28 February, 2017

TWB Translation Empowerment Award 2017




                                       
This came as a nice surprise :)











                                



HEAT Project: Translators Training in West Africa

How it all begun: We are contacting you because we are cooperating with the Open University on a very important project called HEAT. The goal of HEAT is to reach and help training thousands of frontline healthcare workers in sub-Saharan Africa. HEAT was created to address the fact that over 1 billion people never get to see a trained healthcare worker in their life. In sub-Saharan Africa alone, people suffer 25% of the world’s disease burden, but have access to only 3% of the world’s health workers.

Translating from English into French HEAT health training materials we will ensure that the information is available for community health workers operating amongst grass root communities. Once translated to French, the potential for these materials to be translated to other local languages is maximized not just in Guinea but in all of French speaking Africa

Translators without Borders is also aiming to train 12 translators from Guinea over 5 months, to become professional translators, translate material from English into French into an appropriate format so that this critical information could then be delivered into local languages orally, start their businesses and improve the field of professional translation in Guinea. They will be working on the translation of the remaining documents of the HEAT materials

Translators will be asked to use a Translation Memory software to build up the Translation Memory for this project that can later increase the efficiency and quality of the Guinean translators. TWB will provide recommendations for the TM but volunteer translators can use their own. Interested translators can also volunteer beyond December to become editors/mentors for translators in Guinea.

Every person, in every village everywhere, should have access to skilled, motivated and supported health worker.'
Former WHO Director-General J W Lee.

After that, I was liaising directly with Areeg Hegazi, the West Africa Program Director, an Egyptian woman. 

She explained: 'through the translation of health training materials from English to French we will ensure that they are accessible for community health workers working among grass root communities in Guinea.   Once translated to French, the training packages can then be translated to other local languages in Guinea. Information in the wrong language can lead to serious misconceptions on how to contract a disease and how to treat a disease. In a survey published in late August, UNICEF found that in Sierra Leone, 30% believed Ebola was transmitted via mosquitos and another 30% believed it was an airborne disease. Moreover, four out of ten respondents (42%) believed hot salt-water baths are effective cure. For the translation to proceed, the materials need to reviewed and edited to simplify the language to ensure that the content is simplified. 

She said: We cannot afford not to translate 

Later on, on International Translators Day (30th of September 2016), she send us an email saying: 'I wanted to share with you the news that today is the end of the two weeks medical translation training for the team of translators in Guinea. We are all very excited. This is the very very first time that a training like this took place in Guinea. This group after the coming 4 months will be the most qualified Medical translators team in Guinea. 

On Monday they will be ready to start the translations thanks to your work on the translations you have helped us build a translation memory for them to facilitate their work and the help in the review of their exams. 

Given that the general education level in the country is not so good (literacy is only 30%), we were lucky to pick a group of well educated translators who will be able to read and write in English and French. But none the less , the English level proficiency among the team isn't so high and that's were your job is critical and timely.  

On behalf of the team in Guinea, I would like to thank each and everyone of you for your time and effort you are helping us with to make the job easy for this nice team.

She then shared a few pictures of the newly trained translators






The project leader with the only female translator in the team.

Literacy among females is only 18% so working women are pretty rare. 'She's one of the best participants' Areeg said. I was lucky to have her as one of the two translators I would coach for the second phase of the project, editing and making suggestions to her translations on weekly batches for 4 months.

It was an honor working on this project, I knew the value of building a specialised Translation Memory for the new translators to build on, and we were lucky to use MateCat, a great Translation software, with MT built in, etc... we were 'technically well treated as well'. 

This is one of my best profesional moment!

Communication in the right language saves life:

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=MQ0ebTKUCy4

I especially like the last images with all the network links firing all around the globe like neurone connections

More about the project and on Guinea's Newest Translators: http://translatorswithoutborders.org/guinea

Ted Talk from TWB CEO on the why of the project or how to make a difference in the world  through language translation https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zYcYVVNe_O4


17 February, 2017

Between Weight & Wind - Natasha Arena

Natasha's 
'please join us for the drinks with the artist'  
Fortitude Valley, last night







 Light, Depth & Movement,

an invitation to dance to intense sounds and colours





















'Natacha is in the language of abstraction, her paintings are about the atmospheric ... a vision appearing before you that is strange and yet familiar ... out of 'dabbing and 'stabbing in rhytmic swirls' ... (there are sounds in the painting, every brush mark is ike a sound),.... she is 'able to work directly with her consciousness in constructing from formless to form, keeping the balance between the birth and life of an abstract painting' 

 Ian Woo, Senior Lecturer, Lasalle College of Arts, Singapore.

'Abstraction is like a stranger, one that you are drawn to because it enquires questions about your state of being. It always seeks to enquire questions about yourself'