Rudina: Maria Taragjini represented Albania in Miss & Mister Deaf 2019.
TIRANA, Albania -- A beautiful and gorgeous 21-year-old Maria Taragjini is a Deaf woman with different abilities who does not speak or listen. But that has not stopped her from pursuing her dream. Maria represented Albania in the Miss and Mister Deaf 2019 competition that took place in Italy, ranking 5th.
Maria was invited today on the show "Rudina" on TV Klan to tell us more about this beautiful experience. Accompanied by her friend Loretta, who helps us communicate in sign language, Maria is currently a sophomore at the University of the Arts in the Department of Sculpture and Painting.
She has been living away from her family since coming to Tirana at the age of five to study at the school for Deaf and Hard of Hearing students. While her family still lives in Kodovjat village of Gramsh.
Representing Albania was a dream come true and ranking in fifth place was a great achievement, even though it says competition was strong.
“I competed with 5 outfits; in a red dress, in a black dress, in something fashionable, in bathing suits and in a red dress. The race was strong, lots of beautiful girls, lots of competition. I did not find it difficult, I felt safe after being helped by people in the field. Fulfilled the dream I had when I was little, I learned how to walk in the backyard, to be beautiful. Fulfilling the dream is something very big."
Marias says she likes to change her appearance often. “I like myself more blonde than brunettes. I love the change of appearance. My hair was blue. I really want to explore with myself."
Prejudice is another aspect Marian has often associated with throughout her life. In this beauty contest, messages were given that these young people would not be seen with a different eye. And this is what Mary seeks to say. Maria's message is, "Don't prejudge, but help, we're like you."
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Related Miss and Mister Deaf World:
Miss Deaf World 2013 Crowns Competition
Miss-Mister Deaf World & Europe, World Fashion 2013
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#DeafEvents - #DeafModel - #DeafWoman - #DeafTalent - #Interview
Showing posts with label Deaf Biography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deaf Biography. Show all posts
This Deaf Streamer Is Shattering Stereotypes
14-year-old Deaf Fortnite 'EwOk' the first female as a professional gamer.
What was the last time you were the first person to do something? For most hearing people, pioneering anything is a pipe dream at best.
Meet Soleil “Ewok” Wheeler, the 14-year-old Deaf female streamer, who joined FaZe Clan back in July as a content creator on the Fortnite World Cup.
FaZe Ewok is the first girl to ever join FaZe and has her sights set on the Fortnite World Cup. If Soleil “Ewok” Wheeler rapid success is a sign of things to come, she’ll be kicking some serious ass in the near future. Go EwOk Go!
Read More: Deaf Fortnite Streamer 'EwOk' Joins FaZe Clan
According to stats at Fortnite Tracker, Ewok has 65 victories so far in Season 9, with 1,335 eliminations and a 1.74 K/D. On Twitch, she has almost 200,000 followers and has been streaming for the past eight months, beginning with a video in which she eliminates Thang “SpaceLyon” Phan, who is a founding member of FaZe’s Fortnite team. Go EwOk Go!
Follow @EwOk:
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YouTube: https://youtube.com/ewokfn
Gamepedia: https://streamers.gamepedia.com/ewok
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Related Technology:
Deaf Fortnite Streamer 'EwOk' Joins FaZe Clan
This Deaf Streamer Is Shattering Stereotypes
Deaf Live-Streamer Helps Deaf Shop Online
Deaf Players Innovate VRChat Community
Microsoft's Kinect Turns Sign Language Translator
SignAloud Glove That Translates ASL Into English
Future Of Electronic Devices For The Deaf
New Technology of Communication for the Deaf
Forbes: Changing Technologies For The Deaf
What was the last time you were the first person to do something? For most hearing people, pioneering anything is a pipe dream at best.
Meet Soleil “Ewok” Wheeler, the 14-year-old Deaf female streamer, who joined FaZe Clan back in July as a content creator on the Fortnite World Cup.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
FaZe Ewok is the first girl to ever join FaZe and has her sights set on the Fortnite World Cup. If Soleil “Ewok” Wheeler rapid success is a sign of things to come, she’ll be kicking some serious ass in the near future. Go EwOk Go!
Read More: Deaf Fortnite Streamer 'EwOk' Joins FaZe Clan
According to stats at Fortnite Tracker, Ewok has 65 victories so far in Season 9, with 1,335 eliminations and a 1.74 K/D. On Twitch, she has almost 200,000 followers and has been streaming for the past eight months, beginning with a video in which she eliminates Thang “SpaceLyon” Phan, who is a founding member of FaZe’s Fortnite team. Go EwOk Go!
Follow @EwOk:
Instagram: https://instagram.com/ewokfn
Twitter: https://twitter.com/ewok
YouTube: https://youtube.com/ewokfn
Gamepedia: https://streamers.gamepedia.com/ewok
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Related Technology:
Deaf Fortnite Streamer 'EwOk' Joins FaZe Clan
This Deaf Streamer Is Shattering Stereotypes
Deaf Live-Streamer Helps Deaf Shop Online
Deaf Players Innovate VRChat Community
Microsoft's Kinect Turns Sign Language Translator
SignAloud Glove That Translates ASL Into English
Future Of Electronic Devices For The Deaf
New Technology of Communication for the Deaf
Forbes: Changing Technologies For The Deaf
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Deaf Chef Kurt 'Irish Dishwasher' Ramborger
Deaf celebrity Kurt 'Irish Chef' Ramborger share how did he become famous chef was started out as a dishwasher.
AUSTIN, Texas -- Calvin Young, a Deaf traveler known as Seek the World on YouTube channel, exploring the world to discover and share amazing story about the Deaf American celebrity chef, Kurt 'Irish Chef' Ramborger of Texas.
Did you know Kurt 'Irish Chef' Ramborger started out as a dishwasher and never studied at a cooking school? He's also a self-taught chef? He will tell you more stories in this video in American Sign Language with captions.
A hottest Kurt 'Irish Dishwasher' Ramborger, officially the hottest chef in America competition, and not only is Ramborger dead sexy, Kurt's also garnered incredible support from the worldwide ASL & Deaf community thanks to online activism from his Deaf sister, Heidi Branch. Ramborger is also Deaf, and so are several of his colleagues as well.
Kurt 'Irish Chef' Ramborger appearanced on the TV show "Chopped" on the Food Network channel becoming the first Deaf chef to be on the show.
Follow @KurttheIRISHchefRamborger:
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Related Kurt Irish Chef Ramborger:
'Chopped!' Featuring a Kurt 'the IRISH chef' Ramborger
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Deaf Chef 2014 - Kurt Irish Chef Ramborger
Deaf Chef Kurt 'Irish Dishwasher' Ramborger
Follow @SeektheWorld:
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Twitter: https://twitter.com/seektheworld_
YouTube: https://youtube.com/channel/seektheworld
Website: https://seektheworld.com
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Museum of Deaf - History, Arts & Culture
Deaf Haunted House Story 'Nightmare Factory'
Erik Jensen - The Deaf Keyboard Muralist
Dal's Poke - Canada's New Deaf Restaurant
Deaf Chef Kurt 'Irish Dishwasher' Ramborger
Deaf Green Thumbs - Plant, Nurture, Thrieve
Deaf-Owned Business: World Deaf Match
'Seek The World' The Blackface Controversy
'Seek The World' Arrested For Domestic Violence
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Kentucky Fried Chicken Operated By Deaf People
Indonesian Fingertalk Cafe Employs Deaf People
Restaurant Run & Staffed By Gaza Deaf People
More Deaf Entrepreneurs Show Signs of Success
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AUSTIN, Texas -- Calvin Young, a Deaf traveler known as Seek the World on YouTube channel, exploring the world to discover and share amazing story about the Deaf American celebrity chef, Kurt 'Irish Chef' Ramborger of Texas.
Did you know Kurt 'Irish Chef' Ramborger started out as a dishwasher and never studied at a cooking school? He's also a self-taught chef? He will tell you more stories in this video in American Sign Language with captions.

Kurt 'Irish Chef' Ramborger appearanced on the TV show "Chopped" on the Food Network channel becoming the first Deaf chef to be on the show.
Follow @KurttheIRISHchefRamborger:
Subscribe: youtube.com/subscription/kurttheirishchef
Facebook: facebook.com/kurttheirishchef
Related Kurt Irish Chef Ramborger:
'Chopped!' Featuring a Kurt 'the IRISH chef' Ramborger
Buda’s Kurt Ramborger Is Nation’s Hottest Chef
Famous Deaf Person Presentation On Kurt 'The Irish Chef' Ramborger
Amateur Deaf Chef - Chad A Ludwig & Kurt Ramborger
Deaf Chef 2014 - Kurt Irish Chef Ramborger
Deaf Chef Kurt 'Irish Dishwasher' Ramborger
Follow @SeektheWorld:
Facebook: https://facebook.com/seektheworld2015
Instagram: https://instagram.com/seektheworld
GooglePlus: https://plus.google.com/seektheworld2015
Pinterest: https://pinterest.com/seektheworld
Twitter: https://twitter.com/seektheworld_
YouTube: https://youtube.com/channel/seektheworld
Website: https://seektheworld.com
Related Seek The World:
Seek The World, A Deaf Adventurer
INSIDER: Calvin Young, Deaf World Traveler
Seek The World: INES - Brazil's First Deaf School
Signing Merry Christmas In 57 Sign Languages
Signing Happy New Year in 76 Sign Languages
The World's First Public Deaf School in France
The Story of Katrina Deaf Survivor
Museum of Deaf - History, Arts & Culture
Deaf Haunted House Story 'Nightmare Factory'
Erik Jensen - The Deaf Keyboard Muralist
Dal's Poke - Canada's New Deaf Restaurant
Deaf Chef Kurt 'Irish Dishwasher' Ramborger
Deaf Green Thumbs - Plant, Nurture, Thrieve
Deaf-Owned Business: World Deaf Match
'Seek The World' The Blackface Controversy
'Seek The World' Arrested For Domestic Violence
Related Restaurants:
Deaf-Owner Mozzeria, Chron's Onto Bouche
Deaf Owned 'Mozzeria' Small Business Story
Deaf Restaurant ‘Signs’ Opening In Toronto
DeaFined - Canada's New Deaf Restaurant
Dal's Poke - Canada's New Deaf Restaurant
Kentucky Fried Chicken Operated By Deaf People
Indonesian Fingertalk Cafe Employs Deaf People
Restaurant Run & Staffed By Gaza Deaf People
More Deaf Entrepreneurs Show Signs of Success
Related Posts:
#DeafAmericans - #DeafTravel - #DeafTravelers - #TheIRISHChefRamborger
Deaf Entrepreneur - The Igor Djenge Skit Show
Deaf Comedian and actor Igor Djenge takes you on a trip down the rabbit hole through his skits of comedy, wackiness, and craziness.
