Celebrating National Braille Literacy Month

Vickie Cook is a blogger who shares her wisdom with us at SheSpeaks.

Growing up, I lived on and off with my grandparents along with my aunt and uncle. My uncle was invoved in an accident that left him blind around the age of 10. That did not keep him down; he ended up graduating high school, going on and graduating from Seminary School and evenutally becoming a minister and director for one of the top residential centers for the mentally and physically handicapped in Ohio.

He had to learn a new way to read and to communicate. It turned out to be a learning experience for the whole family. Of course, it took us a lot longer then it did my uncle. He began teaching himself Braille and over the years we all became proficient at it. Braille allowed us to correspond with my uncle after he left home through cards and letters. If we had not learned it, the loving cards and letters we sent to him would have had to have been read aloud to him.

January is National Braille Literacy Month. January was chosen for this celebration because it is the birth month of Louis Braille, the inventor of the system of raised dots that made it possible for people who are blind to read and write for themselves with independence and freedom.

Who was Louis Braille? Louis Braille was born near Paris and was blinded in an accident when he was only three years of age. He tried to keep up in school by listening to the teachers but he became very frustrated.

Taking from an invention called "night writing" Louis trimmed the hard to learn code down from 12 raised dots to just six. By the time Louis was 15 years old he had published his first braille book. Louis Braile made it possible for my family and millions of other familes the opportunity to learn and to communicate using his amazing braile system.

What can you do to celebrate National Braile Literacy Month?

  • Talk to your children about blindness

  • With someone to guide you for safety, blindfold yourself and move through your home. With practice you will find that you can do it without assistance. And, this comes in handy in the middle of the night when the night light has burned out.

  • Go to the library and check out a book in Braille and let your kids feel the raised bumps. See of they can make out some of the words.

  • Check out the Braille Bug Website. There are a lot of fun activities and information for you and your children.

  • Help your kids to write their name using the Braille Alphabet.

Go to SheSpeaks.com to try free products and join more lively discussion with women just like you!

More on SheSpeaks:

Too Harsh for TV? Anti-Childhood Obesity Ads Stir Controversy in Georgia

Discussion Forum: Parenting

Member Reviews Baby and Child Products