Have you looked at the sample code in $ORACLE_HOME/oci/samples (if you don't have them installed, then run the Oracle Installer and tell it to install sample code). There are several that use the bulk interfaces.
You may want to seriously consider using a library instead. I've coded Pro*C (hate it), straight OCI, and used 3rd party libraries. The last is the best, by a large margin. The OCI syntax is really hairy and has options you will probably never use. At the same time it is very, very rigid and will crash your code if you do things even slightly wrong.
If you're using C++ then I can recommend OTL; I've done some serious performance testing and OTL is just as fast as hand coding for the general case (you can beat it by 5-10% if you know for certain that you have no NULLs in your data and thus do not need indicator arrays). Note -- do not try to comprehend the OTL code. It's pretty hideous. But it works really well.
There are also numerous C libraries out there that wrap OCI and make it more usable and less likely to bite you, but I haven't tested any of them.
If nothing else, do yourself a favor and write wrapper functions for the OCI code to make things easier. I did this in my high performance scenario and it drastically reduced the number of issues I had.