LOS ANGELES -- The Igor Djenge Skit Show in American Sign Language, a Deaf actor, artist and entrepreneur, Igor Djenge 'troll hair' becomes famous internet star is popular on social media in ASL & Deaf community platforms.
At age 17 Igor Djenge had the courage to move to USA from Southeast Europe, known for its rich cultural heritage. Igor does exactly what he visualizes in his head, committing to have a successful career in acting world. He attended a school in the capital of Serbia, Belgrade. His mother is a Serb, and his father is a Hungarian. He has a younger sister, often mistaken for his twin. They got identical smiles.
Igor mostly uses American Sign Language (ASL) to communicate with others, but he can speak as well fluently in English and Serbian. He evolved tremendously as a unique artist and can be often found at the beaches in Southern California.
Djenge said "You know we all have some kind of self-expressing moments. I do this through these clips made from home. They could be humorous, educational, offensive or it's just nothing. I'm an introvert who mistakenly ends up in the big crowd without an exit." The Igor Djenge Skit Show in ASL on Amazon.
SOURCE - IDMb
Follow @IgorDjenge:
Facebook - https://facebook.com/igortheofficial
Instagram - https://instagram.com/igordjenge
Twitter - https://twitter.com/igordjenge
YouTube - https://youtube.com/channel/igordjenge
The Igor Djenge Skit Show In ASL - Order on Amazon
Related Posts: #DeafActors - #DeafComedians - #DeafTalent - #Parody
LOS ANGELES -- The Igor Djenge Skit Show in American Sign Language, a Deaf actor, artist and entrepreneur, Igor Djenge 'troll hair' becomes famous internet star is popular on social media in ASL & Deaf community platforms.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
At age 17 Igor Djenge had the courage to move to USA from Southeast Europe, known for its rich cultural heritage. Igor does exactly what he visualizes in his head, committing to have a successful career in acting world. He attended a school in the capital of Serbia, Belgrade. His mother is a Serb, and his father is a Hungarian. He has a younger sister, often mistaken for his twin. They got identical smiles.
Igor mostly uses American Sign Language (ASL) to communicate with others, but he can speak as well fluently in English and Serbian. He evolved tremendously as a unique artist and can be often found at the beaches in Southern California.
Djenge said "You know we all have some kind of self-expressing moments. I do this through these clips made from home. They could be humorous, educational, offensive or it's just nothing. I'm an introvert who mistakenly ends up in the big crowd without an exit." The Igor Djenge Skit Show in ASL on Amazon.
SOURCE - IDMb
Follow @IgorDjenge:
Facebook - https://facebook.com/igortheofficial
Instagram - https://instagram.com/igordjenge
Twitter - https://twitter.com/igordjenge
YouTube - https://youtube.com/channel/igordjenge
The Igor Djenge Skit Show In ASL - Order on Amazon
Related Posts: #DeafActors - #DeafComedians - #DeafTalent - #Parody
The Silent Child (2017) - Official Trailer
The Silent Child film tells the story of a profoundly Deaf child born to hearing parents and the unequivocal power of communication.
HOLLYWOOD -- The Silent Child is a British short film written by and starring Rachel Shenton and directed by Chris Overton, and released in 2017 by Slick Films. It tells the story of Libby, a profoundly Deaf four-year-old girl, who lives a silent life until a social worker, played by Shenton, teaches her how to communicate through sign language. The film won the Live Action Short Film category at the 90th Academy Awards.
The film was based on Shenton's own experiences as the child of a parent who became deaf. The film features profoundly Deaf six-year-old first-time actor Maisie Sly as the titular child. British Sign Language (BSL) is used in the film.
The Silent Child won best short film at the Rhode Island International Film Festival in August 2017. This made it eligible for entry to the Oscars. In December 2017 the film was selected as one of the final ten films in the Live Action Short Film category for the 90th Academy Awards.
On 23 January 2018, it was announced that The Silent Child was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film for the 90th Academy Awards, which it then won. Shenton kept a promise that she had made to their young lead actress and signed her acceptance speech.
SOURCE - Wikipedia
Follow @TheSilentChild:
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Related Posts: #DeafFilm - #DeafMovie
HOLLYWOOD -- The Silent Child is a British short film written by and starring Rachel Shenton and directed by Chris Overton, and released in 2017 by Slick Films. It tells the story of Libby, a profoundly Deaf four-year-old girl, who lives a silent life until a social worker, played by Shenton, teaches her how to communicate through sign language. The film won the Live Action Short Film category at the 90th Academy Awards.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
The film was based on Shenton's own experiences as the child of a parent who became deaf. The film features profoundly Deaf six-year-old first-time actor Maisie Sly as the titular child. British Sign Language (BSL) is used in the film.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
The Silent Child won best short film at the Rhode Island International Film Festival in August 2017. This made it eligible for entry to the Oscars. In December 2017 the film was selected as one of the final ten films in the Live Action Short Film category for the 90th Academy Awards.
On 23 January 2018, it was announced that The Silent Child was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film for the 90th Academy Awards, which it then won. Shenton kept a promise that she had made to their young lead actress and signed her acceptance speech.
SOURCE - Wikipedia
Follow @TheSilentChild:
Facebook: https://facebook.com/thesilentchildfilm/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/silentchildfilm
YouTube: https://youtube.com/channel/silentchildfilm
Indiegogo: https://indiegogo.com/projects/the-silent-child-short-film
Related Posts: #DeafFilm - #DeafMovie
'Ready To Be Heard' By Amanda McDonough
Deaf Awareness: “Ready To Be Heard” The story of actress and author, Amanda McDonough as a Deaf person.
“Ready to Be Heard” is a story for all ages written to give you an inside look at what life is like for someone growing up with deteriorating hearing loss and it is a unique look into Deaf culture from the point of view of a late Deafened adult.
For anyone looking for inspiration to help with a challenging life situation or condition, Amanda McDonough's story will provide encouragement and will help you make your voice heard.
“Ready to Be Heard” is the story of Amanda McDonough, who was diagnosed with hearing loss at the age of 4. As she grew older, her hearing steadily declined as she battled to hide her ongoing hearing loss from her family, friends, teachers, and the world. Despite facing unbelievable challenges, she succeeded in; getting straight A’s in school, having a successful child acting career, and leading a fairly “normal” life. But one day, during the most difficult part of her college career, she awoke to discover that her remaining hearing was completely gone. She had lost 100% of her hearing in both ears. All of a sudden, she was unable to communicate with the people around her. She did not know sign language, could no longer speak well, and could not lip read. She became isolated from the world and had to finally face her hearing loss, accept that she was deaf, and find a way to finish college without being able to hear. She found the strength to teach herself to talk well again, to lip-read, and to use sign language. As she was leaning new communication skills, she also graduated from college and set out on an emotional rollercoaster ride to discover who she was and who she wanted to become. Join her on her journey to find a balance between the hearing world she was raised in and the Deaf culture she now belonged to. This is a story about overcoming obstacles, finding yourself, and making your mark on the world... visit at http://readytobeheard.com.
SOURCE - ReadyToBeHeard.com
Follow Amanda McDonough
Subscribe - https://youtube.com/channel/amandamcdonough
Facebook - https://facebook.com/officialamandamcdonough
Twitter - https://twitter.com/actingamanda
IMDb - http://imdb.me/amandamcdonough
Instagram - https://instagram.com/amanda_mcdonough
Official Website - http://amanda-mcdonough.com
Related Amanda McDonough:
What ‘Deaf’ Means To Me - Amanda McDonough
DeafNation World Expo - Amanda McDonough
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Facts & Myths About Deaf People
Myths or Facts: Can Deaf People Drive ?
Myths & Facts About Deaf Children
Dating Tips - How To Date A Deaf Person
'Ready To Be Heard' By Amanda McDonough

For anyone looking for inspiration to help with a challenging life situation or condition, Amanda McDonough's story will provide encouragement and will help you make your voice heard.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
“Ready to Be Heard” is the story of Amanda McDonough, who was diagnosed with hearing loss at the age of 4. As she grew older, her hearing steadily declined as she battled to hide her ongoing hearing loss from her family, friends, teachers, and the world. Despite facing unbelievable challenges, she succeeded in; getting straight A’s in school, having a successful child acting career, and leading a fairly “normal” life. But one day, during the most difficult part of her college career, she awoke to discover that her remaining hearing was completely gone. She had lost 100% of her hearing in both ears. All of a sudden, she was unable to communicate with the people around her. She did not know sign language, could no longer speak well, and could not lip read. She became isolated from the world and had to finally face her hearing loss, accept that she was deaf, and find a way to finish college without being able to hear. She found the strength to teach herself to talk well again, to lip-read, and to use sign language. As she was leaning new communication skills, she also graduated from college and set out on an emotional rollercoaster ride to discover who she was and who she wanted to become. Join her on her journey to find a balance between the hearing world she was raised in and the Deaf culture she now belonged to. This is a story about overcoming obstacles, finding yourself, and making your mark on the world... visit at http://readytobeheard.com.
