The following information will be quite useful for people undertaking 
research in the field. The excerpts as well as the references cited below 
are quite interesting and *not* off list according to me.

Excerpt From: M. Miles (2000) Disability on a Different Model:
Glimpses of an Asian Heritage. Disability & Society 15: 603-618.



Blind People Handling Their Own Fate

Models and stories embodying them arise in social situations, and any 
different conceptualisations in Asia cannot be understood without dipping 
into social
history. Accounts of earlier social responses to blind people particularly 
in Japan, and to some extent in China, indicate a measure of both group and
individual autonomy within reserved and valued occupations, ostensibly 
reflecting a status model more 'normal' than blind people enjoyed in much of 
European
history.

Improved status in Japan traditionally dates from the blind son of a ninth 
century emperor, for whom "many blind men of good families" were recruited 
as
companions (Dixon, 1891; Yoshimoto, 1908). A national revenue was supposedly 
devoted to the welfare of blind people from this time (Golay, 1973). 
Contrary
interpretations have also appeared. Susan Matisoff (1978, pp. 19-22, 28-31, 
39-46) assembles detailed evidence suggesting that blind, lute-playing, 
mendicant
friars (biwa hoshi) originated in China and reached Japan in the 6th 
century. Their successors slowly constructed a semi-legendary past, 
conflating stories
of more than one blind prince in an effort to raise their very modest social 
status - an interesting reminder that disabled people have not always been
helpless targets for model-making by a dominant environment.

Whatever may underlie these legendary beginnings the traditional professions 
of musical performance, song and recitative became a recognised speciality
of blind people, with the less elevated alternative vocations of massage, 
acupuncture, fortune-telling, and later money-lending. Various schools 
emerged,
teaching the standard professional curricula with local innovations or 
flavours. The training and certification process was controlled by powerful 
blind
guilds. Over several centuries, the Proper Path Guild of blind Heike 
reciters eventually
Block quote start
Block quote start

"...extended its control to include all blind lute performers in Japan. They 
became, in effect, a country of the blind, controlled by their own system of
regulations outside direct government management." (Matisoff, 1978, p. 43)
Block quote end
Block quote end

The original apprentice-style training also became a broader education. 
Music on the curriculum extended beyond learning to play the lute - blind 
musicians
were expected to have a repertoire of stirring songs, so parts of the 
literary heritage were memorised by students. Hrdlickova (1965, p. 229) 
cites a field
study where blind or illiterate Chinese storytellers "could sing and recite 
three months on end without repeating themselves", suggesting the formidable
immersion expected of learners. The therapy skills of acupuncture and 
massage extended to coverage of body parts and functions together with a 
grasp of
client psychology.

Thus it was that in 1760 young Hokiichi Hanawa, who would become one of 
Japan's founding academic bibliographers, went to a private school for blind 
youths
at Edo, now Tokyo (Yoshimoto, 1908). There he should have learnt skills of 
music and acupuncture under Ametomi Kengyo. Failing to gain proficiency in 
those
skills, he succeeded 'only' in learning classical literature, and was taught 
later by the famous Kamo no Mabuchi.

This sort of well established and differentiated educational provision in 
urban Japan (and systems with some similarities in China) compares 
favourably
with the situation in 18th century Europe. Hokiichi Hanawa was already 
launched on his bibliographical career by the time Valentin Haüy, at Paris 
in 1771,
was shocked to see a mock orchestra of blind people pretending to read and 
play music, a jape meant to attract passers-by to a café. Eventually in 1784
Haüy founded a school to provide more dignified work for blind people, and 
the chance genuinely to learn to read and play music (Farrell, 1956, pp. 
18-29).
He was a pioneer in Europe - it is only a pity that Haüy could not first 
have visited Japan and China to learn how some blind men had for centuries 
managed
their own education and professions.

The extent of education and employment for blind people in Japan is hard to 
quantify, even more so in China where earlier developments of the same 
professions
and 'blind guilds' had taken place, at least in cities. Perhaps a majority 
of blind young people learnt some local craft or skill within their 
families,
while people losing their sight in old age were cared for by relatives. 
Occasionally such familial concern brought a wider practical application. 
The northern
Chinese provincial governor Lü K'un (1536-1618) was an enthusiast for 
welfare measures. Reportedly,
Block quote start
Block quote start

"Lü ordered the officials of each city to train the blind in a profession 
such as music, singing, storytelling, and fortune telling. Although he did 
not
believe in the last himself he compiled a simple textbook from which the 
younger people among the blind might be orally taught." (Goodrich & Chaoying 
Fang,
1976, vol. I, p. 1007)
Block quote end
Block quote end

Lü's particular concern for blind people arose from the experience of his 
mother losing her eyesight suddenly in 1547, the family's unavailing search 
for
treatment, and their hiring of a succession of blind women musicians to 
restore her spirits. Joanna Handlin (1983, pp. 161-163) suggests the pattern 
of
Lü K'un's thoughts in which crisis, the power of music, and the means for 
self-reliance recurred to take him beyond a 'charitable' model of response, 
to
one in which independence and self-support were central and the government's 
duty was to provide skill training and work tools.

