Interpreter's Workshop with Tim Curry
This unique (sometimes funny, sometimes serious) podcast focuses on supporting signed language interpreters in the European countries by creating a place with advice, tips, ideas, feelings and people to come together. Interpreter's Workshop with Tim Curry deals with the fact that many countries do not have education for sign language interpreters. Here we talk to sign language interpreters, teachers, and researchers, to look at the real issues and share ideas for improvement from many countries. Signed language interpreters usually work alone or in small teams. This can create a feeling of uncertainty about our work, our skills and our roles. Here is the place to connect and find certainty. Let me know what you need at https://interpretersworkshop.com/contact/ and TRANSCRIPTS here: https://interpretersworkshop.com/transcripts
Interpreter's Workshop with Tim Curry
IW 119: Interview Gerdinand Wagenaar Part 4: Step Away. It's OK. We're in Deaf Hands Now
Three days to think of an answer?! Well, maybe not.
Gerry gives his final thoughts about respect, working modestly, humbly, as a Sign Language Interpreter. His travel wisdom and journey as a Dutch Sign Language interpreter is our gain. Many concepts to take to heart in this episode. Is our profession an industry? How do we expand our concept of respect? How do we wait in the wings as the true leading actors take charge?
Thanks, Gerry, for everything!
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Take care now.
IW 119: Interview Gerdinand Wagenaar Part 4: Step Away. It’s OK. We’re in Deaf Hands Now
[ROCK INTRO MUSIC STARTS]
00:00:02 TIM
Good morning, good evening, good afternoon. Wherever you are, this is the Interpreter's Workshop podcast. I'm Tim Curry, your host. Here we talk everything sign language interpreting the ins, the outs, the ups, the downs, the sideways of interpreting. If you're a student, a new interpreter, experienced interpreter, this is the place for you. If you want to know more, go to interpretersworkshop.com.
00:00:28 Tim
Let's start talking... interpreting.
[ROCK INTRO MUSIC ENDS]
00:00:34 Tim
And now the quote of the day by our guest in the last few episodes, Gerry, Gerdinand Wagenaar from Holland.
00:00:46 Tim
“Wait until you're asked.”
00:00:50 Tim
And that goes along with the slogan that has been bandied around since the 1980s from various groups around the world.
00:00:59 Tim
“Nothing about us without us.”
00:01:02 Tim
There's so much in both of those quotes, and we'll get to that in this episode with Gerry. We also talked a little bit about what sign language interpreting has become. It's a pet peeve of Gerry’s and about respect, multilingualism, and how it's time to step back and let the Deaf lead.
00:01:27 Tim
It's all in this episode.
00:01:29 Tim
Let's get started.
[SHORT TRANSITION MUSIC]
00:01:36 Tim
Next.
00:01:37 Tim
Pet peeve.
00:01:40 Gerry
Which, interpreting as an industry, I hear this, I see this mainly in the US, but as an industry, as a business, as a business model.
00:01:51 Tim
Yeah, industry. [Gerry: Yeah]
00:01:53 Tim
[sighs] OK.
00:01:56 Tim
Next word…
00:01:58 Tim
Heartbreaking.
00:02:01 Gerry
Heartbreaking. Umm. Yep…
00:02:05 Gerry
The misconceptions about inclusive education and how it impacts Deaf Ed.
00:02:11 Tim
Hmm. Yeah. Is that part of the education system in Holland now.
00:02:15 Gerry
Uh, yeah.
00:02:16 Gerry
Inclusive education is interpreted as physical integration rather than [what] Deaf Ed should look like to be educated in sign language with peers.
00:02:28 Tim
Yeah, that is in many places.
00:02:31 Gerry
Yep.
00:02:32 Tim
Yeah.
00:02:35 Tim
Next…
00:02:36 Tim
Respect.
00:02:39 Gerry
Yes.
00:02:41 Tim
Yes. OK, good. [laughing]
00:02:45 Gerry
Yeah, after so many years of interpreting, after meeting so many people from so many different walks of life, from so many nations and so many continents in the world.
00:02:56 Gerry
You end up with ample respect.
00:02:59 Gerry
Human diversity and role in your understanding of what respect means.
00:03:05 Gerry
And of course, the other side, like, what's happening in Venezuela this month. [Tim: hmm. Yeah] The dictator is claiming victory.
00:03:14 Gerry
Yeah. Respect for yourself.
00:03:17 Tim
OK.
00:03:18 Tim
And last…
00:03:19 Tim
CODA.