SOURCE - ReadyToBeHeard.com
Follow Amanda McDonough
Subscribe - https://youtube.com/channel/amandamcdonough
Facebook - https://facebook.com/officialamandamcdonough
Twitter - https://twitter.com/actingamanda
IMDb - http://imdb.me/amandamcdonough
Instagram - https://instagram.com/amanda_mcdonough
Official Website - http://amanda-mcdonough.com
Related Amanda McDonough:
What ‘Deaf’ Means To Me - Amanda McDonough
DeafNation World Expo - Amanda McDonough
5 Deaf Myths Busted With Amanda McDonough
Facts & Myths About Deaf People
Myths or Facts: Can Deaf People Drive ?
Myths & Facts About Deaf Children
Dating Tips - How To Date A Deaf Person
'Ready To Be Heard' By Amanda McDonough
Deaf Actress Millicent Simmonds 'Wonderstruck'
'Wonderstruck' (2017) Official Trailer - Millicent Simmonds, Wonderstruck's Deaf Breakout Star.
HOLLYWOOD -- Wonderstruck is a 2017 American mystery drama film directed by Todd Haynes and based on the 2011 novel Wonderstruck by Brian Selznick, who also adapted the novel into a screenplay. The film stars Oakes Fegley, Julianne Moore, Michelle Williams, and Millicent Simmonds.
Plot: The film interlaces two stories set fifty years apart, switching frequently between them. Each tells the story of a child's quest. In 1927, Rose (Simmonds) runs away from her father's New Jersey home to find her mother/idol, the actress Lillian Mayhew (Moore). In 1977, recently orphaned Ben (Fegley) runs away from his Minnesota home in search of his father.
Get to know Deaf actress Millicent Simmonds intimately and learn more about her journey with 'Wonderstruck' the film.
About Wonderstruck: Based on Brian Selznick’s critically acclaimed novel Ben and Rose are children from two different eras who secretly wish their lives were different. Ben longs for the father he has never known, while Rose dreams of a mysterious actress whose life she chronicles in a scrapbook. When Ben discovers a puzzling clue in his home and Rose reads an enticing headline in the newspaper, both children set out on quests to find what they are missing that unfold with mesmerizing symmetry. Here's the official site Wonderstruck.com.
SOURCE - Wikipedia
SOURCE - Amazon Studios
SOURCE - Sorenson VRS
Related Millicent Simmonds:
'A Quiet Place' (2018) - Sign Language Film
'A Quiet Place' Part II (2020) Sign Language Film
Deaf Actress Millicent Simmonds 'A Quiet Place'
Deaf Actress Millicent Simmonds 'Wonderstruck'
Related Posts:
#ASLFilm - #DeafActress - #DeafFilm - #DeafMovie - #MillieSimmonds
HOLLYWOOD -- Wonderstruck is a 2017 American mystery drama film directed by Todd Haynes and based on the 2011 novel Wonderstruck by Brian Selznick, who also adapted the novel into a screenplay. The film stars Oakes Fegley, Julianne Moore, Michelle Williams, and Millicent Simmonds.
Plot: The film interlaces two stories set fifty years apart, switching frequently between them. Each tells the story of a child's quest. In 1927, Rose (Simmonds) runs away from her father's New Jersey home to find her mother/idol, the actress Lillian Mayhew (Moore). In 1977, recently orphaned Ben (Fegley) runs away from his Minnesota home in search of his father.
Get to know Deaf actress Millicent Simmonds intimately and learn more about her journey with 'Wonderstruck' the film.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
About Wonderstruck: Based on Brian Selznick’s critically acclaimed novel Ben and Rose are children from two different eras who secretly wish their lives were different. Ben longs for the father he has never known, while Rose dreams of a mysterious actress whose life she chronicles in a scrapbook. When Ben discovers a puzzling clue in his home and Rose reads an enticing headline in the newspaper, both children set out on quests to find what they are missing that unfold with mesmerizing symmetry. Here's the official site Wonderstruck.com.
SOURCE - Wikipedia
SOURCE - Amazon Studios
SOURCE - Sorenson VRS
Related Millicent Simmonds:
'A Quiet Place' (2018) - Sign Language Film
'A Quiet Place' Part II (2020) Sign Language Film
Deaf Actress Millicent Simmonds 'A Quiet Place'
Deaf Actress Millicent Simmonds 'Wonderstruck'
Related Posts:
#ASLFilm - #DeafActress - #DeafFilm - #DeafMovie - #MillieSimmonds
Deaf and Blind - Being Me Heather
Short film project: Meet the Deaf woman who had to learn how to live again after going blind.
MELBOURNE, Australia -- Heather Lawson is Deaf and Blind. She's been through periods of extreme loneliness and isolation, but by becoming independent through orientation and mobility training has helped her to be heard in a world she once felt she wasn’t part of. Here's the video with closed captions.
Heather Lawson was born Deaf. She grew up in Melbourne with the impairment and coped well with the reality of relying on her sight to be able to socialise and communicate.
"I am Deaf-Blind. But I was born Deaf. Then I grew up deaf. I coped with that well. I had vision. Later on when I was a teenager around 13-14, I slowly lost my sight and I had tunnel vision," she said.
"When I was deaf, I had vision, so I could socialise. I was a really happy girl, involved in activities. I could see other people's signing.
"As I lost my sight it impacted on my life. I was frightened. I felt alone. Because at that time, I didn't have any skills. I had to learn everything again."
But then she also lost her sight, to the point of having tunnel vision, leaving her "frightened" and "alone".
Heather told Channel 10's The Project the loss of another crucial sense meant she had lost the skills she relied on to live and was forced to learn how to function again.
She now relies on a language known as Tactile Auslan -- a system of communication where a Deaf-Blind individual places their hands over the hands of an interpreter as they use sign language, in order to be able to feel the movements and read what they're saying.
She told The Project this unique form of communication has become the way she now lives her life and manages to maintain a 30-year friendship with another Deaf-Blind person, Michelle Stephens.
Unlike Heather, Michelle grew up with minimal sight due to a premature birth and lost her hearing during her 30s as a result of childhood ear infections.
She was an early recipient of a cochlear implant and when her remaining hearing faded, she too had to learn the skills of life once again -- including her pet hobby in playing the piano.
"At first it was really devastating. I naturally thought that I would never, ever be able to play the piano again," she said.
Michelle also said her friendship with Heather grew around their training to re-learn communication techniques. Now they support each other through the good and bad days they experience using new technologies such as Braille display text and email.
"We became friends and we used to catch up and do training together and I used to go to her house a few times. We do have good and bad days but we support each other," she said.
"Heather and I work very closely together. For instance, we're always texting each other about something."
Both Heather and Michelle were also the creators of an immersive performance that was featured in the Sydney Festival in January called Imagined Touch. The event required attendees to wear goggles and headphones that restricted light and sound in order to experience life as a Deaf-Blind individual.
SOURCE - The Huffington Post
Video Credit: Attitude
Related Posts: #Deaf-Blind
MELBOURNE, Australia -- Heather Lawson is Deaf and Blind. She's been through periods of extreme loneliness and isolation, but by becoming independent through orientation and mobility training has helped her to be heard in a world she once felt she wasn’t part of. Here's the video with closed captions.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
Heather Lawson was born Deaf. She grew up in Melbourne with the impairment and coped well with the reality of relying on her sight to be able to socialise and communicate.
"I am Deaf-Blind. But I was born Deaf. Then I grew up deaf. I coped with that well. I had vision. Later on when I was a teenager around 13-14, I slowly lost my sight and I had tunnel vision," she said.
"When I was deaf, I had vision, so I could socialise. I was a really happy girl, involved in activities. I could see other people's signing.
"As I lost my sight it impacted on my life. I was frightened. I felt alone. Because at that time, I didn't have any skills. I had to learn everything again."
But then she also lost her sight, to the point of having tunnel vision, leaving her "frightened" and "alone".
Heather told Channel 10's The Project the loss of another crucial sense meant she had lost the skills she relied on to live and was forced to learn how to function again.
She now relies on a language known as Tactile Auslan -- a system of communication where a Deaf-Blind individual places their hands over the hands of an interpreter as they use sign language, in order to be able to feel the movements and read what they're saying.
She told The Project this unique form of communication has become the way she now lives her life and manages to maintain a 30-year friendship with another Deaf-Blind person, Michelle Stephens.
Unlike Heather, Michelle grew up with minimal sight due to a premature birth and lost her hearing during her 30s as a result of childhood ear infections.
She was an early recipient of a cochlear implant and when her remaining hearing faded, she too had to learn the skills of life once again -- including her pet hobby in playing the piano.
"At first it was really devastating. I naturally thought that I would never, ever be able to play the piano again," she said.
Michelle also said her friendship with Heather grew around their training to re-learn communication techniques. Now they support each other through the good and bad days they experience using new technologies such as Braille display text and email.
"We became friends and we used to catch up and do training together and I used to go to her house a few times. We do have good and bad days but we support each other," she said.
"Heather and I work very closely together. For instance, we're always texting each other about something."
Both Heather and Michelle were also the creators of an immersive performance that was featured in the Sydney Festival in January called Imagined Touch. The event required attendees to wear goggles and headphones that restricted light and sound in order to experience life as a Deaf-Blind individual.
SOURCE - The Huffington Post
Video Credit: Attitude
Related Posts: #Deaf-Blind
Deaf Musician - Myles de Bastion
How a Deaf musician is helping others “See with Sound”
Share from Great Big Story channel on YouTube. For many, music is a unifier--an art form that brings people together and allows us to connect over shared emotions. But what if you couldn’t hear the lyrics or rhythms that add meaning to our lives? Enter Myles de Bastion and his Audiolux visualization system.
Though he now identifies as Deaf, the Portland-based artist and musician never lost his love of music. Combining his interest in sound, visual arts and technology, de Bastion created a system to share music with both Deaf and hearing audiences alike. In the process, he formed an entirely new method of communication and self-expression that hearing and non-hearing communities can appreciate together.
