Former student Maya Sgaravato-Grant has shared her thoughts on the significance of the city in her life and why it will forever remain close to her heart.
Former student Maya Sgaravato-Grant discussed her decision to relocate to the area for her university education and shared her genuine feelings about Coventry.(Image: Christopher Furlong/ Getty Images)
At age 18, I arrived in Coventry feeling somewhat uneasy, a sentiment many young people can relate to. Like numerous others from my year group, I made the journey northward from my birthplace and childhood home in London to pursue my studies. This was in 2020, during a period when a pandemic was wreaking havoc across the nation. I was deeply aware of my fortune in being able to navigate that year with relative ease. However, the unknowns and solitude that accompanied living independently for the first time during a nationwide lockdown manifested as a persistent heaviness in my mind and heart. My initial day in the city was spent seated quietly on the floor of my fresh accommodation.
In the years that followed, Coventry transformed into something far more significant than I could have anticipated. Through exploring the always lively Far Gosford Street, the peaceful pathways of Canley, and the expansive grounds of my university campus, I discovered a substitute home and a feeling of belonging I had seldom encountered previously.
Coming from London, where I routinely spent exceeding sixty minutes traveling to see companions, I discovered something far more personable about Coventry’s more modest scale. I cannot remember if I had ever visited the central area prior to 2021, as restrictions had mostly kept me within my living space until that point. Nevertheless, it subsequently became the setting for numerous pivotal experiences in my existence. It was there that I encountered my initial romantic partner, who himself had arrived in the nation merely weeks prior to pursue his own academic journey. It was there that I commemorated my academic achievement with a beverage from a popular chain, and where I spent countless evenings and afternoons in wonderful company.
Although I have since returned to London, I try to visit when circumstances allow, and I am always overcome with memories whenever I glimpse the Lady Godiva statue in the central plaza, clusters of enthusiastic students making their way toward Kasbah, or brief views of undulating countryside from the upper level of a coach.
However, beyond all of this, what lingers most vividly in my recollection of Coventry are the faces of the diverse and warm-hearted individuals I came to know here. These people, originating from every corner of the world or having grown up in Coventry itself, had elected to make this city their home.
I have always maintained that it is the inhabitants who define a location, and in this aspect, Coventry ranks among the most exceptional places I have ever experienced.
