses out on holidays, weddings, babies being born. âItâs tough,â he says. âThe one thing thatâs omnipresent when youâre in a different place is that youâre in a different place.
âThe work is very demanding,â he adds. âItâs not for everybody. But you can really do some good work.â
Robin L. Flanigan is a writer in Rochester, New York.
Eggleston and his wife Faith in traditional Yoruba clothing on a visit to the Nike (pronounced Ni-kay) Gallery in Lagos, Nigeria.