This Great Big Story was made in partnership with LensCrafters - http://lenscrafters.com/seegooddaily
Subscribe - https://youtube.com/channel/greatbigstory
This story is a part of our Frontiers series, where we bring you front and center to the dreamers, pioneers, and innovators leading society at the cutting edge. Let us take you along for a trip to the oft-imagined but rarely accomplished.
Follow us behind the scenes on social media:
Instagram - http://goo.gl/2KABeX
Facebook - http://goo.gl/Vn0XIZ
Twitter - http://goo.gl/sY1GLY
Vimeo - http://goo.gl/T0OzjV
Website - http://greatbigstory.com
Share from Great Big Story channel on YouTube. For many, music is a unifier--an art form that brings people together and allows us to connect over shared emotions. But what if you couldn’t hear the lyrics or rhythms that add meaning to our lives? Enter Myles de Bastion and his Audiolux visualization system.
Though he now identifies as Deaf, the Portland-based artist and musician never lost his love of music. Combining his interest in sound, visual arts and technology, de Bastion created a system to share music with both Deaf and hearing audiences alike. In the process, he formed an entirely new method of communication and self-expression that hearing and non-hearing communities can appreciate together.
This Great Big Story was made in partnership with LensCrafters - http://lenscrafters.com/seegooddaily
Subscribe - https://youtube.com/channel/greatbigstory
This story is a part of our Frontiers series, where we bring you front and center to the dreamers, pioneers, and innovators leading society at the cutting edge. Let us take you along for a trip to the oft-imagined but rarely accomplished.
Follow us behind the scenes on social media:
Instagram - http://goo.gl/2KABeX
Facebook - http://goo.gl/Vn0XIZ
Twitter - http://goo.gl/sY1GLY
Vimeo - http://goo.gl/T0OzjV
Website - http://greatbigstory.com
Nyle DiMarco: Were You Bullied For Being Deaf ?
Were You Bullied For Being Deaf? ASK Nyle DiMarco.
Nyle DiMarco's very first #ASKNYLE video answering so many of your questions.
Post a commet and ask me questions. DiMarco will do his best to reply.
Give it a thumbs up if you loved it!
If you're new here, welcome! Here's a little more about Nyle DiMarco:
Nyle DiMarco is an actor, model and activist. He is a native New Yorker and was born into a large multigenerational Deaf family. He is an alumni of Gallaudet University, the only liberal arts University in the world for the Deaf, with a B.A. in mathematics.
Nyle is the first Deaf person to win America's Next Top Model Cycle 22 and Dancing With The Stars Season 22. As an actor, Nyle's castings have included: the lead in the independent film In the Can, an ASL Films production, as Garret on ABC Family's Switched at Birth, and Difficult People Hulu Series. As a founder of Nyle DiMarco Foundation and an honorary spokesman for Language Equality and Acquisition for Deaf Kids (LEAD-K), Nyle is passionate about language and literacy and advocacy within the Deaf Community.
Nyle is a signer and creative collaborator on The ASL App (by Ink & Salt), an App created by native Deaf signers to teach conversational American Sign Language (ASL). Nyle DiMarco is Deaf and uses American Sign Language. American Sign Language requires the use of facial expressions and body movements, his Deafness amplifies his natural talent. His Deafness is an asset and not a limitation, he is amicable and able to communicate easily.
Follow @NyleDiMarco:
Subscribe - https://youtube.com/nyle222
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/nyledimarco
Twitter - https://twitter.com/nyledimarco
Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/nyledimarco
Model Mayhem - http://modelmayhem.com/nyledimarco
Linkedin - https://linkedin.com/in/nyledimarco
Tumblr - http://nyledimarco.tumblr.com
Website - http://nyledimarco.com
Related: #NyleDiMarco
Nyle DiMarco - Upbringing With My Deaf Family
Related Bullying:
Bullies Dump Deaf Student's Backpack In Toilet
Bullied Deaf Boy Forced To Leave School
Deaf Girl's Bullying In Mainstream School
Deaf Victim Of Bullying At Three Different Schools
Deaf Student Bullied at the AG Bell School
Teens Assaulted Deaf Student, Filmed Incident
Deaf People Bullied By The AG Bell Association
Nyle DiMarco: Were You Bullied For Being Deaf ?
Related Mainstreaming School:
Mainstream School Lacks Communication Access
Dropout Rate Among Mainstream Deaf Students
Mainstream School Is Failing Deaf Students
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
Deaf Awareness 'Voiceless' Short Film
Nyle DiMarco's very first #ASKNYLE video answering so many of your questions.
Post a commet and ask me questions. DiMarco will do his best to reply.
Give it a thumbs up if you loved it!
If you're new here, welcome! Here's a little more about Nyle DiMarco:
Nyle DiMarco is an actor, model and activist. He is a native New Yorker and was born into a large multigenerational Deaf family. He is an alumni of Gallaudet University, the only liberal arts University in the world for the Deaf, with a B.A. in mathematics.
Nyle is the first Deaf person to win America's Next Top Model Cycle 22 and Dancing With The Stars Season 22. As an actor, Nyle's castings have included: the lead in the independent film In the Can, an ASL Films production, as Garret on ABC Family's Switched at Birth, and Difficult People Hulu Series. As a founder of Nyle DiMarco Foundation and an honorary spokesman for Language Equality and Acquisition for Deaf Kids (LEAD-K), Nyle is passionate about language and literacy and advocacy within the Deaf Community.
Nyle is a signer and creative collaborator on The ASL App (by Ink & Salt), an App created by native Deaf signers to teach conversational American Sign Language (ASL). Nyle DiMarco is Deaf and uses American Sign Language. American Sign Language requires the use of facial expressions and body movements, his Deafness amplifies his natural talent. His Deafness is an asset and not a limitation, he is amicable and able to communicate easily.
Follow @NyleDiMarco:
Subscribe - https://youtube.com/nyle222
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/nyledimarco
Twitter - https://twitter.com/nyledimarco
Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/nyledimarco
Model Mayhem - http://modelmayhem.com/nyledimarco
Linkedin - https://linkedin.com/in/nyledimarco
Tumblr - http://nyledimarco.tumblr.com
Website - http://nyledimarco.com
Related: #NyleDiMarco
Nyle DiMarco - Upbringing With My Deaf Family
Related Bullying:
Bullies Dump Deaf Student's Backpack In Toilet
Bullied Deaf Boy Forced To Leave School
Deaf Girl's Bullying In Mainstream School
Deaf Victim Of Bullying At Three Different Schools
Deaf Student Bullied at the AG Bell School
Teens Assaulted Deaf Student, Filmed Incident
Deaf People Bullied By The AG Bell Association
Nyle DiMarco: Were You Bullied For Being Deaf ?
Related Mainstreaming School:
Mainstream School Lacks Communication Access
Dropout Rate Among Mainstream Deaf Students
Mainstream School Is Failing Deaf Students
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
Deaf Awareness 'Voiceless' Short Film
Deaf Wrestler: Experience of Being Homeless
Deaf rough sleeper pictured living in 'disgusting' Flinders Street homeless camp claims he's a wrestler who doesn't do drugs and competes in 'WWE-style' tournaments.
MELBOURNE -- A Deaf wrestler is one of the rough sleepers living on the main thoroughfare that visitors take on their way to the Australian Open in Melbourne.
Jonathan 'Link' Hardy and more than a dozen homeless people have set up makeshift homes at Melbourne's Flinders Street Station, The Age reports.
Mr Hardy from Safety Bay in Perth has travelled around Australia and overseas, including to the U.S. where he claims he competed in WWE-style tournaments.
The 28-year-old has been living on the streets for nearly four years, and started sleeping outside Flinders Street Station just before Christmas.
Being completely Deaf has added to his problems, and as he does not know sign language he has to write down the answers to questions. This has led to trouble with the police recently.
Daily Mail Australia photographs showed him remonstrating with police officers on Wednesday on a couple of occasions, while also flexing his muscles with his top off for the camera.
He claimed that police regularly hassled him, and tried to move him on daily. There is a hand-written sign taped to the wall above where he sleeps and a book, titled Steps to Christ.
It says: 'I hate drugs and I love go gym and eat a lot. I always look after myself. I am always hungry. I keep going and look for job so you can ask me about job.'
Mr Hardy said he had not received much support from homeless services. He also gets free food and goes to a gym every day to keep up a routine... Read More: Full Story with Photos - Daily Mail.
Follow @JonathanLink:
Subscribe - http://youtube.com/jonathan1link
Facebook - http://facebook.com/jonathan1link
Related:
Deaf Wrestler 'Jonathan Link'
Deaf Wrestler: Experience of Being Homeless
MELBOURNE -- A Deaf wrestler is one of the rough sleepers living on the main thoroughfare that visitors take on their way to the Australian Open in Melbourne.
Jonathan 'Link' Hardy and more than a dozen homeless people have set up makeshift homes at Melbourne's Flinders Street Station, The Age reports.
Mr Hardy from Safety Bay in Perth has travelled around Australia and overseas, including to the U.S. where he claims he competed in WWE-style tournaments.
The 28-year-old has been living on the streets for nearly four years, and started sleeping outside Flinders Street Station just before Christmas.
Being completely Deaf has added to his problems, and as he does not know sign language he has to write down the answers to questions. This has led to trouble with the police recently.
Daily Mail Australia photographs showed him remonstrating with police officers on Wednesday on a couple of occasions, while also flexing his muscles with his top off for the camera.
He claimed that police regularly hassled him, and tried to move him on daily. There is a hand-written sign taped to the wall above where he sleeps and a book, titled Steps to Christ.
It says: 'I hate drugs and I love go gym and eat a lot. I always look after myself. I am always hungry. I keep going and look for job so you can ask me about job.'
Mr Hardy said he had not received much support from homeless services. He also gets free food and goes to a gym every day to keep up a routine... Read More: Full Story with Photos - Daily Mail.
