Macron is right – let’s revive the school French exchange to secure a future together
As a former French teacher, I think I must have been the first MP to reply to Black Rod’s invitation to President Macron’s visit to address parliamentarians in Westminster. And I got to the Royal Gallery on Tuesday early – I was in row five!
I wasn’t disappointed. In fact, I was delighted – especially when he spoke about fixing the relationship between our young people. He shares my fear that they may end up strangers unless pre-Brexit opportunities for connection are revived. His call for a new French exchange programme almost had me up and cheering. I completely agree. Our children should be given the same exchange opportunities as we had.
And the need is urgent. As the King and President Macron both said, we need a strong relationship to counter a multitude of global threats. Nurturing engagement between our children is key to that.
But the scars from Brexit run deep on both sides of the Channel.
As a gawky 17-year-old, travelling from Llanelli to our twinned town of Agen in southern France for an exchange was one of the scariest things I had ever done. But I loved it. I vividly remember sitting at my host’s dining table reciting swear words from the French dictionary, to hoots of laughter! The whole trip cemented my love of France and my passion for its language and people, and it set me on a path to being a French teacher.
So, how can we revive the school French exchange?
A start would be removing some of the obstacles – paperwork, safeguarding issues, and funding. This has begun to happen: a new fast-track border process for school groups travelling between France and Dover has just started thanks to cross-agency and UK-France collaboration. And some of the contradictory safeguarding guidelines have been streamlined. But it would help if group passports made a comeback and there was more support, official guidance and funding for schools wanting to do an exchange.
If we are going to enter a new era of togetherness – hand in hand, shoulder to shoulder – as President Macron put it, we need as many cross-Channel relationships as possible. Our futures depend on it.
Tonia Antoniazzi is the Labour MP for Gower and chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Modern Foreign Languages
This article was first published by PoliticsHome.com and you can read the article in full here.