A sighted author on writing a book about a woman regaining sight.
A project to tell the stories of blind women around the world.
And one listener’s view on accepting her blindness. Presenter: Peter White
Producer: Lee KumutatPictured: A blind girl learning braille in a school in India. Courtesy of the 'A Light in Darkness' project.
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News, views and information for people who are blind or partially sighted
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Folge vom 14.05.2019Why Do Sighted People Want To Tell Blind People’s Stories?
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Folge vom 07.05.2019Tactile voting provision deemed 'unlawful'A landmark High Court judgment says tactile voting devices are 'unlawful'. And a new way of getting around Gatwick Airport.Presenter: Lee Kumutat Producer: Tom Walker
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Folge vom 01.05.2019A new method of training guide dogsTwo guide dog trainers from the Liverpool Guide Dogs Centre, Nina Swindells and Jan Johnston, tell presenter Lee Kumutat about Positive Reinforcement Training, which the Guide Dogs for the Blind Association is in the process of introducing across its twenty training schools.Lee also speaks to David Grice, GDBA’s Head of Canine Behaviour and Training, about the rationale for the new methodology. Finally, we hear from visually impaired organist, David Aprahamian Liddle. In 2002, David got the opportunity to play the organ at Notre Dame Cathedral. David tells us about how he made a braille chart to remember the organ’s layout, the rehearsal and how he felt when he had finished his recital.Presenter: Lee Kumutat Producer: Tom WalkerPhoto description: Presenter Lee Kumutat stands in between Guide Dogs trainers Nina Swindells and Jan Johnston, and guide dogs Farley and Pepper. They are in front of the parcours outside the Guide Dogs training centre in Liverpool on a sunny day.
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Folge vom 23.04.2019Three stories on accepting blindnessDave Steele was diagnosed with the hereditary condition retinitis pigmentosa five years ago. He found translating his grief and loss into poetry was cathartic for him, and quickly discovered that it helped others who were also coming to terms with visual impairment.The Colorado Center for the Blind in the United States, run by the National Federation for the Blind, offers a nine month course to people who want to learn skills for living life as a visually impaired person. At the end of the course, they must pass a final assessment. It's called 'The Drop' and involves being driven to an unknown location, handed a phone on which they can only make emergency calls and told to find their way back to the Centre.Danielle Montour completed 'The Drop' back in September. She tells us how it helped her to become more comfortable with her blindness.And Chris Fisher went from being fully sighted and studying for his pilot's licence to, four weeks later, being totally blind. Chris, always good with maintenance and building things, turned back to what he knew before losing his sight, and has built a commercially viable business as a wood turner. Chris shows Tom Walker around his workshop.Presenter: Peter White Producer: Lee Kumutat Reporter: Tom Walker