There was a time,
not long ago, when most people thought that blind people could never learn to
read. People thought that the only way to read was to look at words with your
eyes.
A young French boy named Louis Braille thought
otherwise. Blind from the age of three, young Louis desperately wanted to read.
He realized the vast world of thought and ideas that was locked out to him
because of his disability. And he was determined to find the key to this door
for himself, and for all other blind persons.
The story begins in the early part of 19th
Century. Louis Braille was born in 1809, in a small village near Paris. His
father made harnesses and other leather goods to sell to the other villagers.
Louis’s father often used sharp tools to cut and punch holes in the leather.
One of the tools he used to make holes was a
sharp awl. An awl is a tool that looks like a short pointed stick, with a
round, wooden handle. While playing with one of his father’s awls, Louis’s hand
slipped and he accidentally pocked one of his eyes. At first the injury didn’t
seem serious, but then the wound became infected. A few days later, young Louis
lost sight in both his eyes. The first few days after becoming blind were very
hard.
But as the days went by, Louis learned to adapt
and learned to lead an otherwise normal life. He went to school with all his
friends and did well at his studies. He was both intelligent and creative. He
wasn’t going to let his disability slow him down one bit.
As he grew older, he realized that the small
school he attended didn’t have the money and resources he needed. He heard of a
school in Paris that was especially for blind students. Louis didn’t have to
think twice about going. He packed his bags and went off to find himself a
solid education.
When he arrived at the special school for the
blind, he asked his teacher if the school had books for the blind persons to
read. Louis found that the school did have books for the blind to read.
These books had large letters that were raised
up off the page. Since the letters were so big, the books themselves were large
and bulky. More importantly, the books were expensive to buy. The school had
exactly fourteen of them.
Louis set about reading all fourteen books in
the school library. He could feel each letter, but it took him a long time to
read a sentence. It took a few seconds to read each word and by the time he
reached the end of a sentence, he almost forgot what the beginning of the
sentence was about. Louis knew there must be a better way.
There must be a way for a blind person to
quickly feel the words on a page. There must be a way for blind person to read
as quickly and as easily as a sighted person.
That day he set himself the goal of thinking up
a system for blind people to read. He would try to think of some alphabet code
to make his ‘finger reading’ as quickly and easy as sighted reading.
He knew that he was an intelligent and creative
as any other person his own age. And his musical talent showed how much he
could accomplish when given a chance.
One day chance walked in the door. Somebody at
the school heard about an alphabet code that was being used by French army.
This code was used to deliver messages at night from officers to soldiers. The
message couldn’t be written on paper because the soldier would have to strike a
match to read it. The light from the match would give the enemy a target at
which to shoot. The alphabet code was made up of small dots and dashes. These
symbols were raised up off the paper so that soldiers could read them by
running their fingers over them. Once the soldiers understood the code,
everything worked fine.
Louis got hold of some of this code ad tried it
out. It was much better than reading the gigantic books with gigantic raised
letters.
But the army code was still slow and
cumbersome. The dashes took up a lot of space on a page. Each page could only hold
one or two sentences. Louis knew that he could improve this alphabet in some
way.
On his next vacation home, he would spend all
his time working on finding a way to make this improvement. When he arrived
home for school vacation, he was greeted warmly by his parents.
His mother and father always encouraged him on
his music and other school projects. Louis sat down to think about how he could
improve the system of dots and dashes. He liked the idea of the raised dots,
but could do without the raised dashes.
As he sat there in his father’s leather shop,
he picked up one of this father’s blunt awls. The idea came to him in a flash.
The very tool which had caused him to go blind could be used to make a raised
dot alphabet that would enable him to read.
The next few days he spent working on an
alphabet made up entirely of six dots. The positions of the different dots
would represents the different letters of the alphabet.
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