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| Is this Judy or Dagy interpreting? We actually don't know. |
Dagy
was in the English booth and understood him alright (here’s to the advantage of
working from your first language). However, this meant trouble in other booths
staffed by excellent interpreters who were working into their native language. Not
surprisingly, they understood very little of what the motivational speaker was
saying since his German had almost no resemblance to the kind of German usually
spoken at conferences. Apparently, after a few moments of shock, my fellow
interpreters did the best they could, which involved mostly guesswork. At some
point, they decided to switch to the English channel and work from there into
their languages, which was probably the best call.
However, in the meantime,
many conference participants who depended on the interpreting service had
already started to complain to the organizer, which prompted her to send up
members of the organizing team who grabbed the microphone from the professional
interpreters and tried to do their job. This only made matters worse. These
staff members might have understood the Austrian German, but they spoke only
basic foreign languages and had absolutely no training in interpreting, which
is why they threw in the towel after a few minutes. To me, that’s one of the
biggest imaginable affronts that any interpreter might experience in their
professional life. I felt vicariously humiliated and decided to mention it to
the client after the conference.
But it got
even worse: the company’s CEO spoke on the following day and actually made fun
of the hard-working interpreters and their troubles on the previous day, while
thanking just about everybody else for their work. This struck me as
particularly offensive, given that it was the company who had hired an
incomprehensible speaker whom even a lot of native German speakers in the
audience did not understand (I overheard many conversations to that effect
during the coffee and lunch breaks).
I later
e-mailed the client about this matter and she mostly dismissed my concerns,
which considerably lowered my willingness to work for this client in the
future. What would you have done in such a situation? We would love to hear your opinions.



























