Youth Exchanges

Youth exchanges are more than just a few days away from home. They’re a moment when young people from different countries come together, spend time with each other, and start seeing the world from perspectives they didn’t have before.

In Rzeszów, we host participants who often meet for the first time. They come from different backgrounds, speak different languages, and bring different experiences with them. But it usually takes only a few days for those differences to fade into the background.

Our exchanges typically last between five and seven days and are designed for people aged 18–25. Each project has its own theme, but the way we work remains similar. It’s all based on non-formal education, meaning workshops, discussions, teamwork, and activities that require participation rather than passive listening.

Each group includes both local participants from the Podkarpackie region and young people coming from abroad with our partner organisations. They live together throughout the project, share meals, and spend most of their time as one group. It’s often in the in-between moments, outside the structured sessions, where real connections start to form.

Intercultural evenings are an important part of every exchange. This is when participants present their countries in the most direct way possible through food, music, and conversation. No formal presentations, just sharing.

Participation in our exchanges is free of charge, as the projects are funded by the European Union. Travel, accommodation, and all programme activities are covered. Each year, we organise several exchanges in Rzeszów, with around 25 participants in each group coming from different countries.

If you live in the Podkarpackie region and would like to join a project, the best way is to follow our social media channels, where we publish current open calls. We most often invite people who are already engaged in our local activities.

If you are from the Czech Republic, Ukraine, Slovakia, or Hungary, participation happens through partner organisations in your country. They are responsible for recruitment and preparing the groups:

Youthfully Yours SK – Košice, Slovakia
Uzhhorod National University – Uzhhorod, Ukraine
Mustárház IITI – Nyíregyháza, Hungary
Brno For You, z.s. – Brno, Czech Republic

Similar exchanges are also organised by our partners abroad. This creates opportunities for participants from Podkarpackie to join projects in other countries and continue the experience in a new setting.

2022-01-17

 

What happens when you bring together young people from different countries and give them one task: to create their own film festival? In January 2022, we explored this idea in Rzeszów during the Act It Out project.

Over the course of a week, 20 participants and 5 group leaders from Armenia, Poland, Slovakia, Ukraine and Hungary came together. The starting point was not just filmmaking itself, but the entire process leading up to it. From the first ideas, through discussions and choosing themes, to the final image on the screen.

The first days were about getting to know each other and the city. Participants went out to explore Rzeszów, and shortly after, they moved into a completely different space, working on their own films.

Instead of ready-made topics, there were questions. During workshops focused on human rights and global and local challenges, the groups began to search for what they truly wanted to say. Only then did the ideas for their scripts emerge.

The following days were dedicated to creative work. Writing, filming, acting and editing. Each group worked in its own way, but everyone faced the same challenge of turning an idea into a visual story.

The final event took place at Kino za Rogiem in the centre of Rzeszów. During the film evening, participants presented their productions to the local audience. The screenings were followed by discussions that allowed for a deeper understanding of the topics and different perspectives.

The last day was a moment for reflection. Participants looked back at their experiences, conversations and the connections they had built throughout the week.

The project was made possible thanks to funding from the European Union.