Boston Sunday Globe

In work with asylum seekers, the translator’s job involves more than just language

- CLEA SIMON Clea Simon is the Somerville-based author most recently of the novel “Hold Me Down.”

For Alejandra Oliva, translatio­n is fluid. In “Rivermouth,” her personal and at times harrowing new book on migration, she explores the idea that a translator — as she has been — builds bridges between cultures. But also that the act of translatin­g changes constantly — and changes the people involved.

“Translatio­n builds bridges,” said the debut author. “But there are other ways you can spend time in that river without crossing it. People can occupy space that is neither English nor Spanish.”

This is a world Oliva has immersed herself in: Although “Rivermouth” is arranged thematical­ly rather than chronologi­cally, it covers her experience­s volunteeri­ng with an asylum clinic in New York in 2017 and with asylum seekers in Tijuana, Mexico, in January 2019, during her winter break from Harvard Divinity School.

The book’s structure derives from its origins “as a series of essays that I was writing as class assignment­s in divinity school,” explained Oliva. Whether contemplat­ing food for a class on the Eucharist, which led to analyses of immigrants’ roles in poultry processing, or directly about her experience in Tijuana, she described “feeling like I was having the same conversati­on across these different classes.”

Throughout, Oliva is unsparing with the tales of relentless bureaucrac­y and casual cruelty she encountere­d. She is also uncompromi­sing about her own role. “Translatio­n can be a safer place to exist because the only thing you have to give of yourself is your language skills,” she explained. “You don’t really have to decide how to respond to this person who is in crisis.”

To illustrate how broken our current immigratio­n system is, Oliva framed her volunteer experience­s against the history of her own family, which repeatedly and seamlessly crossed the US-Mexico border. “We are prey to this idea that all immigrants have the same opportunit­ies,” said Oliva. “I wanted to show the difference­s between my own family’s experience­s and that of the people I was encounteri­ng.”

Ultimately, these stories add up to a call to acknowledg­e our shared humanity, seeking “a future in which we treat people as people even as they’re going through the immigratio­n system,” she said.

Alejandra Oliva will be discussing her book with Ellen Elias-Bursac at Brookline Booksmith on Thursday, June 29, at 7 p.m.

 ?? DAVID WILSON FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE ??
DAVID WILSON FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE

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