Saturday, January 15, 2011

Braille for the Blind, Books on the Road.

Source: http://alwaysreadingcaravan.org/

This organisation took the effort to follow us on twitter. The Bio next to their twitter name gave me information about their good cause. So I looked up their website and came accross a great initiative.

The people involved like to travel, like to read and some of them are blind themselves. They are trying to put together a library on the road with all kind of books for the blind in Thailand.

Here is an overview from what they are looking for:
  • Normal print books (books for children and adults in Thai or English)
  • Braille books (Thai or English)
  • Large print books (Thai or English)
  • Tactile Picture Books (any language)
  • Tactile maps
  • Tactile pictures and images of famous artworks, buildings, photos around the world
  • Three-dimensional miniatures (animals, fruits and vegetables, vehicles, tools, houses of different styles, etc.)
  • Educational games and toys that all the children can play together
So in case you have books left on your shelve and want to donate them to this good cause look up their website and get in touch.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Wheelchair project looking for volunteers.

Source: http://www.ricd.go.th/jvalun/index.htm

The disability problem in Thailand is so big that the government cannot tackle it alone – we play a fundamental role in helping people who would not otherwise get any help.
The number of people waiting for wheelchairs and other mobility aids is put at more than 200,000 by Dr Samai Sirithongthaworn, the RICD Director. And their conditions are often desperate.
Poverty is a major cause of disabilities - and often the result of disabilities resulting from accidents. This means people living in environments where they can do no more than survive. This in turn causes depression and apathy, a cycle of despair that can be broken with help from RICD and its Wheelchair Project.
“What we come across in home visits can make a strong person cry,” said Luke, the volunteer leader of the project. “I have cried when I have seen how some people have been suffering. But we can help them. We try to change their lives.
“We see children, maybe six or seven years old, lying in a dark room. They have never seen daylight. Their parents have no knowledge of what to do for them. They just lie there, all the time, and they have never been out because there are no mobility aids for them, no one to show their parents how to help them. No one realizes the children can be helped, could one day go to school, some even to university.”
Their carers, too, desperately need help but they have no one to turn to – even if they live in the same city street as other disabled people, they probably do not know each other and have no network to share information and support.
Adults, as well as children, are often condemned to hopeless, inactive lives after being disabled in accidents, through illness or by birth. With mobility aids and training, they can get work, provide for their families and contribute to their communities.
The problem is just as acute for the elderly. During a home visit, volunteers met one woman in her 90s. She had not been out for 20 years because she could not walk. "We gave her a wheelchair and the first thing she wanted to do was to go to church … we got there and found there was no access for wheelchairs, so we built one there and then," said Luke.
"Getting a mobility aid is a life-changing experience: it gives the person feet. It means they can live a normal life instead of being trapped by their bodies.
"Many children, who without a wheelchair would be confined in their homes, can go to mainstream schools. Others can go to special education centers for children with disabilities. When they are adults, they can reach amazing levels … some are graduates, managers and writers, others find their places in trades or businesses. And all because, at a critical time in their lives, we were able to give them feet and enable them to work for their futures."
An enormous area of work is education: parents’ love is often reduced to a day-to-day battle to cope because of the lack of knowledge about what can be done for, and by, people with disabilities. The Wheelchair Project’s parent organization, RICD, also tackles this problem

If you give a person feet, you can turn despair into hope and happiness and has a major commitment to telling everyone about the help and treatment available for children with disabling conditions.
This lack of knowledge is found everywhere among carers. It is also a big problem in health, community and education professionals, although the Wheelchair Project volunteers see the situation improving with government and RICD efforts.
Ten years ago, a healthcare professional told the RICD Wheelchair Project volunteers not to waste effort on a group of “hopeless” disabled children: the volunteers did put in the effort and now those children live constructive and happy lives. Some even go to   university. Today, that experience is a guiding light for the RICD Wheelchair Project.
RICD and its Wheelchair Project are beginning to consider ways of supporting neighboring countries which have far fewer, if any, facilities to help people with disabilities. Links have already been forged with Laos and education is being offered to health professionals from Myanmar and Cambodia.
Visitors to Thailand may conclude disability is not a problem because it is rare to see disabled people on the streets.
But the reality is the nightmare of being trapped by disability in a society where there are too few mobility aids and the streets are too difficult to negotiate by any but the able bodied.