Follow @JonathanLink:
Subscribe - http://youtube.com/jonathan1link
Facebook - http://facebook.com/jonathan1link
Related:
Deaf Wrestler 'Jonathan Link'
Deaf Wrestler: Experience of Being Homeless
Seek The World, A Deaf Adventurer
Inspirational, promo video of a Deaf Adventurer that Seek the World.
Calvin Young, a Deaf traveler, who constantly travel the world since the day he left his start-up business. He founded his show, Seek the World, is to educate, inspire, and encourage the global Deaf community to be connected with others and courage to travel the world.
Through his work, it carries numerous jaw-dropping videos, vibrant photographs, and bridges the communication divide between our colorful Deaf community.
He aims to inspire, educate, and break down barriers to proving the fact Deaf people can do anything as long as they have immeasurable faith in themselves! Please subscribe at https://youtube.com/channel/seektheworld for new video.
Follow @SeektheWorld:
Facebook: https://facebook.com/seektheworld2015
Instagram: https://instagram.com/seektheworld
GooglePlus: https://plus.google.com/seektheworld2015
Pinterest: https://pinterest.com/seektheworld
Twitter: https://twitter.com/seektheworld_
YouTube: https://youtube.com/channel/seektheworld
Website: http://seektheworld.com
Related Seek The World:
Seek The World, A Deaf Adventurer
INSIDER: Calvin Young, Deaf World Traveler
Seek The World: INES - Brazil's First Deaf School
Signing Merry Christmas In 57 Sign Languages
Signing Happy New Year in 76 Sign Languages
The World's First Public Deaf School in France
The Story of Katrina Deaf Survivor
Museum of Deaf - History, Arts & Culture
Deaf Haunted House Story 'Nightmare Factory'
Erik Jensen - The Deaf Keyboard Muralist
Dal's Poke - Canada's New Deaf Restaurant
Deaf Chef Kurt 'Irish Dishwasher' Ramborger
Deaf Green Thumbs - Plant, Nurture, Thrieve
Deaf-Owned Business: World Deaf Match
'Seek The World' The Blackface Controversy
'Seek The World' Arrested For Domestic Violence
Related Posts:
#DeafCommunity - #DeafTravel - #DeafPeople
Calvin Young, a Deaf traveler, who constantly travel the world since the day he left his start-up business. He founded his show, Seek the World, is to educate, inspire, and encourage the global Deaf community to be connected with others and courage to travel the world.
Through his work, it carries numerous jaw-dropping videos, vibrant photographs, and bridges the communication divide between our colorful Deaf community.
He aims to inspire, educate, and break down barriers to proving the fact Deaf people can do anything as long as they have immeasurable faith in themselves! Please subscribe at https://youtube.com/channel/seektheworld for new video.
Follow @SeektheWorld:
Facebook: https://facebook.com/seektheworld2015
Instagram: https://instagram.com/seektheworld
GooglePlus: https://plus.google.com/seektheworld2015
Pinterest: https://pinterest.com/seektheworld
Twitter: https://twitter.com/seektheworld_
YouTube: https://youtube.com/channel/seektheworld
Website: http://seektheworld.com
Related Seek The World:
Seek The World, A Deaf Adventurer
INSIDER: Calvin Young, Deaf World Traveler
Seek The World: INES - Brazil's First Deaf School
Signing Merry Christmas In 57 Sign Languages
Signing Happy New Year in 76 Sign Languages
The World's First Public Deaf School in France
The Story of Katrina Deaf Survivor
Museum of Deaf - History, Arts & Culture
Deaf Haunted House Story 'Nightmare Factory'
Erik Jensen - The Deaf Keyboard Muralist
Dal's Poke - Canada's New Deaf Restaurant
Deaf Chef Kurt 'Irish Dishwasher' Ramborger
Deaf Green Thumbs - Plant, Nurture, Thrieve
Deaf-Owned Business: World Deaf Match
'Seek The World' The Blackface Controversy
'Seek The World' Arrested For Domestic Violence
Related Posts:
#DeafCommunity - #DeafTravel - #DeafPeople
Nyle DiMarco - Upbringing With My Deaf Family
Nyle DiMarco: "My Upbringing With My Deaf Family"
Nyle DiMarco does not consider himself to be disabled by deafness and sees his media profile as an opportunity to bring awareness to Deaf culture. He views deafness as an advantage in modeling because he is accustomed to conveying messages without speaking. He also holds the belief that Deaf roles should be played by Deaf actors.
Fact: DiMarco have over 25 Deaf members in his family. Yes, it is genetic; However only 10% are born to Deaf parents. Come and meet his family and learn what Nyle do everyday and with his activism for #DeafTalent.
This video exists because last year I was named "BeYoutiful" by a Deaf owned company, Convo.
DiMarco is a spokesperson for LEAD-K (Language Equality and Acquisition for Deaf Kids). He is also a signer and creative collaborator on The ASL App, an app that teaches conversational ASL.
In 2016, DiMarco started The Nyle DiMarco Foundation. It is a non-profit organization with the purpose of providing more access to resources for Deaf children and their families.
SOURCE
Follow @NyleDiMarco:
Subscribe: https://youtube.com/nyle222
Facebook: https://facebook.com/nyledimarco
Twitter: https://twitter.com/nyledimarco
Instagram: https://instagram.com/nyledimarco
Model Mayhem: https://modelmayhem.com/nyledimarco
Linkedin: https://linkedin.com/in/nyledimarco
Tumblr: https://nyledimarco.tumblr.com
Website: https://nyledimarco.com
Related Posts: #NyleDiMarco
Nyle DiMarco does not consider himself to be disabled by deafness and sees his media profile as an opportunity to bring awareness to Deaf culture. He views deafness as an advantage in modeling because he is accustomed to conveying messages without speaking. He also holds the belief that Deaf roles should be played by Deaf actors.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
Fact: DiMarco have over 25 Deaf members in his family. Yes, it is genetic; However only 10% are born to Deaf parents. Come and meet his family and learn what Nyle do everyday and with his activism for #DeafTalent.
This video exists because last year I was named "BeYoutiful" by a Deaf owned company, Convo.
DiMarco is a spokesperson for LEAD-K (Language Equality and Acquisition for Deaf Kids). He is also a signer and creative collaborator on The ASL App, an app that teaches conversational ASL.
In 2016, DiMarco started The Nyle DiMarco Foundation. It is a non-profit organization with the purpose of providing more access to resources for Deaf children and their families.
SOURCE
Follow @NyleDiMarco:
Subscribe: https://youtube.com/nyle222
Facebook: https://facebook.com/nyledimarco
Twitter: https://twitter.com/nyledimarco
Instagram: https://instagram.com/nyledimarco
Model Mayhem: https://modelmayhem.com/nyledimarco
Linkedin: https://linkedin.com/in/nyledimarco
Tumblr: https://nyledimarco.tumblr.com
Website: https://nyledimarco.com
Related Posts: #NyleDiMarco
Jennifer Tandoc - Deaf Artist & Photographer
Deaf Artist and Photographer, Jennifer Tandoc.
Jennifer Tandoc is a professional artist, photographer and very talent that strives to create art that represents the Deaf community.
Tandoc says "Over the years, My art work has drawn a lot of positive attention. One of my dream is to become famous and successful as an artist and also, I fell in love with photography the minute my Dad gave me an old Kinolta Minolta. Photography became my passion!"
The Daily Moth is a new ASL radio show, delivers news in video using ASL. The Deaf host, Alex Abenchuchan, covers trending news stories and Deaf topics. The video shows of artist and photographer Jennifer Tandoc, each piece of art takes hours and hours of work. There's something hidden in all of her designs.
Check out and LIKE her artist page and LIKE her photography page. Jennifer Tandoc Artist and Photographer! Visit her site: http://jtandocphotography.com
Contact J9: jtandoc9@gmail.com
Related Posts:
#The Daily Moth -- #Deaf Business -- #Deaf Artists -- #Deaf Photographers
Jennifer Tandoc is a professional artist, photographer and very talent that strives to create art that represents the Deaf community.
Tandoc says "Over the years, My art work has drawn a lot of positive attention. One of my dream is to become famous and successful as an artist and also, I fell in love with photography the minute my Dad gave me an old Kinolta Minolta. Photography became my passion!"
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
Filmed and Edited by Danielle Graybill.The Daily Moth is a new ASL radio show, delivers news in video using ASL. The Deaf host, Alex Abenchuchan, covers trending news stories and Deaf topics. The video shows of artist and photographer Jennifer Tandoc, each piece of art takes hours and hours of work. There's something hidden in all of her designs.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
Check out and LIKE her artist page and LIKE her photography page. Jennifer Tandoc Artist and Photographer! Visit her site: http://jtandocphotography.com
Contact J9: jtandoc9@gmail.com
Related Posts:
#The Daily Moth -- #Deaf Business -- #Deaf Artists -- #Deaf Photographers
Robert Panara - First Deaf To Be On US Stamp
Robert Panara, became the first National Institute for the Deaf faculty member to be featured on a United States postage stamp.
ROCHESTER, New York -- Rochester Democrat and Chronicle: Robert Panara, who was the first Deaf faculty member at Rochester Institute of Technology's National Institute for the Deaf, knew no limits for what a Deaf person could accomplish.
As a tribute to his achievements, Panara will be honored on a new U.S. postage stamp showing him signing the word "respect."
Robert Panara, A Profile. Video Credit: DCMP.
Panara, who died in 2014 at age 94, joined the NTID faculty in 1967 and for two decades was an inspirational and innovative educator, as he had been previously at Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C.
"During his 40-year teaching career, Panara inspired generations of students with his powerful use of American Sign Language," said the Postal Service, in its announcement Tuesday that the new stamp featuring Panara will be part of the Distinguished Americans series.
The stamp was designed by Ethel Kessler, art director for the Postal Service, and based on an image taken by RIT/NTID photographer Mark Benjamin.
