img.wp-smiley, img.emoji { display: inline !important; border: none !important; box-shadow: none !important; height: 1em !important; width: 1em !important; margin: 0 0.07em !important; vertical-align: -0.1em !important; background: none !important; padding: 0 !important; } /*# sourceURL=wp-emoji-styles-inline-css */

海角论坛

News Story

Living Language

March 14, 2013鈥擬ore than half the world鈥檚 population is bilingual. Josh Rivera (C鈥15), a former Marine and recent transfer student to Georgetown, is the rare person who qualifies as 鈥榦ctolingual.鈥

Rivera is fluent in English, Arabic, Hebrew, German, Spanish, and Italian, and proficient in the Farsi and Dari Persian dialects. He is also currently learning Mandarin for a business internship in Beijing this summer. He has been 鈥減assionate鈥 about learning language since he was a child. Once, when his uncle sent him a postcard written in different languages, he studied it for weeks.

And while his two brothers did not start 鈥渟peaking clearly鈥 until they were five or six years old, Rivera showed advanced linguistic skill as a toddler.

鈥淎fter you pick up three or four languages, you know how to pick up another one,鈥 said Rivera, an major and minor. 鈥淥ne thing that is always a challenge is getting the accent, the pronunciation, and the tone correct; getting the emphasis of a word right and mastering that; and then moving on and practicing it鈥攂ecause if you don鈥檛 use it, you lose it.鈥

English has always been the 鈥渓iving language鈥 for Rivera, who became proficient in other languages as he traveled the world in his late teens and early twenties.

His senior year of high school was spent in Germany, learning both piano and the native tongue at E.T.A. Hoffmann-Gymnasium Bamberg. Afterward, he lived in Jerusalem for four months, inspired by his Jewish heritage to experience Israeli culture and gain fluency in Hebrew.

鈥淲hen I lived in Germany and did not speak English for a year, I dreamt in German and I thought in German. It鈥檚 all about your surroundings,鈥 Rivera explained. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 how the linguistic brain works, or maybe any brain. It becomes a sponge and takes in anything around it鈥攂lends in like a chameleon.鈥

In 2007, Rivera joined the Marine Corps, with the goal of helping the United States win its politically complex war in the Middle East. Stationed in Delaram, Afghanistan, he worked in military intelligence, supporting combat teams by translating languages foreign to most American soldiers.

鈥淚 wanted to help the United States in wartime,鈥 said Rivera, who achieved the rank of sergeant. 鈥淚 had that call of duty that鈥檚 cultural and spiritual.鈥

During his service, Rivera also enrolled in the Defense Language Institute, the only federally accredited body that trains members of American intelligence agencies and the Armed Forces in learning foreign languages. He excelled at learning Arabic.

But, despite his success, by serving in the Marine Corps Rivera was also forced to reevaluate notions he had long held about combat.

鈥淭his is a huge political opinion of mine鈥攁nd I love the American military and the United States鈥攂ut I don鈥檛 think American lives are worth being lost for the causes we are supposedly fighting for in Iraq and Afghanistan,鈥 Rivera explained.

鈥淏ut there are two sides to every story. When I was in Afghanistan, I acquainted myself with the locals and asked them, 鈥榃hat do you think about Americans?鈥欌 he said. 鈥淲e feel that everyone hates us, but the majority love us. Many Afghans are saddened that the United States will withdraw because when we came, it improved their lives. In that regard, our being there was justified.鈥

Questioning the war effort, Rivera left the Marines in 2011 and began work as a foreign language consultant for the U.S. government. When this job proved lucrative but unfulfilling, he refocused on his education, looking into prestigious colleges and universities that were impressed by his military experience and linguistic skills.

Rivera chose to attend Georgetown, his first choice, which valued his experience at the Defense Language Institute and recognized credits other universities did not.

鈥淚 love Georgetown. I think it鈥檚 a magnificent institution,鈥 said Rivera, who gratefully receives support from the Georgetown Scholarship Program, which covers some expenses not met by the G.I. Bill.

鈥淕eorgetown is inspiring. It has provided me with a lot of insight into things that I wouldn鈥檛 have learned if I hadn鈥檛 come here. The Arabic department is exceptional,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd Washington, DC, reminds me of Europe. It has a very international presence and a lot of culture.鈥