00:03:21 Gerry
Identity.
00:03:23 Gerry
Third world.
00:03:25 Tim
You're a third world country all into yourself.
00:03:27 Gerry
Yeah, with many others, not just by myself. That's growing up in a binary world, which is either hearing or Deaf.
00:03:36 Gerry
Finding CODAs an organization and finding other CODAs that have this fluid identity being Deaf in one space and hearing in another space.
00:03:47 Gerry
Very meaningful to me.
00:03:49 Tim
When did you first feel that?
00:03:53 Gerry
During our first CODA weekends in… must have been ‘87 or ’86, maybe, when the Dutch Sign Language interpreter training started. Like I said of the 34, 33 were CODAs, one was married to her Deaf husband. And CODA weekends in, in kind of informal adult educational center that we used to have in Holland. It was informal adult education. [Tim: mm-hmm]
00:04:25 Gerry
Deaf people used to have a special sanction in north [area].
00:04:28 Gerry
And we went there for a CODA weekend and I think it was the first time we looked at each other and said, “Hey, wait… Deaf parents.” Then we start exchanging stories and, and my part of the deal is once a year, I want to go to a CODA conference.
00:04:42 Tim
Mm-hmm.
00:04:44 Gerry
That's my time and space to be with my people.
00:04:48 Gerry
I remember first time I went was Alexandria, VA, and I walked in and I thought I was in the wrong place because I heard all these deaf voices.
00:04:58 Gerry
They weren’t deaf voices. They were CODAs using deaf voices.
00:05:04 Gerry
But anyway, that's…
00:05:06 Gerry
It's been helpful to me to create a space between not having to choose. Am I hearing? I'm not Deaf, biologically, but culturally, I'm not hearing either.
00:05:18 Gerry
Still, if I am sitting in my office and my wife is sitting, and is talking to me from the kitchen over there.
00:05:25 Gerry
I still have to walk to the kitchen to see her, to understand what she’s saying to me. [Tim chuckles]
00:05:31 Gerry
My wife starts talking to me, I missed her half, the first half of her sentence.
00:05:36 Gerry
Because there's no eye contact to initiate the conversation like, hey, Gertie.
00:05:41 Gerry
That will help. Like, “OK, you want my attention? You got my attention. Now I can listen to you.”
00:05:47 Gerry
If people start talking, I don't hear it. So, in this sense, I'm not hearing either. [chuckles] [Tim: Yeah] So CODAs as an organization… important to me.
00:05:58 Gerry
Now I’m with a non-CODA non-signing partner. It's becoming less important in a way ‘cause, yeah, life’s on a different track, but I spend a lot of time in CODA environments and I still enjoy them, whenever I can.
00:06:15 Tim
It's interesting. I don't know how it connects or where it is in the spectrum of this identity, with our daughter, when she first started acquiring language, [Gerry: mm-hmm] I was using ASL with her and English only. [Gerry: Yep] Her first lexical item was the sign for father or Daddy [Gerry: uh-huh] in American Sign Language.
00:06:40 Tim
And we were constantly around the deaf community here as she was growing up just before COVID hit, [Gerry: Yep] which disconnected her from that environment. [Gerry: uh-huh] But during that time she wouldn't listen to us or talk to us unless she had our eye contact. [Gerry: There we go. Yeah.]
00:06:59 Tim
And it, I mean it was very, I mean she would wave at… She even does that even today she'll wave at us. Give that deaf wave to get our attention first. Even though she may be talking.
00:07:09 Gerry
Yep. Is your wife Deaf? Hearing?
00:07:11 Tim
No she's, she's hearing, Czech Sign Language interpreter. She was using Czech and only with her as well as Czech Sign Language. [Gerry: Beautiful] She has the receptive skills, but she doesn't have the production…
00:07:22 Gerry
Makes sense.
00:07:23 Tim
…now, yeah, because it's been four years that she was without that connection, [Gerry: yep] but it's still there, and she's definitely a visual person.
00:07:31 Gerry
I just became a granddad, and we just gave the parents a, a book about 50 basic baby signs. [Tim: yeah] Definitely going to raise it with Spanish, Dutch, English, Dutch Sign Language.
00:07:38 Gerry
Yeah.
00:07:44 Tim
Yeah, I know he can handle it.
00:07:47 Gerry
Oh yeah, of course.
00:07:48 Tim
People were saying here, “Well…” and we're like, “Yeah, we're, we're going to continue doing this. It's, it's fine.” [Gerry: absolutely] She messes up some grammar.
