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Sensitivity Toward Those Who Are "Other"

How do we respond when faced with a language or other cultural difference in others?

You just got your fast food after a fair amount of difficulty understanding the person who took your order. The young man behind the counter had a limited command of the English language with a heavy accent indicating the part of the world from which he likely has recently moved. You had to ask him to repeat himself numerous times just to get a burger and fries. As you walk to your car with carryout bag in hand, what are you thinking about the encounter you have just experienced? What are you feeling toward the young man who waited on you? What things might you be mumbling under your breath or expressly verbalizing to your passenger who has been patiently sitting in the car while you waited for your order?

There are other similar scenarios. Perhaps the situation is reversed and you are behind the counter waiting on the recent immigrant struggling to express herself in English. Maybe it is on a phone call to a customer service hotline you’ve called relative to a product you just purchased. When these encounters occur, what do they reveal about our attitudes toward those who are “other?”

A few years ago, I traveled to a developing Islamic nation. My immediate experience in the country was one of “otherness.” The arrivals area of the airport felt terribly unfamiliar. Most all of the signs were in Arabic, (One of the exceptions was the English at the currency exchange counter.), as was most of the language I heard around me. It was obvious that many of the people were noting the Westerner as they looked me over. I stood out and felt it profoundly.

During the week I spent in a culture very different than my own, I encountered the sense of otherness frequently. The nature of my travel didn’t contain me to the relative safety net of modern hotels and tourist areas that are generally accomodating to English speaking Westerners. It was challenging at times to communicate. Yet everywhere I went people were friendly and patient with my limited capacity in their culture.

One of the many lasting impacts of this trip was a greater sensitivity to those who are experiencing “otherness” within a particular context. My own experience of being “the other” has helped me better identify with what it must be like for someone to emigrate to the United States. They come to a culture not their own and are immersed into a language of which they may have little grasp. They also do not have the benefit I experienced–people most everywhere who speak at least a little bit of their language to help them get by.

Obviously there are practical realities that make it impossible to speak a little bit of all the languages we may encounter in American culture. But the questions that concern me are not about learning basic phrases in another language. Rather, it is the attitudes and motivations of our hearts, including my own, toward those who are different than us in some way. The opening scenario ends all too often with arrogant, condescending responses (sometimes immediately in the situations, but more likely in the story we later tell our friends or family about the situation). These responses may reveal more than frustration with language barriers.

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Carol October 2, 2012 at 03:33 pm
You need to separate the personal vs the business encounter. When doing business in any country, there is a reasonable expectation that the person can communicate in that country's language. In the case of the USA, that is English. If the counter person or phone person cannot fluently communicate with customers, the problem is not with the person, but with the business that chose that person to represent them, often at the expense of domestic jobs. A person's frustration with bad business practices does not reveal their attitudes about the individual person. It certainly does not make them racists, as you imply.
Personal encounters may, but business dealings do not. If you travel to another country, you cannot reasonably expect everyone to speak English. If that causes you to be hostile toward them, then you are the personification of the term "ugly American". At home, one should expect immigrants to be making reasonable attempts to learn the language. We can encounter immigrants or travelers with little knowledge of English in personal situations. How we react to them
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An interested bystander May 6, 2013 at 05:29 pm
Just pointing out facts. You are also forgetting that money withdrawn from an IRA or 401k (exceptRead More Roth IRAs) are taxed at withdrawal. I prefer my government not punish good financial actions. Sorry it's a quirk of mine, I think we should reward those who make good decisions, not punish them.
Tony Simek May 6, 2013 at 06:35 pm
I agree with you Interested Bystander. Problem is that if you punish the ones making the badRead More decisions, the Federal government will be punished all the time. In the current climate, poor decision making gets rewarded by voters. The middle class doesn't have a chance.
Bill May 9, 2013 at 05:11 am
Naziti and Caroline Johnson so sorry to take so long to get back to you from your comments onRead More Sunday, May 5th, I didn't think I would have to respond. I re-posted Ken's comment because the REAL issue is "AARP selling out it's faithful supporters for BIG MONEY. So let me break it down so even the Soros trolls understand. ObamaCare guts SS and medicare reserve money by 750 Billion. Which ends these programs as we know them. AARP publicly backs ObamaCare. Seniors confused about OCare but trust AARP and their massive ad campaign for OCare. AARP contributes to re-election AARP becomes insurance provided for OCare. Unleashes host of insurance options that Seniors will be needing to make decisions about in next 2-3 years. Complicate the choices for Seniors so they fall back on who they have trusted in the past. Still unaware of the great deception perpetrated by AARP. OCARE fully enacted 2014. AARP gets steady $$$ insurance income now (not $16 membership fees for whoever posted that line above). SS and MediCare bankrupt (3/4 trillion $ stolen to fund OCare) Result for SENIORS. NO SS or MEDicare it's dissolved or becomes something less. Free OCare that sucks. Pay AARP for supplemental Ins. Prescriptions too expensive to purchase so go without or pay AARP for better plan. AARP richer and more powerful represents Gvmt Seniors - Self rule lost You see they screwed the very people that paid dues for their protection!