Discovering cultural diversity throughout my internship at the cultural center Simón Bolívar in Montreal-Canada
Resumen
As a requirement to complete the study plan of the major in Modern
Languages, it is essential to do an internship. It is a practice that allows students the
opportunity to implement the knowledge and understanding acquired at the
University in a genuine work place. The areas and domains in which languages could
be applied are as wide and diverse as the different alternatives and choices that
students have to do the internship, whether abroad or within our borders. In my case,
I had the favorable chance to do the internship abroad, more specifically in Montreal,
Canada. This city provided me the setting to approach people in English as well as in
French, and by this, I could ameliorate my skills in those two languages that I learnt
at the University. Most importantly, in the city of Montreal, I learnt the complexity
and richness of a culturally diverse society. For this reason, I can affirm that the
experience of doing the internship abroad is of incalculable value and worth.
The institution that received me as an intern was The Cultural Center Simón
Bolívar (CCSB). It is the cultural section of the Consulate General of the Bolivarian
Republic of Venezuela in Montreal. Evidently, it is a governmental institution
dependent on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Venezuela. The main goal of the
CCSB is the intercultural dialogue and exchange through cultural activities, first of
all among the vast Latin American community that resides in that city, and then,
between the formerly mentioned community and the society of Montreal. The
Cultural Center offers every day a variety of cultural events in three languages: Spanish, French, and English. This fact gave me an additional benefit of having the
chance to become more proficient in the languages that I had already studied.
At the moment that I was accepted to be an intern in this institution, I
undoubtedly agreed to go to Canada and take advantage of this opportunity. There are
two main reasons for having done my internship at the Cultural Center Simón
Bolívar. First, it is an International Organization, and I immediately saw an
opportunity to have a first hand experience with the career that I would like to pursue
in a near future. Second, the CCSB is located in Montreal, an important and
cosmopolitan center of the world, and most importantly, a bilingual city.
At the CCSB I worked as a General Assistant, and my main functions were
basically administrative and related to the organizations of many different cultural
events. The tasks that I performed made me aware of all the implications of the
planning of activities, especially those of great importance and magnitude.
Additionally, I experienced the pressure of having a lot of responsibilities, as well as
the gratification of having accomplished the organizational goals.
Throughout this report, I will be presenting in detail all the features of my
internship experience. This means that I will present the job that I carried out at the
CCSB, combined with my impressions of the Montreal society. In order to do this, I
will divide this report in five parts. First, I will describe the Cultural Center Simón
Bolívar, a brief history of its creation, its mission and vission, and the staff that works
there. Additionally, I will also explain most of the activities carried out at the CCSB.
Second, I will give a rundown of the activities that I was in charge of developing during my internship. Third, I will put into words my retrospective impressions of the
internship experience, its positive and negative aspects from my personal point of
view as from the view of the Modern Languages students in general. I will also
reflect on the implications of working at an institution of the nature of the CCSB, and
the features that involve trying to practice language skills in a bilingual society.
Fourth, I will analyze some aspects that have influenced the arrival of immigrants to
Montreal, and how this society is leaving behind their own social and ethnic
resentments, and it is taking a step forward in the recognition and practice of cultural
diversity. Finally, I will give my conclusions and recommendations to the School of
Modern Languages, The Cultural Center Simón Bolívar and to the students who are
near to pursue their internship. Hopefully, these recommendations will be of
assistance for the improvement, and subsequently the success of the internship
program of Modern Languages.