i found this article intresting and wanted to share with all of you.

dec-5 sunday hindu/magazine
Travelling far, barrier-free


MALA KUMAR


Visiting inaccessible places is a reality for the disabled. “Journeys
without Barriers” took intrepid steps that made it possible.







On top:Shivani Gupta in Ladakh


It's freezing at Khardungla Top, at 18, 340 ft above sea level. Here,
on the highest motorable road in the world, sits Shivani Gupta, one of
the three friends who set up ‘Journeys without Barriers' (JwB), an
accessible tourism venture. If Shivani, in her wheel-chair, made it to
this beautiful place in Ladakh, then it is proof that thousands of
physically-challenged and senior tourists too can enjoy such outings.
Shivani has been a quadriplegic now for 18 years, ever since she met
with an accident that injured her spine, and has been working with
several organisations to improve accessibility.

Fascinating



“Leh's natural beauty is so magnificent and overpowering, that it
completely humbles you and spreads a sense of peace and calm. No
wonder I survived so well, without mobile connectivity and without
worrying about time comfortably for those six days. Each mountain in
this dry land is of a different colour. Each view is such that you
would want to photograph it,” says Shivani, also the director of
AccessAbility, an accessibility and disability employment consultancy.

“Journeys without Barrriers” grew from a passion for inclusiveness,
and the available pool of expertise in the field of architecture,
management, disability and tourism. JwB owes its birth to several
related organisations, one of them being Himalayas on Wheels (HoW!).
The driving force behind HoW! is Mohammad Iqbal, a severely disabled
person, avid traveller, and president of People's Action Group for
Inclusion and Rights (PAGIR). The organisation, based in Ladakh, works
towards creating an inclusive and prejudice free society and through
its network across Leh district provides a single window of
information, opportunities for training, livelihoods and for marketing
products. This work is supported by a team of volunteers bringing
together people with disability and those who are physically able.

It was while accessibility professional Vidhya Kalyani worked with
Mohammad Iqbal and his team that they came up with the idea of
starting a tourism venture that would not only create jobs for the
local people with disabilities, but also widen the world for disabled
persons who dreamt about seeing the Himalayas and many other parts of
the country.

While HoW! promotes inclusive tourism in the Ladkh region, JwB is
ramping up its bank of associates to be able to offer travel packages
across the country. JwB's focus will be on least restrictive
travelling. Travellers with disabilities will enjoy the experience of
visiting a new place, have a comfortable stay and absorb the culture
and environment of the area — all with minimal restrictions to their
travel and mobility. JwB ensures basic accessibility in all the
services, like accommodation and travel. It will provide physical
assistance where necessary, say while transferring from a vehicle,
crossing the road, and ensure safety within the services provided,
safe transfers to and from the wheel chair, and safety while walking
and climbing. The company has partnered with service providers who can
provide such facilities to this group of travellers.

Brave trio


Both HoW! and JwB are ventures supported by Travel Another India
(TAI), a responsible tourism company that recently won the Cartier
Women's Initiatives Award in France. Along with Shivani Gupta and
Vidhya Kalyani, Gouthami, one of the founders and CEO of TAI, is the
important third that makes up JwB. With over 18 years of experience
with international and national development agencies such as
ActionAid, Concern Worldwide, Christian Aid, and Kutch Mahila Vikas
Sangathan, she was part of the team that set up the Shaam-e-Sarhad
Rural Resort in Hodka village, Kutch.

Shivani is an experienced accessibility professional now. But she
knows how bad things can be for a person with disabilities, and how
troublesome badly-constructed rest-rooms can be. Shivani was a
confident 22-year old when she had an accident. It took her two years
to rehabilitate, and to come to terms with the reality that she would
never be able to use her limbs normally.. She went on to do a course
in peer counselling in the United Kingdom, and started working for the
Indian Spinal Injury Centre in New Delhi.

While at the centre, Shivani attended a workshop in Bangkok on
barrier-free environment. “This opened my eyes to the world of
architecture and the challenge that I saw for myself...an urge to do
something about this in India,” recalls Shivani. She did a two year
course in architectural technology in Delhi, and followed it up with a
post-graduate course in inclusive environment. Her expertise in
barrier-free built environment, and her own physical disability led
her to manage several accessibility projects with professional zeal.

It is the combined experience and strength of this intrepid trio that
should give confidence to the potential traveller. Once a person takes
a travel package offered by JwB, the person can expect to be put in a
hotel that is disabled-friendly. The package includes pick up and drop
from the airport or station, breakfast and dinner, vehicle and fees to
the local tourism spots, trained driver and helper to lift the guest
in and out of the wheel-chair or vehicle and so on. People with
disabilities have the same urge to see new places and experience new
cultures that able-bodied people have. If the travel bug has caught
you after reading this article, or if you want to be an affiliate of
this social enterprise, you may contact one of the three key persons
at JwB at

[email protected],

[email protected], hi.vids@

gmail.com

The writer is a Bangalore-based editor. Her email id is : [email protected]




with regards

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