Category Archives: Disability Issues

Louis Braille’s 200th birthday

“Braille is to fingers what print is to eyes” (RNZFB)

It would be very remiss if a blog entitled Low Visionary did not acknowledge the birthday of the man who was one of the initiators of accessible information, at least in hard copy. Louis Braille’s 200th birthday is being celebrated around the world this year.

A celebration in Wellington to mark his birthday drew attention to the contribution of this man from a humble background to the lives of millions of blind people.

January 4, 2009, was the 200th birthday of the creator the tactile code of raised letters and numbers and musical notation that has allowed blind people around the world to read and achieve the great gift of literacy.
While many think that the advent of computers, assistive technology and the Internet have made Braille obsolete, nothing could be further from the truth. Children who are born blind need Braille to learn to read and write, and refreshable Braille displays on computers now provide access to information such as email in a way that Louis Braille could never have imagined. Technological developments have revolutionised the lives of blind and deaf blind people, making new information more readily and cheaply available in Braille.

Louis Braille

Louis Braille

Louis Braille was French. He was blind from the age of three as a result of an accident. As well as inventing the code that is named after him he was also a skilled musician, playing the cello and the organ to a high standard. He was only 15 when he invented the code that was to be named after him, but died of tuberculosis in his forties.
“Braille is knowledge and knowledge is power” was one of the catch cries at the celebration. There is still some way to go if blind and deaf blind people world-wide are to achieve that power. Only 5% of printed material is available in formats that blind people can read, according to the Foundation of the Blind.

I don’t read Braille, but if I lost my sight completely I would still want to be able to read and write. I might well learn Braille. You can find out more about Braille and the celebrations from the Royal New Zealand Foundation of the Blind.

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Filed under Disability Issues, Disability Rights, Information Accessibility, Media

New Blogs on the block

The blogosphere is like the Universe in the Monty Python song which “keeps on expanding and expanding in all of the directions it can whiz.” I could spend 24 hours a day or more and still never read even all the blogs which might interest me, never mind those which would give me apoplexy, but there are two which I have recently found which might interest readers.

Those of us who are keen on making information accessible talk a lot naturally about accessible web sites. But what about blogs?
How accessible is your blog? All Access Blogging is a blog generally devoted to…well…accessible blogs. What more can I say. It is worth a visit.

In these grim times it is encouraging to see the EEO Commissioner in her National Conversation about Work instituting a new blog on disabled people at work.

Those of us who care about employment issues need to get involved in the process so our voices are heard and our issues included.

On that note I do hope disability interests will be heard at the Employment Summit on 27th. There will be a representative there from DPA so good luck, especially if you are the only one!

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Education for all in NZ… Yeah right!

The world of disability is full of irony and paradox. The past week’s events have been no exception. Media attention has focused on truancy in our schools, with a fair bit of righteous outrage about children and young people who don’t attend school because they are disaffected, school is not where they want to be and it doesn’t engage them, or they think there are better things they can do with their time. What shall we do is the cry? Who do we punish and how? What so we do with these kids?

I am possibly a bit naive to wish that the same level of public indignation and energy could be raised about the disabled children who are denied equal access to their local schools, despite the law. Who but their families and some activists care if they are engaged in learning or not? We are assured it would be too difficult and expensive and ‘we don’t have the resources.’ The children who are truanting also need specialist help and resources I suspect.

It all leads me to wonder how many kids the schools really do serve if thousands are truanting and others are unacceptable.

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Disability Culture in NZ

A new year and new resolutions – not – although I have considered starting regular swimming again after all that Christmas food!

Anyway Happy New Year to everyone out there in the blogosphere!

The holidays have passed quietly in this corner of the capital, with the usual amount of moderate over-indulgence. I can’t prevent myself from adopting a kind of siege mentality at this time of year and over-estimate the amount we can eat. My favourite pastime as I recover is relaxing with a glass of wine and a stack of good books. It is a restful antidote to the highly contagious and exhausting lemming rush towards Christmas which I always swear I will avoid but never can.

Things went a bit pear shaped on New Year’s Eve morning when we awoke to a steady drip as a pipe leaked copiously from two floors up. That kind of catastrophe is one of the (few) disadvantages of living in an apartment I guess.

Over the holidays I have been reading about and reflecting on some disability topics, including disability culture, wondering what it means to your average crip or blindie in Aotearoa/New Zealand. I have found the concept lurking in some surprising places on the Interweb thingy, including knowledge of it being specified in several public sector-type job ads. It made me wonder if the people who wrote them could tell me what they mean. They are probably all away on holiday, otherwise I might ring one or two and ask them out of curiosity. If I find out I will publish their answers here.

I would be interested to know what readers think about disability culture. Does such a thing exist? If so what is it? What does it mean to disabled people in NZ today? Post your thoughts.

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Filed under Disability Issues, Media, The Arts