Some rather positive glimpses appear above, for which evidence is available; 
yet for large numbers of blind people there was certainly no ideal Asian 
world.
Beggars were plentiful, particularly on urban streets, and during the 
periodic famines those with disabilities were swept away by disease, neglect 
and
starvation along with millions of other people. An archetypal image of early 
19th century dispensary clients showed "old, blind, decrepit men, 'with 
staff
in hand,' led thither by their little grand-children" (Canton Dispensary, 
1833). The condition of blind Chinese women was often pitiful. In the 16th 
century,
Juan Gonzalez de Mendoza (1588, p. 68) reported of such that
Block quote start
Block quote start

"...when she commeth vnto age, she doth vse the office of women of loue 
[i.e. works as a prostitute], of which sorte there are a great number in 
publike
places."
Block quote end
Block quote end

The evidence is strong that some children were deliberately blinded for 
urban begging and prostitution, an activity not unknown also in Europe 
(Lockhart,
1861, p. 250; Hanks, 1872, p.13). Twentieth century writers such as Susanna 
Hoe (1991, pp. 173-176) and Lucy Ching (1982, pp. 19-21 47, 50, 274-275) 
remark
on the ongoing sexual exploitation of blind women, the latter because it was 
still commonly assumed to be her own destiny in the 1940s. Blindness was 
turned
to advantage in prostitution presumably because the client's own identity 
and defects were thereby spared the scrutiny of a knowing 'professional 
gaze'
- there was only a defenceless, sightless body for temporary hire. On the 
other hand, the absence of physical sight benefitted blind women working as 
spirit
mediums (itako) in some north-eastern Japanese prefectures, because of the 
widespread belief that blind people 'see' things that sighted people cannot
see. Carmen Blacker (1975, pp. 140-163, 337-339), who studied these mediums 
and their personal experiences, realised that what she witnessed was far 
from
the original shamanistic practice:
Block quote start
Block quote start

"A girl is impelled to become an itako purely and simply because she is 
blind. ... By becoming a medium she will become a viable member of her 
community
rather than a burden." (p. 141)
Block quote end
Block quote end

What these mediums performed for their clients seemed to Blacker all too 
clearly a stilted act rather than a genuine trance. Yet the aura of 
'otherness'
attached to their blindness seemed sufficient for rural participants to 
suspend any disbelief and to be greatly moved by what they took to be 
evidence
of communication with the dead. Blacker made no comparisons with the 
performance of blind prostitutes, nor delved into questions of who was 
exploiting
whom.

Ambivalence of relations between the blind and the sighted worlds was 
exploited in several Kyogen dramas. These poignant farces originating in 
13th century
Japan depict humankind in the raw. The peculiarities of blind people are 
fair game, as "not only were blind people very much a part of everyday life 
in
Japan, but they were also intimately involved with the performing arts" 
(Golay, 1973). One of the best known, Tsuki-mi Zato, opens with a blind man 
in
a field at full moon, soliloquizing about the delightful voices of the 
insects. A sighted man from a posh locality enters, also to view the moon, 
and they
strike up an amicable conversation, even sharing a jug of wine. Eventually 
the two men part with warm thanks for each other's company. The blind man 
moves
away, cheered by this chance encounter.

The sighted man is cheered by his own kindly condescension; but suddenly it 
occurs to him that he could have a little more fun by sneaking back and 
'accidentally'
bumping into the blind man, then roughing him up. He promptly does so, 
shouting abuse in a disguised voice, before running off. This dramatic 
bouleversement
shocks the audience into nervous laughter. Picking himself up, the blind man 
bitterly confides to the stunned audience that he is "amazed at how 
different
from the man before this pitiless rascal was" (Kenny, 1989, p. 211); the 
double-edged irony forces the audience to laugh again in spite of itself. 
The
blind man's conduct throughout is a model of decent if naive human 
behaviour - no 'disability model' is required; but the sighted audience is 
confronted
by its own recognition that other people's trust and vulnerability may evoke 
sharply contradictory responses in oneself. The advanced model of human 
intercourse
slips readily into the barbaric.

