Man
doing sign language on stage for Nelson Mandela memorial was a ‘fake,’ says
deaf federation
A man who provided sign language interpretation on stage for
Nelson Mandela’s memorial service, attended by scores of heads of state, was a
“fake,” the national director of the Deaf Federation of South Africa said on
Tuesday.
The sign language interpreter seen at the memorial service for
Nelson Mandela Tuesday is being called a fake.zoom
The
scandal over the interpreter is another indication of bad organization of the
historic memorial service at a huge soccer stadium on Tuesday. Other
difficulties included public transportation breakdowns which hindered mourners
from getting to the event and a faulty audio system that prevented many of the
tens of thousands in the stadium from hearing the leaders' speeches. In an
apparent security failure, police did not search the first wave of crowds
arriving at the stadium.
The
unidentified man seen around the world on television next to leaders including
United States President Barack Obama “was moving his hands around but there was
no meaning in what he used his hands for,” Bruno Druchen, the federation's
national director, told The Associated Press.
Collins
Chabane, one of South Africa's two presidency ministers, said the government is
investigating the matter but has not finished yet because it has been
overwhelmed with work preparing for Mandela's funeral Sunday in his hometown of
Qunu.
Four sign
language experts, including Druchen, said the man was not signing in South
African or American sign languages and could not have been signing in any other
known sign language because there was no structure to his arm and hand
movements. South African sign language covers all of the country's 11 official
languages, according to the federation.
Ingrid
Parkin, principal of the St. Vincent School for the Deaf in Johannesburg, said
she's received complaints from the deaf community from Canada to China about
the man on stage and that his movements look “like he's signing gibberish.” He
also used no facial expression to convey the emotions of the leaders, a key
element of sign language interpretation.
“This man
himself knows he cannot sign and he had the guts to stand on an international
stage and do that,” Parkin said.
Nicole Du
Toit, an official sign language interpreter who also watched the broadcast,
said in a telephone interview that the man on stage purporting to sign was an
embarrassment.
“It was
horrible, an absolute circus, really, really bad,” she said. “Only he can
understand those gestures.”
The man
also did sign interpretation at an event last year that was attended by South
African President Jacob Zuma, Druchen said. At that appearance, a deaf person
in the audience videotaped the event and gave it to the federation for the
deaf, which analyzed the video, prepared a report about it and a submitted a
formal complaint to the ANC, Druchen said.
In their
complaint, the federation suggested that the man should take the five years of
training needed to become a qualified sign language interpreter in South
Africa. But the ANC never responded, Druchen said.
Druchen
said a fresh complaint will be filed to the ANC about the interpreter he called
a “fake” with a demand for an urgent meeting.
“We want
to make a statement that this is a warning to other sign language interpreters
who are fake and go about interpreting,” Druchen said. “I am hoping the South
African government will take notice of this.”
Bogus
sign language interpreters are a problem in South Africa, because people who
know a few signs try to pass themselves off as interpreters, said Parkin, the
principal of the school for the deaf. And those hiring them usually don't sign,
so they have no idea that the people they are hiring cannot do the job, she
said.
“They advertise themselves
as interpreters because they know 10 signs and they can make some quick money,”
said Parkin. “It is plain and simple abuse of the deaf community, they are
taking advantage of the deaf community to make money.”

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