Facilitating Democracy: Alumnae Led Interpreting Team for Presidential Campaign and Inauguration – Middlebury College News and Events

Interpreters play an essential role in making critical interactions possible every single day, whether the venue is a courtroom, a doctors office, or the United Nationsand sometimes they even facilitate the functioning of democracyitself.

Middlebury Institute of International Studies (MIIS)ProfessorLeire Carbonell Aguero, a 2003 graduate of theMA in Conference Interpretation program,called it a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity when she was recruited by fellow alumna Maureen Sweeney MPA 94 to lead a team providing interpretation support for the Biden-Harris presidentialcampaign.

According to2019 Census data, 22 percent of voting-age Americans speak a language other than English at home, with about two-thirds of those speaking Spanish. As a result, without interpreting support, a significant portion of the electorate would be shut out of full participation in the democraticprocess.

Members of the Biden campaign reached out to our team atTiller Language Services, says Sweeney of the firm she co-leads with business partner Todd Dennett, after learning about our live and remote interpreting services for other high-level clients. Sweeney then connected with colleagues at MIIS.

It was the beginning of summer 2020 when Maureen and Todd contacted me with the opportunity to be the chief interpreter of the Spanish booth for the Biden campaign, says Carbonell. From that moment on, I worked to put together a core team of five interpreters to cover weekly assignments for the campaign. Four of these five were Middlebury Institutegraduates; two were Carbonells classmates, one was a former student of hers, and the other was fellow professor Cas Shulman-Mora MATI95.

It was a true privilege for me to put together such an amazing and talented team, says Carbonell. Together, we covered more than 40 assignments for the Biden campaign from August through Election Day. In addition, I helped assemble a team of 44 interpreters for the pre-watch parties for the presidential debate. Im very happy to report that, out of those 44 interpreters, 29 were MIIS graduates, including a few of my currentstudents!

In total, Sweeney and Dennetts firm provided interpretation for more than 135 campaign-related events in languages including Chinese, French, Japanese, Korean, and Spanish. The majority of our interpreters for this project were graduates of the Institute, says Sweeney, who later this month will serve as deputy chief of the interpreting corps for the Tokyo Summer Olympic Games, with fellow MIIS alum Alexandre Ponomarev MACI 00 serving as chief. We were thrilled to work with so many highly qualified language services professionalsand believe this project goes to show the value of high-level interpretation to the successful functioning of democraticinstitutions.

Carbonell describes it as the highest honor of hercareerto be asked to interpret President Joe Bidens inaugural remarks for Spanish-language media. For the Spain-born Carbonell, though, the stakes were personal as well asprofessional.

The inauguration happened in the same year that I became an American citizen, she says. I came to the U.S. in 2001 for an MA in Conference Interpretation at MIIS. To be part of facilitating conversations that are so important to the functioning of democracy in the U.S. was something I could have never imagined when I arrived here. Thanks to our interpretation, key information was accessible to people who only speak Spanish, who are part of our country and have the right to participate in the political process. Every time I interpreted for the campaign, I felt that, in a way, it was my own story that I was telling. I felt that I was closing the circle and giving back to my new country, a country that has given me somuch.

The opportunity was both unique and uniquely meaningful for Carbonell. I will always treasure it. Paraphrasing Amanda Gormans words in her inaugural poem for the country, I came out of this experience knowing that together, we will continue to climb the hill, in all languages, cultures, andcolors!

Originally posted here:
Facilitating Democracy: Alumnae Led Interpreting Team for Presidential Campaign and Inauguration - Middlebury College News and Events

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