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Sign educators on Mandela interpreter CNN com Video - copy for captioning

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    >> Rosemary Church: ... And we want to talk
    more about the sign-language interpreter
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    at Nelson Mandela's memorial on Tuesday.
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    We're joined by Laura Peterson and Julie Rems-Smario
    in Fremont, California,
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    They work at the California School for the
    Deaf, as we mentioned,
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    and Julie herself is deaf and will be communicating
    through an interpreter
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    who is off-camera here.
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    Thank you for joining us.
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    Laura, I do want to start with you and get
    your reaction
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    to this sign-language interpreter: what did
    you think?
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    >> Laura Peterson: Um, well, when I first
    heard about it, actually from Julie,
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    I thought "OK, then maybe they weren't qualified,"
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    So I thought, in order to explain this here,
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    I really wanted to provide access to everybody
    in your audience
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    and so, because I understand that there is
    no captioning,
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    so Julie is interpreting,
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    so that everybody in the audience can have
    access.
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    So I just wanted to clarify that,
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    because people are maybe not understanding
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    why Julie is signing right now.
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    So, when I first read about it, I thought:
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    "OK, maybe it was somebody who just wasn't
    very good."
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    But when I actually saw the video, it was
    really clear that they were --
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    did not have the semantics, the hand shapes,
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    the normal attributes of any sign language.
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    I don't know South African Sign Language,
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    but there are things that are uniform in all
    sign languages.
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    >> Church: And it is worth mentioning that
    there isn't an International Sign Language,
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    which is there,
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    I mean there are different Sign Languages
    in each country.
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    But Julie, I do want to go to you:
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    Are you outraged? What do you want to see
    happen here?
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    >> Julie Rems-Smario: Well, really, I am upset,
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    because really, that shows a lack of respect
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    for human rights of language equality.
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    That was destroyed at this event
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    and Nelson Mandela represented human rights
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    and he's an icon and an African.
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    And this person exploited that on a very important
    day
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    to honor Nelson Mandela
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    and he also violated our human rights as deaf
    people
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    by showing exactly what, you know,
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    language apartheid looks like.
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    >> Church: And Laura, as we saw in the story
    that Errol Barnett brought us
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    just before the break,
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    this man, this interpreter, he has been in
    trouble before,
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    but there have been no consequences.
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    How does somebody -- as far as I was concerned
    --
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    he had credentials to do this.
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    How does somebody end up on the stage
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    next to all of those dignitaries
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    in such an important, historic day,
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    for not just South Africa, but indeed the
    world?
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    How does someone get through to that point
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    when they've been in trouble before?
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    >> Peterson: Right, so your question is
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    how does he end up on the stage.
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    Um, it's not, unfortunately, it's not that
    unusual.
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    It happens not just in South Africa,
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    it happens around the world,
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    it happens in classrooms here in California.
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    This -- oftentimes the situation is,
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    the person who is doing the hiring doesn't
    know the language.
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    And so, if the person says they are fluent
    in that language,
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    they take them, you know, just by their word.
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    Here in the United States,
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    we have the Registry of Interpreters for the
    Deaf,
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    there's a whole certification process
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    and a code of ethics and professional conduct,
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    so we try to avoid that.
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    However, that doesn't mean that people don't
    hire
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    people who don't have those qualifications,
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    they don't include deaf people in that hiring
    process
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    so that somebody who knows the language can
    actually ascertain
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    whether they do have that fluency.
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    >> Church: And presumably, money is the motivator
    here.
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    But of course, across the world,
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    many deaf children struggle to get a proper
    education
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    and that's the big point here.
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    And Human Rights Watch has a campaign dedicated
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    to help raise awareness about SIgn Language
    education
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    in places throughout Africa, and indeed the
    rest of the world.
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    I want to just watch a portion of the video
    if we can bring that up:
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    >> Teacher: My name?
    Good!
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    Yours?
    Hey! Anne, Anne, good!
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    My name.
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    [Girl signs her name]
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    >> Teacher: Good good good!
    Yours?
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    Your name? Ah ah, you are not Anne.
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    My name? Who? Yours, yours, yours.
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    >> Boy: Yours, yours, yours.
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    >> Teacher: Mmm, What is her name?
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    [Girl signs]
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    >> Teacher:Yeah, beautiful.
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    She's very good in taking in the sign language.
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    It's very important to have because
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    she can now be communicating to other people.
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    While she was at home
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    there was no sign language being taught there.
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    >> Church: And Julie and Laura, of course
    advocates say,
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    one of the biggest problems
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    is the lack of Sign Language schools and instructors.
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    And of course that portion of that video,
    I mean,
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    really does bring it home, doesn't it,
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    the importance of educating these children
    who,
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    for some -- sometimes, it's not until they're
    6 years of age
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    that they have access to this sort of education.
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    So how concerned are you that this fake interpreter's
    actions
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    could have a negative impact on this initiative?
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    >> Rems-Smario: Well, I'm very concerned
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    about the lack of acceptance of deaf people,
    deaf leaders,
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    and the input from the community,
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    because we're the experts,
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    and many schools don't hire the deaf people
    who know the community,
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    who know the language,
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    who know our human right to Sign Language.
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    We have a national and international epidemic
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    of deaf children who have language deprivation.
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    They grow up without full access, full competency
    in any language,
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    which means they struggle academically, socially,
    emotionally
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    and it's really a travesty.
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    >> Church: If there's one good point,
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    perhaps this incident has brought attention
    to that.
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    We will see of course.
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    Laura Peterson and Julie Rems-Smario,
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    thank you so much for joining us
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    and bringing attention to this incident.
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    We appreciate it.
Title:
Sign educators on Mandela interpreter CNN com Video - copy for captioning
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Video Language:
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Duration:
06:08

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