
From Gaza to Wisconsin
Clip: Season 12 Episode 12 | 5m 12sVideo has Closed Captions
Exchange student Jwana Rostom’s journey is one of survival, grief and hope.
Coming from Gaza, Jwana Rostom carried both grief and hope to Wisconsin. As a high school exchange student, she found belonging with the Atkins family in Monona — sharing meals, memories and loss while her loved ones endured war back home. Now preparing for college, her story is one of survival, resilience and expanding the circle of family.
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Wisconsin Life is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin
Funding for Wisconsin Life is provided by the Wooden Nickel Fund, Mary and Lowell Peterson, A.C.V. and Mary Elston Family, Leon Price & Lily Postel, Stanley J. Cottrill Fund, UW...

From Gaza to Wisconsin
Clip: Season 12 Episode 12 | 5m 12sVideo has Closed Captions
Coming from Gaza, Jwana Rostom carried both grief and hope to Wisconsin. As a high school exchange student, she found belonging with the Atkins family in Monona — sharing meals, memories and loss while her loved ones endured war back home. Now preparing for college, her story is one of survival, resilience and expanding the circle of family.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship[gentle music] - Angela Fitzgerald: When war broke out back home, all Jwana Rustom could do is watch.
- Jwana Rustom: I called them, and I was like, "Hey, is everything okay?
Where is my family right now?"
And, like, if I don't hear from them, like, I just panic.
Like, are they alive still?
I was like, "What should I do?
"Like, I'm in class right now.
I can't do anything."
And I just felt so powerless.
I can just sit and watch.
And that was like a nightmare for me.
- Angela: For Jwana, growing up in Gaza meant surviving war.
Coming to Wisconsin meant finding a new home.
- Jwana: I'm a Palestinian, one who was born in Gaza.
It was my home, my people, my friends are like, everything there just makes me happy.
I was born in 2008.
I was literally born in the middle of a war.
And I experienced seven wars until now.
- Angela: A State Department scholarship program called YES, Youth Exchange and Study, opened a door.
- Jwana: My best friend, Nastia, she was a YES student.
She got placed here, and, like, she had a great experience.
She was like, "Jwana, you should do this."
- Angela: With her parents' blessing and plenty of nerves, Jwana boarded a plane to Wisconsin.
Her new home looked different than anything she had known before.
- Jwana: I heard about the cheese, the snow.
I was so excited.
People here are just so lovely.
You don't know them, and in the streets, like, "Why are you smiling at me?"
- Angela: In Monona, she moved in with the Atkins, her new host family.
- Liz Atkins: We actually didn't wanna host a student, but Jwana's counselor at school had shared her GoFundMe.
I had, you know, read her story, and as soon as that email was sent, I forwarded it to Caleb.
And I was like, "Hey, I think we should do this."
- Caleb Atkins: Get her!
[Liz laughs] - Liz and Caleb are young, so, like, I never-- I kind of never saw them as a parent, but I also do.
Liz is like one of my sisters.
Caleb is like a brother.
Riley is the bigger one.
She's full of hope.
Then Evie is so goofy and funny.
They welcomed me a lot when I came here.
And I owe them so much.
- Angela: For Jwana and the Atkins, connection often came on a plate.
- Caleb: I do pretty much all the cooking at home, and so I wanted to make sure that we incorporated Palestinian food into our repertoire.
- And when I ate that bite, I was like, "Oh, my God, like, my mom used to make it exactly like this."
So, I couldn't handle it, and I cried.
- When she took a bite and she started to cry, 'cause it was like a taste of home.
Food is powerful in that way.
- Angela: But even here, thousands of miles away, the suffering was never far.
- I came here, and I didn't even enjoy, like, two months full until the war happened.
I lost my cat.
I lost four friends.
One of my friends died under the rubbles.
They cannot find, like, parts of her body to bury.
And like, that's not something, like, rare.
And then now, they're just totally gone and all that I have of them is just pictures and memories.
- Angela: She carries grief for family, friends, and the home she left behind.
- It's super weird to losing a soul, cry so much about it, and then start losing more.
And then you just feel, like, numb.
So, you see those pictures and images and you always, always imagine your family being in that position.
And you just don't know what to do.
- She's going through all of this normal teenage stuff on top of surviving multiple wars.
- Caleb: Our big message to Jwana was that, like, whatever you're feeling, like, we'll take it as it comes.
You know, joys, sorrows, everything in between.
- Angela: Her journey isn't over, but from Gaza to Wisconsin, from grief to belonging, Jwana carries her story and her hope with her.
- I just hope to see my country a little bit free, more than now.
And have a little bit more peace than now.
- Liz: I mean, it's just grown.
Like, our family and our extended family and our kids forever.
- Angela: For Jwana, home is no longer just a place.
It's the people who make sure she's not alone.
- Caleb: Draw the circle of your family bigger.
Like, be willing to draw a larger circle because your family is so much more than just the people that are blood related to you.
[Jwana exclaims] - I hope that peace be upon you and everybody else, in their hearts and in their minds.
I really wish that peace can be upon everybody.
[gentle music]
Textile folk artist shares tradition and healing
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S12 Ep12 | 3m 7s | For Ireri Andrea Muñiz Ortega, textile art is a way to carry home with her from Mexico to Madison. (3m 7s)
Crokicurl puts a new spin on sport of curling
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S12 Ep12 | 2m 30s | Curling, long a popular pastime in the state, has a new variation, Crokicurl. (2m 30s)
Developing local soccer talent in Wisconsin
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S12 Ep12 | 2m 26s | Superior City FC prioritizes developing local soccer talent through community support. (2m 26s)
Preview: Superior City Football Club
Preview: S12 Ep12 | 30s | It’s gameday with Superior City Football Club, a homegrown soccer team in the Northwoods. (30s)
Walk in the woods with an old growth guide
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S12 Ep12 | 4m 23s | Guide John Bates explores a remaining old growth forest, the Van Vliet Hemlocks. (4m 23s)
How a distillery tour inspired a hit board game
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S12 Ep12 | 5m 16s | UW-Stout professor Dave Beck created "Distilled," a whiskey-themed board game. (5m 16s)
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Wisconsin Life is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin
Funding for Wisconsin Life is provided by the Wooden Nickel Fund, Mary and Lowell Peterson, A.C.V. and Mary Elston Family, Leon Price & Lily Postel, Stanley J. Cottrill Fund, UW...



