REFERENCES

Blacker, C. (1975) The Catalpa Bow (London, Allen & Unwin).

Canton Dispensary (1833) Chinese Repository, II, pp. 276-277.

Ching, L. (1980, reprint 1982) One of the Lucky Ones (London, Souvenir).

Dixon, J.M. (1891) The habits of the blind in Japan, Transactions of the 
Asiatic Society of Japan, 19 (iii), pp. 578-582.

Farrell, G. (1956) The Story of Blindness (Cambridge, Harvard University 
Press).

Golay, J. (1973) Pathos and farce: Zat_ plays of the Ky_gen repertoire, 
Monumenta Nipponica, 28, pp. 139-149.

Goodrich, L.C. & Chaoying Fang (Eds) (1976) Dictionary of Ming Biography 
1368-1644 (New York, Columbia University Press).

Handlin, J.F. (1983) Action in Late Ming Thought (Berkeley, University of 
California Press).

Hanks, L.W. (1872) Blindness and the Blind (London, Chapman & Hall).

Hoe, S. (1991) The Private Life of Old Hong Kong (Hong Kong, Oxford 
University Press).

Hrdlickova, V. (1965) The professional training of Chinese storytellers and 
the storytellers' guilds, Archiv Orientalni, 33, pp. 225-248.

Kenny, D. (transl.) (1989) The Kyogen Book (Tokyo, The Japan Times).

Lockhart, W. (1861) The Medical Missionary in China (London, Hurst & 
Blackett).

Matisoff, S. (1978) The Legend of Semimaru, blind musician of Japan (New 
York, Columbia University Press).

de Mendoza, J.G., transl. R. Parke (1588, reprint 1853) The Historie of the 
Great and Mightie Kingdome of China (London, Hakluyt Society).

Yoshimoto, T. (1908) Past, present, and future of the blind in Japan, in: 
Report of the Second Triennial International Conference on the Blind and 
Exhibition,
Manchester July 24th - Aug. 1st, 1908, pp. 174-181 (Manchester).


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Taraprakash" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, December 04, 2006 5:35 AM
Subject: Re: [AI] A Burning Issue