00:07:56 Gerry
Yeah, it's a phase. With my ex-American wife, we have a daughter and she… by the time we divorced and she went back to the states, she was 5 1/2. But until then she been at three Deaflympics, she’d been at the Deaf Way 2.
00:08:11 Gerry
So, she was already three years old, I remember her saying, sitting in the back of the car, saying, “Ohh, poor grandmother she doesn't know Dutch, but I could speak English for her. And OPA, and OMA, they don't know English, but I could talk with my hands with them. So, it was Dutch, English, Dutch sign language, International sign. [Tim: mm-hmm]
00:08:31 Gerry
Great communicator and she’s just turned out fine. [Tim: yeah]
[ROCK TRANSITION MUSIC STARTS]
00:08:36 Tim
You know, it's better to give than receive, so why not click on the Buy Me A Coffee link in the show notes and give generously to the podcast and receive interpreter conversations from around the world? Uh… no, no, it, it's better to give. Yes. So, give. Thank you. Let's go back.
[ROCK TRANSITION MUSIC ENDS]
00:08:55 Tim
Because we've been talking about academia.
00:08:58 Gerry
Uh-huh.
00:08:59 Tim
And the problems that come with that, the professional definition, etc.
00:09:04 Gerry
Uh-huh.
00:09:04 Tim
What advice would you give to researchers or teachers of sign language interpreters?
00:09:11 Gerry
To encourage their students to find a way into the deaf community, make deaf friends and that’s basically it. Find a way into the deaf community and it's not easy. But it's the only way to go.
00:09:26 Gerry
And then…
00:09:26 Gerry
Wait ‘til you’re asked. [Tim: yeah]
00:09:29 Gerry
Apart from your training, and your qualifications, and your diplomas…
00:09:34 Gerry
Wait ‘til you’re asked.
00:09:38 Gerry
And there's the buzzword it seems to be you've got a network and…
00:09:42 Gerry
Maybe that's all true, but that's a whole difference to see Sign Language Interpreting as a market is not my discourse, though, that's a jargon that I'm not very familiar with.
00:09:53 Tim
Yeah. So what I hear you saying is it's not the deaf community or / the interpreting connected to the deaf community is not a market or a business focus it's, it's a, a relationship.
00:10:09 Gerry
Yeah.
00:10:10 Tim
Speaking to interpreters who are interpreting now. [Gerry: mm-hmm]
00:10:14 Tim
From your experience, worldwide, locally, and your life, what would you tell them about the profession now, how would you encourage them or what do you want them to remember?
00:10:31 Gerry
Oh, that's the question I could have thought about for days and come up with a good answer. Umm…
[ELEVATOR TRANSITION MUSIC STARTS]
00:10:39 Tim
Three days later. [JOKING]
[ELEVATOR TRANSITION MUSIC ENDS]
00:10:43 Gerry
Be as much as you can, part of the deaf community, you're where it's local, national, regional, global.
00:10:54 Gerry
Be humble.
00:10:57 Gerry
My wife just wrote a book for our grandson and it's beautiful. It's Trilingual. It’s in Spanish and Dutch and English…
00:11:06 Gerry
…with life advice. I wish I had it at hand, but I don't. So… umm…
00:11:13 Gerry
Be respectful of the community you work with.
00:11:16 Gerry
Don't approach it as a business.
00:11:19 Gerry
As a very personal advice get your administration in order, which is something I haven't managed to do after forty years.
00:11:29 Tim
[laughing] Your administration in order? Yeah, that's….uhhh…
00:11:34 Gerry
Hmm. And it's not a market. Don't push yourself. If you're part of the community and wait till you're asked, you have… you're entering a beautiful profession or you're in a beautiful profession. You have the luxury to say yes or no to jobs. Being wise.
00:11:49 Gerry
Don't overestimate yourself or underestimate yourself. Go for the challenges.
00:11:53 Tim
Hmm.
00:11:54 Gerry
We learn as much as you can on the way, and you meet beautiful people on the way and opportunities will come your way. [Tim: mm-hmm] But…
00:12:03 Gerry
Do it in a modest way. Be, be modest. Be humble.
00:12:07 Gerry
Opportunity will come.
00:12:09 Gerry
And that, I think goes from any…
00:12:11 Tim
That's good advice for anyone in or out of the interpreting community, being modest.
00:12:18 Gerry
Recognize opportunities and grab opportunities, but maybe not necessarily create them.