Panara's son, John, who is an English instructor at NTID, sent an email to the NTID community Tuesday saying that the "picture on the stamp is one that you certainly are familiar with, for it has been seen often around campus the last few years, in offices and on hallway walls."
Benjamin's photograph of his father signing the word "respect," John Panara added, is a "theme that will 'ring out loud and free' (to borrow a line from my dad's famous poem) every time the stamp is placed on an envelope!"
John Panara said that when he received an email a year ago telling him that the Postal Service's Stamp Advisory Committee had recommended the issuance of a stamp of his father, he read the email over and over again to make sure he wasn't dreaming.
Harry Lang, a professor emeritus at NTID and author of Teaching from the Heart and Soul: The Robert F. Panara Story, posted on Facebook: "What a nice Thanksgiving present! Bob is certainly looking down with his famous smile right now."
Lang, who was an adviser to the Postal Service on the stamp, noted in the foreword to his biography that the senior Panara was a poet, author, lecturer and theater aficionado.
Panara, Lang wrote, was largely self-educated at a time accommodations were not available for Deaf children.
"He was also among the first wave of Deaf scholars in the twentieth century, and a pioneer in the field of Deaf Studies," Lang noted.
Panara's poem "On His Deafness," written in 1946, has been reprinted many times and won first prize in the World of Poetry contest in 1988. Lang, in his biography of Panara, said the poem is about "how Deaf people can 'hear' with an 'inner ear' of imagination." ... Read The Full Story - Rochester Democrat and Chronicle.
ROCHESTER, New York -- Rochester Democrat and Chronicle: Robert Panara, who was the first Deaf faculty member at Rochester Institute of Technology's National Institute for the Deaf, knew no limits for what a Deaf person could accomplish.
As a tribute to his achievements, Panara will be honored on a new U.S. postage stamp showing him signing the word "respect."
Robert Panara, A Profile. Video Credit: DCMP.
Panara, who died in 2014 at age 94, joined the NTID faculty in 1967 and for two decades was an inspirational and innovative educator, as he had been previously at Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C.
"During his 40-year teaching career, Panara inspired generations of students with his powerful use of American Sign Language," said the Postal Service, in its announcement Tuesday that the new stamp featuring Panara will be part of the Distinguished Americans series.
The stamp was designed by Ethel Kessler, art director for the Postal Service, and based on an image taken by RIT/NTID photographer Mark Benjamin.
Panara's son, John, who is an English instructor at NTID, sent an email to the NTID community Tuesday saying that the "picture on the stamp is one that you certainly are familiar with, for it has been seen often around campus the last few years, in offices and on hallway walls."
Benjamin's photograph of his father signing the word "respect," John Panara added, is a "theme that will 'ring out loud and free' (to borrow a line from my dad's famous poem) every time the stamp is placed on an envelope!"
John Panara said that when he received an email a year ago telling him that the Postal Service's Stamp Advisory Committee had recommended the issuance of a stamp of his father, he read the email over and over again to make sure he wasn't dreaming.
Harry Lang, a professor emeritus at NTID and author of Teaching from the Heart and Soul: The Robert F. Panara Story, posted on Facebook: "What a nice Thanksgiving present! Bob is certainly looking down with his famous smile right now."
Lang, who was an adviser to the Postal Service on the stamp, noted in the foreword to his biography that the senior Panara was a poet, author, lecturer and theater aficionado.
Panara, Lang wrote, was largely self-educated at a time accommodations were not available for Deaf children.
"He was also among the first wave of Deaf scholars in the twentieth century, and a pioneer in the field of Deaf Studies," Lang noted.
Panara's poem "On His Deafness," written in 1946, has been reprinted many times and won first prize in the World of Poetry contest in 1988. Lang, in his biography of Panara, said the poem is about "how Deaf people can 'hear' with an 'inner ear' of imagination." ... Read The Full Story - Rochester Democrat and Chronicle.
For Deaf Tennis Player, Sound Is No Barrier
Lee Duck-hee, 18, of South Korea, is ranked 143rd in the world in a sport in which hearing the ball is considered crucial.
ASAN, South Korea -- To improve its chances in the boys’ team tennis event at the National Sports Festival here, Mapo High School in Seoul brought in a ringer from Jecheon, two hours southeast of the capital. His name was Lee Duck-hee, and he had first caught the coach’s eye when he was in elementary school.
Mapo High’s players pressed against the fence beside along the dusty hardcourts and chanted in support while Lee, 18, crushed forehand winners past his bespectacled opponent in the final. The 6-1, 6-1 win took little time - no surprise, as Lee is the best teenage player in South Korea, and a professional ranked 143rd in the world.
“Seeing the level of skill, power and returning is totally different than high school level,” said Jeong Yeong-sok, his doubles partner at the tournament.
Lee is exceptional among professionals, too. He is Deaf, and no Deaf player in the sport’s history has reached these heights. In tennis, simply seeing the ball is believed to be insufficient. Hearing the ball, top players say, enables faster reactions - a crucial advantage in a sport where powerful serves and groundstrokes mean that every tiny fraction of a second matters.
Wimbledon's Rob Walker takes a look at Duck Hee Lee. Video Credit: Wimbledon
“There are so many different spins in tennis, and I can hear a lot of them coming off someone’s racket because I know what they all sound like,” said Katie Mancebo, a college tennis coach and volunteer coach for the United States Deaf tennis team. “But a Deaf player doesn’t know that sound, so they have to focus more on what the other person is doing, how they’re making contact, and what the ball looks like as it’s coming over the net.”
Joo Hyun-sang, the tennis coach at Mapo High School, said he was skeptical of Lee’s potential at first.
“When I met him the first time, I had certain doubts that being deaf would prevent him from being a great player,” he said. “But I grew confident from watching him develop and improve. I was very confident he could do it.”
Though already the second-highest-ranked player of professionals 18 and under, Lee has not fully broken through. He has yet to play a main-draw match at an ATP tournament or a Grand Slam, though he reached the final of a Challenger event, the level below the ATP World Tour, for the first time in September in Taiwan, and has made two semifinals since... Read The Full Story - New York Times.
Related Posts:
#DeafAwareness - #DeafKoreans - #DocumentaryFilm - #ShortFilm - #SouthKorea

Mapo High’s players pressed against the fence beside along the dusty hardcourts and chanted in support while Lee, 18, crushed forehand winners past his bespectacled opponent in the final. The 6-1, 6-1 win took little time - no surprise, as Lee is the best teenage player in South Korea, and a professional ranked 143rd in the world.
“Seeing the level of skill, power and returning is totally different than high school level,” said Jeong Yeong-sok, his doubles partner at the tournament.
Lee is exceptional among professionals, too. He is Deaf, and no Deaf player in the sport’s history has reached these heights. In tennis, simply seeing the ball is believed to be insufficient. Hearing the ball, top players say, enables faster reactions - a crucial advantage in a sport where powerful serves and groundstrokes mean that every tiny fraction of a second matters.
Wimbledon's Rob Walker takes a look at Duck Hee Lee. Video Credit: Wimbledon
“There are so many different spins in tennis, and I can hear a lot of them coming off someone’s racket because I know what they all sound like,” said Katie Mancebo, a college tennis coach and volunteer coach for the United States Deaf tennis team. “But a Deaf player doesn’t know that sound, so they have to focus more on what the other person is doing, how they’re making contact, and what the ball looks like as it’s coming over the net.”
Joo Hyun-sang, the tennis coach at Mapo High School, said he was skeptical of Lee’s potential at first.
“When I met him the first time, I had certain doubts that being deaf would prevent him from being a great player,” he said. “But I grew confident from watching him develop and improve. I was very confident he could do it.”
Though already the second-highest-ranked player of professionals 18 and under, Lee has not fully broken through. He has yet to play a main-draw match at an ATP tournament or a Grand Slam, though he reached the final of a Challenger event, the level below the ATP World Tour, for the first time in September in Taiwan, and has made two semifinals since... Read The Full Story - New York Times.
Related Posts:
#DeafAwareness - #DeafKoreans - #DocumentaryFilm - #ShortFilm - #SouthKorea
The Challenges of Being Deaf in a Hearing World
Even though I knew that I was Deaf and used sign language, parts of my identity were still fragmented.
TORONTO, Ontario -- This article is part one of a series on accessibility in Toronto for a Deaf, queer, nonbinary person. I grew up in small-town southern Ontario. I hated it--I wanted to experience something bigger, but I didn’t know what or how. My life was slightly different from others. I was a Deaf kid living in a Hearing world.
Growing up as a Deaf kid was really challenging. There were limited options, especially in a tiny community. Unlike hearing kids who went to their local schools, I had to get up earlier than other kids so I wouldn’t miss the short school bus.
Our Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing program was at a mainstream school with other hearing kids. The Deaf kids would have their own homeroom, taught by a “Teacher of the Deaf.”
Students in our program would occasionally be placed in “normal” classrooms with other hearing students, communicating through the use of an interpreter. Unfortunately, none of the teachers in the program were actually deaf, so no examples of healthy Deaf adult role models were present in my childhood.
The only other option was to attend a provincial school for the Deaf. The problem? I couldn’t stand being away from my mother, and attending the school meant that I’d have to live in residence. So I didn’t have much exposure to the Deaf community growing up, except for a few events here and there.
I remember attending Mayfest, an annual Deaf expo hosted by the Ontario Association of the Deaf (OAD) at St. Lawrence Market in Toronto. The number of Deaf and signing participants often overwhelmed me--they signed so differently, not like the way I did.
There were literally hundreds of them from various backgrounds, of different races, and of all types of disabilities. This event was something that I looked forward to every year--a favourite part of my childhood, being in a space where we could celebrate being ourselves.
It was not until I became a teenager that I understood that my school taught us Signed Exact English (SEE) and not American Sign Language (ASL). So that was why others signed differently.
