Speaking Proper Spanish
Ask A Mexican: May 26
DEAR MEXICAN: I’m a Spanish court interpreter in Santa Barbara, Calif.; I’ve also worked in Los Angeles courts. I just read your most recent column regarding the promotion of the learning and practicing of English by Latinos in the U.S.
Generally, I agree with your view. But my question is why can’t we also promote the use and practice of PROPER SPANISH in this country? One only needs to take a stroll through the many Latino neighborhoods throughout California and witness the signage on businesses, and non-profits alike, with awful misspellings and grammatical errors — or, flip through the pages of community periodicals, or view the commercials on U.S. Spanish television and see the same linguistic garbage!
But that is not the worst of it. What about the legions of “bilingual” service professionals that work in private and public agencies who speak and write substandard Spanish? Many of these “professionals” are just taken at their word when they assert that they grew up speaking Spanish, their bi-literacy never truly tested. Sadly, this is the case with most Chicanos, and even native Latinos who neglect their Spanish literacy in favor of awkwardly assimilating into a forced English. Their arguments for using improper Spanish are disingenuous: “Mexican immigrants won’t get the big words,” or “Sometimes, there aren’t translations for big words or concepts.”
The fact is that these “professionals” project their own linguistic incompetence and intellectual indifference when they use Spanglish or other phonetic contrivance in dealing with the Spanish-speaking community. English is the only official language in the U.S. (something we are constantly reminded of), so our Spanish can only be based on something just as official. Why is Spanish not respected as an established foreign language? Why is it consistently dumbed down?
As a court interpreter, it’s my duty to translate complicated legal terminology every day. It’s unethical for me to lower the register, and use words like tíquete, corte, probación and felonía when the proper words are boleta de tránsito, tribunal, condena condicional and delito grave, respectively. Ninety-nine percent of the time, the public I work with understands and appreciates my formal usage. Such standards should apply to any field.
I’ve come to realize that the human experience is universal: there is a veritable translation for everything!
Finally, I must ask: do Latino immigrants really need to learn to master English? Isn’t it possible to create capital and business opportunities, to create communities in a strictly Spanish-speaking context? Major corporations already attempt to cater to our market, the largest ethnic group in the U.S. Other ethnicities do the same, don’t they?
— Hasta la Madre en Sta. Bárbara
Dear WAB: Usually, I ask readers to chop down their preguntas as much as possible — we can’t regulate our borders, but we can sure as hell protect against run-on sentences — but yours was an eloquent-enough enough rant to sneak in, and raises many interesante points.
As a court interpreter, you know the difference between legal and colloquial English, so I suggest you treat Spanish the same — I doubt you ask for prayer when demanding your breakfast bill. Besides, what kind of a boring world would we live in if proper language governed how we spoke? That’s right: France. And, of course Latinos should learn English — remember, it’s the bilinguals who’ll rule the world, and the monolinguals who’ll get left behind. Just look at what’s happening to gabachos in our global economy.