> You are agreeing with what viraj hasn't said. Nowhere he maintained that
> women from this group should express their opinions about the issue, it is
> up to them and they are well with in their rights to maintain a silence.
> What he is trying to do is draw the attention back to the issue of the
> organizations meant for blind women being in fact against them. Some
> previous mails turned the focus of the discussion more towards women than
> the organizations. It seems to be in the interest of the organizations. To
> say that women should learn the martial arts is kind of divesting those
> organizations from their responsibility.
> That women haven't written their opinion is not surprising, what surprises
> is anyone not coming with a mail stating that it is our business, we will
> investigate it. There are members who claim to be working for the blind, 
> if
> there are some working for blind women may take this initiative. Or 
> someone
> could say, we work in this area and Smriti's statement is incorrect.
>
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "rakesh kumar gupta" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[email protected]>
> Sent: Monday, December 04, 2006 5:22 PM
> Subject: Re: [AI] A Burning Issue
>
>
>> Hello to all,
>> Yes, I am agree with Viraj Kafle.
>> I think, this should be great surprising for our group that we have not
>> received any single comment from a single female in this regard till now,
>> even though after moderating this important and relevant issue, Smriti 
>> has
>> not given any such remark or direction for forwarding this talk, while it
>> is
>> very important that the girls should express their views, suggestions and
>> also their feelings in this regard.
>> Thanks,
>> Rakesh.
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> ----- Original Message ----- 
>> From: "Viraj Kafle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> To: <[email protected]>
>> Sent: Sunday, December 03, 2006 7:04 AM
>> Subject: Re: [AI] A Burning Issue
>>
>>
>>> The debate going on about this issue is very insightful. However, As far
>>> as
>>> I feell, we should remember the key issue raised in the beginning by
>>> Smriti.
>>> More than about direct sexual assault or rape, what she was trying to
>>> point
>>> out is the indirect, but well covered- up cases of sexual harassments
>>> taking
>>> place in very institutions which are meant to be protective for them.
>>>
>>> Best regards.
>>>
>>> ----- Original Message ----- 
>>> From: "Subramani L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>> To: <[email protected]>
>>> Sent: Sunday, December 03, 2006 4:30 PM
>>> Subject: Re: [AI] A Burning Issue
>>>
>>>
>>>> Dear Rakesh:
>>>>
>>>> I can't say anything about unusual circumstances, because it is hard 
>>>> for
>>>> anyone to do anything if a reliable person turn out to be the culprit.
>>>>
>>>> The idea of marshal arts isn't something I plucked out from emptiness.
>>>> There organisations in Chennai, for instance, and I am sure you would
>>>> find them elsewhere as well, who teach marshal arts to girls, 
>>>> especially
>>>> vulnerable to sexual assaults.
>>>>
>>>> I had a friend, Reshma Sharma, a black belt in Karate, who taught
>>>> marshal arts to batch of girls who came to her for help and was awarded
>>>> by the T N govt. So, assuming such things work for normal girls, you 
>>>> can
>>>> replicate the idea easily with some changes for VI girls as well.
>>>>
>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>>> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of rakesh
>>>> kumar gupta
>>>> Sent: Monday, December 04, 2006 5:38 AM
>>>> To: [email protected]
>>>> Subject: Re: [AI] A Burning Issue
>>>>
>>>> Hello Subramani, Smriti and to all,
>>>> I think that your suggestions are cheerful and implementable and even
>>>> though
>>>> may be relevant in present context because "self defense is best weapon
>>>> for
>>>> self protection."
>>>> But, I have some little doubt to implement in practical specially for:
>>>> Firstly, totally blind girls, who may not be able to see to "the 
>>>> rapper"
>>>> and
>>>> Secondly, that crucial time, specially when the rappers are in a group
>>>> because in this situation, normal trained girls in self defense find to
>>>> themselves "helpless".
>>>> Perhaps, all of you are aware better from this real fact that several
>>>> girls
>>>> are raped by their relatives even though by their "real Father and real
>>>> Brother". So, we can't rely upon them completely.
>>>> Now, please write me if either of you ,have any specific suggestion for
>>>> regarding to this issue specially for which I have pointed out.
>>>> Thanks,
>>>> Rakesh.
>>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>>> ----- Original Message ----- 
>>>> From: "Subramani L" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>>> To: <[email protected]>
>>>> Sent: Sunday, December 03, 2006 1:39 AM
>>>> Subject: Re: [AI] A Burning Issue
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> Dear Smrithi:
>>>>>
>>>>> I happened to read in a report that mentally retarded girls specially
>>>>> those young, are vulnerable to sexual assaults and the fact that they
>>>>> are vulnerable doesn't help their cause. They have to be protected by
>>>>> parents and those blood-relatives, though it is easier said than done.
>>>>>
>>>>> But, in my opinion, blind girls can learn Karate, carry stuffs like
>>>>> mirchi powder and blades to escape ferom attackers. Marshal arts is
>>>>> something girls in general must learn, as the number of rapes and
>>>> sexual
>>>>> assaults are constantly increasing in India.
>>>>>
>>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>>>> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of smriti
>>>>> singh
>>>>> Sent: Friday, December 01, 2006 9:22 PM
>>>>> To: [email protected]
>>>>> Subject: [AI] A Burning Issue
>>>>>
>>>>> Hello Accessindia,
>>>>>
>>>>> Some of you must have come across a recent NDTV news
>>>>> report, which tells us about a case of a
>>>>> mentally-challenged girl being sexually harassed in
>>>>> some institution for the mentally-challenged women in
>>>>> Gaziabad. The issue is, and must be, a matter of great
>>>>> concern for each one of us. Like it or not, several
>>>>> visually challenged girls also are being victimised of
>>>>> such malpractices in several institutions. In Delhi,
>>>>> for instance, we often hear about such cases in many
>>>>> hostels for college-going visually challenged girls in
>>>>> muffled voices.
>>>>>
>>>>> In this list, we have many people who are working for
>>>>> NGOs and various other kinds of such activities.
>>>>> Therefore, I find this list a very significant
>>>>> plateform for the discussion of issues of an extreme
>>>>> concern like this. I strongly feell, and would like to
>>>>> assert, that there must be some law or some kind of
>>>>> code of conduct to prevents such instances of the
>>>>> visually challenged women's sexual harassments.
>>>>>
>>>>> Therefore, I would like to have a discussion on this
>>>>> matter in the list.
>>>>>
>>>>> Regards,
>>>>>
>>>>> Smriti.
>>>>>
>>>>> Smriti Singh
>>>>> Programme: M. Phil (English Literature)
>>>>> Room # 03
>>>>> Sabarmati Hostel
>>>>> Jawaharlal Nehru University
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> ________________________________________________________________________
>>>>> ____________
>>>>> Want to start your own business?
>>>>> Learn how on Yahoo! Small Business.
>>>>> http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/r-index
>>>>>
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>>>>> with the subject unsubscribe.
>>>>>
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>>>>> please visit the list home page at
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>> http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.i
>>>>> n
>>>>>
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