The signing system I had learned was intended to accommodate hearing people and “improve” our English literacy skills. This, I felt, had taken away my Deaf community and Deaf culture. I was being assimilated, and, due to that, I had no sense of identity.
Even though I knew that I was Deaf and used sign language, parts of my identity were still fragmented. Nearly everyone around me was straight and I didn’t fit the mold. I knew that, despite being Deaf, I was further marginalized by my own Deaf community. What did you expect? Growing up in a small community meant limited options, limited resources, limited identities, and limited access.
This meant that the Deaf community that I grew up in was not accessible for me as a deaf person with emerging identities yet to be discovered.
In Grade 12, something happened that paved the way to my discovery as a culturally deaf person. There was an interpreter shortage, and I couldn’t attend all of the classes that I registered for. I remember showing up for a class and the interpreter was not in her typical assigned seat, and the teacher continued to speak while I looked around, feeling lost, like a fool.
That was it. The lack of accessibility led to my ultimate decision to transfer to a school for the Deaf.
Through socializing with Deaf peers, fragmented parts of my identity and soul were finally put back together and began to feel whole. This journey helped me unpack internalized audism, and change the “d” in deaf to a “D,” to represent my transition to a culturally Deaf person.
Approaching the end of high school, I thought, “What am I going to do?” I thought I’d attend a local post-secondary institution, become a teacher, and lead a very boring life, only because that’s what my family wanted for me. But what did I want? To be accepted, to be in a place where I could be myself.
That space was discovered at Gallaudet University, where I met more members of the queer and trans community. That led to me coming out, embracing different parts of my identity.
Every summer on break from university, I attended the Pride festivities in Toronto and discovered the Ontario Rainbow Alliance of the Deaf, where I met more folks like me.
But what was in my future after graduation? I wasn’t so sure yet.
Toronto was this place that I’d always dreamed of living in. This city was the place that I was going to move to after I graduated from Gallaudet University.
Being the capital city of Ontario, you’d think this city would be accessible for a person like me.
Toronto, you are exceptionally large, with a population of more than six million people in the city and its surrounding areas. Here, you can expect to find a few communities that you belong with. You’d expect more options, more resources, more identities, more accessibility, right?
The next article in this series will detail what accessibility in Toronto looks like.
SOURCE
Related: #DeafCanadians
Related Deaf and Hearing Worlds:
Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Deaf World
Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Hearing World
Ted Evans - In Search Of The DEAF WORLD
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
A Hearing Son In Deaf Family 'I'd Rather Be Deaf'
Dropout Rate Among Mainstream Deaf Students
Life and Deaf - BBC4 Documentary
Through Deaf Eyes - Documentary Film
TORONTO, Ontario -- This article is part one of a series on accessibility in Toronto for a Deaf, queer, nonbinary person. I grew up in small-town southern Ontario. I hated it--I wanted to experience something bigger, but I didn’t know what or how. My life was slightly different from others. I was a Deaf kid living in a Hearing world.
Growing up as a Deaf kid was really challenging. There were limited options, especially in a tiny community. Unlike hearing kids who went to their local schools, I had to get up earlier than other kids so I wouldn’t miss the short school bus.
Our Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing program was at a mainstream school with other hearing kids. The Deaf kids would have their own homeroom, taught by a “Teacher of the Deaf.”
Students in our program would occasionally be placed in “normal” classrooms with other hearing students, communicating through the use of an interpreter. Unfortunately, none of the teachers in the program were actually deaf, so no examples of healthy Deaf adult role models were present in my childhood.
The only other option was to attend a provincial school for the Deaf. The problem? I couldn’t stand being away from my mother, and attending the school meant that I’d have to live in residence. So I didn’t have much exposure to the Deaf community growing up, except for a few events here and there.
I remember attending Mayfest, an annual Deaf expo hosted by the Ontario Association of the Deaf (OAD) at St. Lawrence Market in Toronto. The number of Deaf and signing participants often overwhelmed me--they signed so differently, not like the way I did.
There were literally hundreds of them from various backgrounds, of different races, and of all types of disabilities. This event was something that I looked forward to every year--a favourite part of my childhood, being in a space where we could celebrate being ourselves.
It was not until I became a teenager that I understood that my school taught us Signed Exact English (SEE) and not American Sign Language (ASL). So that was why others signed differently.
The signing system I had learned was intended to accommodate hearing people and “improve” our English literacy skills. This, I felt, had taken away my Deaf community and Deaf culture. I was being assimilated, and, due to that, I had no sense of identity.
Even though I knew that I was Deaf and used sign language, parts of my identity were still fragmented. Nearly everyone around me was straight and I didn’t fit the mold. I knew that, despite being Deaf, I was further marginalized by my own Deaf community. What did you expect? Growing up in a small community meant limited options, limited resources, limited identities, and limited access.
This meant that the Deaf community that I grew up in was not accessible for me as a deaf person with emerging identities yet to be discovered.
In Grade 12, something happened that paved the way to my discovery as a culturally deaf person. There was an interpreter shortage, and I couldn’t attend all of the classes that I registered for. I remember showing up for a class and the interpreter was not in her typical assigned seat, and the teacher continued to speak while I looked around, feeling lost, like a fool.
That was it. The lack of accessibility led to my ultimate decision to transfer to a school for the Deaf.
Through socializing with Deaf peers, fragmented parts of my identity and soul were finally put back together and began to feel whole. This journey helped me unpack internalized audism, and change the “d” in deaf to a “D,” to represent my transition to a culturally Deaf person.
Approaching the end of high school, I thought, “What am I going to do?” I thought I’d attend a local post-secondary institution, become a teacher, and lead a very boring life, only because that’s what my family wanted for me. But what did I want? To be accepted, to be in a place where I could be myself.
That space was discovered at Gallaudet University, where I met more members of the queer and trans community. That led to me coming out, embracing different parts of my identity.
Every summer on break from university, I attended the Pride festivities in Toronto and discovered the Ontario Rainbow Alliance of the Deaf, where I met more folks like me.
But what was in my future after graduation? I wasn’t so sure yet.
Toronto was this place that I’d always dreamed of living in. This city was the place that I was going to move to after I graduated from Gallaudet University.
Being the capital city of Ontario, you’d think this city would be accessible for a person like me.
Toronto, you are exceptionally large, with a population of more than six million people in the city and its surrounding areas. Here, you can expect to find a few communities that you belong with. You’d expect more options, more resources, more identities, more accessibility, right?
The next article in this series will detail what accessibility in Toronto looks like.
SOURCE
Related: #DeafCanadians
Related Deaf and Hearing Worlds:
Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Deaf World
Deaf Awareness: Alone In A Hearing World
Ted Evans - In Search Of The DEAF WORLD
Living In Between The Deaf And Hearing Worlds
A Hearing Son In Deaf Family 'I'd Rather Be Deaf'
Dropout Rate Among Mainstream Deaf Students
Life and Deaf - BBC4 Documentary
Through Deaf Eyes - Documentary Film
What ‘Deaf’ Means To Me - Amanda McDonough
What ‘Deaf’ means to me with Amanda McDonough.
Deaf activist, actress and Youtuber Amanda McDonough discussion and conversation questions about "What "Deaf" Means to Me" she wanted to talk about something she have been thinking a lot about recently and that is the word "DEAF." Now she grew up in hearing culture in the United States.
I grew up with hearing family, hearing friends, going to a mainstream school and I didn't have access to signing. I didn't have access to Deaf people and... So, growing up for me that word "DEAF" scared me, because for me, before, that meant that I was going to lose my hearing. That meant that I was going to lose access to oral communication. That meant I might lose my family and my friends. That was scary for me. It was really scary. And it wasn't until after I became physically Deaf that I started searching for people like me and I started searching for a better way to communicate. And I found that in Deaf Culture, in sign language, in the Deaf community.
Now that i am a proud Deaf woman that word death means something so different to me. So, I wanted to share with you what word "DEAF" means to me now.
Now the word "DEAF" means strength. It means having the strength to accept yourself for who you really are. It also means support; having the support of the Deaf community. Having people around me that understand what i go through every single day, all of my struggles. They understand me, they really understand. It also means communication, because now I have this beautiful language that I can always understand I don't have have to struggle with and I have access to communication through new technology like VoIP and oh captioned phones. Different things that help me communicate better. It also, lastly, means intelligence. Why? Because deaf people; we have to be able to think creatively. We have to be able to think outside the box so that we can create new solutions to problems that we have, that don't depend on hearing, and that takes intelligence. So, this is what my new meaning of the word "DEAF" is.
What does "DEAF" mean to you?
SOURCE
Follow @AmandaMcDonough
Subscribe - https://youtube.com/channel/amandamcdonough
Facebook - https://facebook.com/officialamandamcdonough
Twitter - https://twitter.com/actingamanda
IMDb - http://imdb.me/amandamcdonough
Instagram - https://instagram.com/amanda_mcdonough/
Official Website - http://amanda-mcdonough.com
Related Amanda McDonough:
DeafNation World Expo - Amanda McDonough
Myths or Facts: Can Deaf People Drive ?
Facts & Myths About Deaf People
Myths & Facts About Deaf Children
5 Deaf Myths Busted With Amanda McDonough
Deaf activist, actress and Youtuber Amanda McDonough discussion and conversation questions about "What "Deaf" Means to Me" she wanted to talk about something she have been thinking a lot about recently and that is the word "DEAF." Now she grew up in hearing culture in the United States.
To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.
I grew up with hearing family, hearing friends, going to a mainstream school and I didn't have access to signing. I didn't have access to Deaf people and... So, growing up for me that word "DEAF" scared me, because for me, before, that meant that I was going to lose my hearing. That meant that I was going to lose access to oral communication. That meant I might lose my family and my friends. That was scary for me. It was really scary. And it wasn't until after I became physically Deaf that I started searching for people like me and I started searching for a better way to communicate. And I found that in Deaf Culture, in sign language, in the Deaf community.
Now that i am a proud Deaf woman that word death means something so different to me. So, I wanted to share with you what word "DEAF" means to me now.
