Posted: Sun Jan 01, 2006 11:15 pm
Helen Keller;
i'm trying luci i really am
well i've never heard of her. i was sceptical as to wether i would find anyone worthy of this thread and obscure enough(to me). as soon as i read that she began her life deaf, blind nd mute my interest was sparked. what she achieved given the obstacles she had to overcome was incredible.When she was nineteen months old an illness left Helen deaf, blind, and mute. Though a wild, destructive child, she showed such signs of intelligence that her mother sent for a special teacher. The teacher, young Anne Sullivan, herself formerly blind, managed to break through to communicate with Helen. The child loved to learn, and her remarkable achievements in reading, writing and even speaking soon made her internationally famous.
Helen earned a bachelor's degree at Radcliffe, where Anne Sullivan accompanied her to every class and spelled the lectures into her hand. She wrote poetry, toured on the Chatauqua lecture circuit, and published an autobiography, The Story of My Life. Helen became a member of the Socialist Party. She also supported controversial groups like the Industrial Workers of the World, the American Civil Liberties Union, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and Margaret Sanger's birth control crusade.
In the 1920s, the newly established American Foundation for the Blind asked Helen Keller to help them raise funds. She was living testimony to the capabilities of a group once assumed to be retarded and helpless, and she spent most of the rest of her life as the most prominent advocate for the needs and rights of the handicapped. She lobbied for measures to aid the blind, including reading services and Social Security acceptance
i'm trying luci i really am