00:12:26 Gerry
Eh, when I wanted to marry my first wife, she was American and she was coming to Holland to visit me for my birthday.
00:12:33 Gerry
And at the moment she told me that on the phone. I happened to have the newspaper open and there was an advert that David Bowie was coming to Holland.
00:12:43 Gerry
Uh, she was….umm…
00:12:45 Gerry
…known for being a, an interpreter who enjoyed interpreting rock concerts.
00:12:51 Gerry
So, I ran to the post office, bought ten tickets, gave five to deaf friends, gave five to European Lobbyists that were in the European scene lobbying for recognition of sign language. I bought ten tickets, then called the company and said, “I have a problem. I’ve been booked by five deaf people who are going to the David Bowie concert, but I need access to the set list and I need lights and they need to have a proper space in the front.” [Tim laughing]
00:13:23 Gerry
Long story short, five hours before the concert we got finally to go ahead after a very long back and forth between record company, Bowie Management in London, and the tour manager.
00:13:34 Gerry
Five hours before we got the go ahead to go through the artists’ entrance.
00:13:39 Gerry
And we interpreted the Bowie concert. That’s something I was pioneering, it was groundbreaking. We used it to create publici- I used it to create publicity about the importance of sign language recognition and accessibility. [Tim: mm-hmm]
00:13:55 Gerry
Now that's totally politically incorrect. It couldn't be done now. [Tim: yeah] Now it’s seen as interpreters trying to grab attention to themselves, which is not my intention at all at that time. [Tim: hmm] It says something about how the profession has changed from…
00:14:13 Gerry
And now they're so... so many more deaf professionals, so many deaf capable-leaders.
00:14:22 Gerry
And deaf people demanding access rather than interpreters needing to create accessibility.
00:14:29 Gerry
So, I think that's the big challenge nowadays.
00:14:33 Gerry
But I think the ball is back in the hands of the deaf community where it’s needed for accessibility discourse. [Tim: Yeah]
00:14:42 Gerry
Abused- no, not abused. Used in those days. It was used to create access where there wasn’t.
00:14:49 Gerry
But nowadays it's time for us interpreters to step back.
00:14:52 Tim
Yeah, this has been really nice. It's time for us to step back and let the listeners digest all of this.
00:15:00 Tim
Well, Gerry, thank you very much for being here. It's been a pleasure getting to know you better and I hope to do even more so in the years to come.
00:15:10 Gerry
Yeah. Looking forward to meeting you in person. I've, we have good friends in Prague.
00:15:14 Tim
That sounds great.
[SHORT TRANSITION MUSIC]
[ROCK EXIT MUSIC STARTS]
00:15:21 Tim
Gerry has given us so much to think about over the past episodes. Today is no exception. Let's start with a few of the points, in no particular order. First, being multilingual, our identity is connected to our culture, which is intertwined with the languages that we know.
00:15:40 Tim
That identity affects how we communicate, how we have relationships and how we serve the communities that we're working within.
00:15:50 Tim
It also gives us a healthy respect of different cultures of different ways of communicating. Gerry’s vast experience of travel throughout the world has given him a new perspective on what respect means. Seeing the diversity of views, of language, of communication styles, the cultural traditions. So many things can affect us and biases, paaarejudices don't always go away. But understanding in this vast sea of confusion that we call life becomes easier and easier the more we know, the more we learn from each other.
00:16:33 Tim
And that connects to why Gerry gives us certain points to remember as interpreters. One, be a part of the deaf community that we serve as much as we can, be modest, respectful.
00:16:47 Tim
And if you're going to do something or want to do something for the deaf community or with the deaf community, wait until you're asked. In the long before time, interpreters would sometimes take advantage of opportunities. Use them to create awareness and understanding between the worlds that they were stepping between all with good intentions.
00:17:12 Tim
But today, the world has changed the deaf community, as he said, has become more and more of the leader. It is their community. They speak for themselves, even without us.
00:17:27 Tim
So, remember when you're thinking of this business model, this industry standard, it's not really a business, it's a service, have some respect, step back and let the deaf lead. They have the power, now. Let them use it.
00:17:46 Tim
In the past, interpreters used it. Now using it can lead to abusing it. So, let's be careful as we step away and continue our journey as sign language interpreters around the world.
00:18:00 Tim
Thank you again, Gerry, for all your thoughts and your stories. Until next time, keep calm. Keep waiting to interpret. I'll see you next week. Take care now.
[ROCK EXIT MUSIC ENDS AT 00:18:49]