Now the word "DEAF" means strength. It means having the strength to accept yourself for who you really are. It also means support; having the support of the Deaf community. Having people around me that understand what i go through every single day, all of my struggles. They understand me, they really understand. It also means communication, because now I have this beautiful language that I can always understand I don't have have to struggle with and I have access to communication through new technology like VoIP and oh captioned phones. Different things that help me communicate better. It also, lastly, means intelligence. Why? Because deaf people; we have to be able to think creatively. We have to be able to think outside the box so that we can create new solutions to problems that we have, that don't depend on hearing, and that takes intelligence. So, this is what my new meaning of the word "DEAF" is.
What does "DEAF" mean to you?
SOURCE
Follow @AmandaMcDonough
Subscribe - https://youtube.com/channel/amandamcdonough
Facebook - https://facebook.com/officialamandamcdonough
Twitter - https://twitter.com/actingamanda
IMDb - http://imdb.me/amandamcdonough
Instagram - https://instagram.com/amanda_mcdonough/
Official Website - http://amanda-mcdonough.com
Related Amanda McDonough:
DeafNation World Expo - Amanda McDonough
Myths or Facts: Can Deaf People Drive ?
Facts & Myths About Deaf People
Myths & Facts About Deaf Children
5 Deaf Myths Busted With Amanda McDonough
The Deaf Body in Public Space - NY Times
Deaf News: The Deaf Body in Public Space from New York Times.
NEW YORK CITY -- “It’s rude to point,” my friend told me from across the elementary-school cafeteria table. I grasped her words as I read them off her lips. She stared at my index finger, which I held raised in midair, gesturing toward a mutual classmate. “My mom said so.”
I was 6 or 7 years old, but I remember stopping with a jolt. Something inside me froze, too, went suddenly cold.
“I’m signing,” I said out loud. “That’s not rude.”
As the only Deaf student in my elementary school, I had already stumbled across the challenges of straddling two languages and two modes of communication. My family was hearing, but they still empowered me by using both English and sign language at home.
A sign language interpreter accompanied me throughout the day at school, and my teachers created a welcoming environment for me to learn, but finding a place to belong with kids my own age often felt more difficult. I tried to speak to them, and occasionally they reciprocated the effort by learning some basic signs. But usually I felt separate.
I went home that day and asked my mother about what my friend had said. “Don’t worry,” my mother said, “she doesn’t know the social rules are different with signing. You aren’t being rude.” With that, matter-of-fact as always, she brought the conversation to an end. But I still felt a lingering self-consciousness, entirely novel and difficult to shake.
This was perhaps the first time I realized that other people could see me as obtrusive, as taking up too much space, when I was simply communicating just as I was.
When I reflect on this memory two decades later, I recognize how my childhood friend, whom at the time I had found to be so accusatory, had really gaped at me with a sort of wonder. My signing challenged the rules of social conduct she’d absorbed from adults, and to her I must have seemed ignorant or radically rebellious, or perhaps both. But pointing was a truly fundamental act for me; it was how I expressed what my grown-up scholarly self would call relationality - the idea of being in the world in relation to others. Through sign language, a properly poised finger allowed me to say you and me and he and she and they. If I did not point, how could I make a human connection? ... Read More at New York Times.
NEW YORK CITY -- “It’s rude to point,” my friend told me from across the elementary-school cafeteria table. I grasped her words as I read them off her lips. She stared at my index finger, which I held raised in midair, gesturing toward a mutual classmate. “My mom said so.”
I was 6 or 7 years old, but I remember stopping with a jolt. Something inside me froze, too, went suddenly cold.
“I’m signing,” I said out loud. “That’s not rude.”
As the only Deaf student in my elementary school, I had already stumbled across the challenges of straddling two languages and two modes of communication. My family was hearing, but they still empowered me by using both English and sign language at home.
A sign language interpreter accompanied me throughout the day at school, and my teachers created a welcoming environment for me to learn, but finding a place to belong with kids my own age often felt more difficult. I tried to speak to them, and occasionally they reciprocated the effort by learning some basic signs. But usually I felt separate.
I went home that day and asked my mother about what my friend had said. “Don’t worry,” my mother said, “she doesn’t know the social rules are different with signing. You aren’t being rude.” With that, matter-of-fact as always, she brought the conversation to an end. But I still felt a lingering self-consciousness, entirely novel and difficult to shake.
This was perhaps the first time I realized that other people could see me as obtrusive, as taking up too much space, when I was simply communicating just as I was.
When I reflect on this memory two decades later, I recognize how my childhood friend, whom at the time I had found to be so accusatory, had really gaped at me with a sort of wonder. My signing challenged the rules of social conduct she’d absorbed from adults, and to her I must have seemed ignorant or radically rebellious, or perhaps both. But pointing was a truly fundamental act for me; it was how I expressed what my grown-up scholarly self would call relationality - the idea of being in the world in relation to others. Through sign language, a properly poised finger allowed me to say you and me and he and she and they. If I did not point, how could I make a human connection? ... Read More at New York Times.
Feel The Beat - Dancing While Deaf
Antoine Hunter - Feel the Beat: Dancing While Deaf - Empowers Deaf Community Through Dance.
OAKLAND, CA -- Antoine Hunter just wants to be heard and understood. Born completely without hearing in his left ear and hard of hearing in his right, Hunter, who's now completely Deaf, gravitated towards dance to express himself.
Credits: Great Big Story.
Now, as director of the Urban Jazz Dance Company, Hunter's work as a dancer and Deaf community advocate inspired him to organize the Bay Area Deaf International Dance Festival in California.
Antoine Hunter Empowers Deaf Community Through Dance.
Credits: KQED Arts.
Related Antoine Hunter:
Feel The Beat - Dancing While Deaf
Deaf Dancer Teaches Harvard Masterclass
Deaf Dancer Antoine Hunter Helps DropLabs
Related Deaf Dancers:
'DWTS' Season 22 Recap Clips of Nyle DiMarco
Feel The Beat - Dancing While Deaf
Deaf Taiwanese Dancer Proves Naysayers Wrong
Deaf Dancer: Oh Wonder - Lose It
A Short Film About A Deaf Dancer
Deaf Lebanese Contemporary Dance Performance
Deaf Contestant Leaves The Judges In Tears
Deaf Bulgaria On Dancing Stars TV Show
Deaf Mom Dances With Hearing Son Goes Viral
The Greatest Dancer: Deaf Dancer Chris Fonseca
Redeafination - Deaf Dancer & Choreographer
Related Posts:
#DeafActivist - #DeafDancer - #DeafTalent - #Interview
OAKLAND, CA -- Antoine Hunter just wants to be heard and understood. Born completely without hearing in his left ear and hard of hearing in his right, Hunter, who's now completely Deaf, gravitated towards dance to express himself.
Credits: Great Big Story.
Now, as director of the Urban Jazz Dance Company, Hunter's work as a dancer and Deaf community advocate inspired him to organize the Bay Area Deaf International Dance Festival in California.
Antoine Hunter Empowers Deaf Community Through Dance.
Credits: KQED Arts.
Related Antoine Hunter:
Feel The Beat - Dancing While Deaf
Deaf Dancer Teaches Harvard Masterclass
Deaf Dancer Antoine Hunter Helps DropLabs
Related Deaf Dancers:
'DWTS' Season 22 Recap Clips of Nyle DiMarco
Feel The Beat - Dancing While Deaf
Deaf Taiwanese Dancer Proves Naysayers Wrong
Deaf Dancer: Oh Wonder - Lose It
A Short Film About A Deaf Dancer
Deaf Lebanese Contemporary Dance Performance
Deaf Contestant Leaves The Judges In Tears
Deaf Bulgaria On Dancing Stars TV Show
Deaf Mom Dances With Hearing Son Goes Viral
The Greatest Dancer: Deaf Dancer Chris Fonseca
Redeafination - Deaf Dancer & Choreographer
Related Posts:
#DeafActivist - #DeafDancer - #DeafTalent - #Interview
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Discussing the concept of Intersectionality and how this relates to the current controversy surrounding Angela McCaskill . Reference: htt...
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Jehovah's Witnesses' ASL version "Stop Masturbating" under fire for misleading signs with facial expressions and body lang...
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Prank and Spank, Annette and Scott Kerr has announced that possibly leaving YouTube. The tubers entertaining Deaf couple Annette and Sco...
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Mavrick Fisher's preliminary hearing for murder of Grant Whitaker. LAKEPORT, California -- A Deaf man charged with killing his partn...
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The U.S. Winter Olympics Deaf Speedskater, Michael W. Hubbs arrested and mugshot for probation violation in Utah. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah --...
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Deaf Protest will be held at the White House in Washington the District of Columbia on Sept. 5th and 6th 2015. WASHINGTON -- President Ob...
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An Omaha girl died of bacterial meningitis over the weekend after deteriorating very quickly. OMAHA, Nebraska -- Katie Engle, 7, was a se...
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An Omaha girl died of bacterial meningitis over the weekend after deteriorating very quickly. OMAHA, Nebraska -- Katie Engle, 7, was a se...
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The U.S. Winter Olympics Deaf Speedskater, Michael W. Hubbs arrested and mugshot for probation violation in Utah. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah --...
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Democratic Vice President Joe Biden mocking an ASL interpreter. DANVILLE, Virginia -- Vice President of the United States of America Joe B...
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Parental guidance is advised, The content may contain R-rated material, nudity and profanity not suitable for anyone under the age of 18. ...
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Jehovah's Witnesses' ASL version "Stop Masturbating" under fire for misleading signs with facial expressions and body lang...
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Deaf Protest will be held at the White House in Washington the District of Columbia on Sept. 5th and 6th 2015. WASHINGTON -- President Ob...
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SportsMX - Kitchen Talk: "The Ugly Truth" Interview With Ricky Taylor. The premiere of Kitchen Talk show from SportsMX . This ...
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