Reviewed by Jayanti Roy
http://www.tribuneindia.com/2014/20141012/spectrum/book2.htm
Gifted: Inspiring Stories of People with Disabilities
by Sudha Menon and VR Ferose.
Random House. Pages 260. Rs 299

Gifted is a compilation of fifteen life stories of people with
disabilities, who with their courage, exemplary conviction and an
indomitable spirit made their lives worth emulating. While working for
the India Inclusion Summit, 2013, one of the authors, VR Ferose came
in contact with several such people who had reached the heights of
success, despite getting an unfair treatment from life. He observed
that each one of them possessed traits he had studied in leaders or
pioneers in different domains and wanted to tell the stories of these
unsung heroes who are constantly competing and bettering their records
on the track of life. These valiant individuals, their struggles,
their supportive families, their stories can surely guide us on life,
correct our course and give us the right perspective. This is the
objective of the book, which it fulfills quite compellingly.

Other objectives of the stories are sensitisation and awareness. There
are two extremes when we deal with a specially-abled person, either we
fumble for words not knowing what to say, focusing only on the
disability, ignoring the identity of the person or we are rude and
insensitive, saying cruel things, belittling their potential. It is
seldom that we behave with them as with another normal human being.
These stories tell us that living with a certain disability can
somehow be learnt and adjusted to; however, what pinches the most,
even more than the physical pain, is the insensitivity,
underestimation and lack of faith by their able-bodied fellowmen.

The book is as much about the tenacity of the family members, often of
the mothers or the wife, sister, or father who gave up their personal
lives but refused to give up their relentless efforts to make life of
their loved one better. In one case, it is a friend, a pillar of
strength. The stories are also a narration of how families smilingly
supported the person, many a time bearing the brunt of injustice meted
out to one. This compassion warms the heart and makes you believe in
the goodness of humans.

There is a lot of diversity in the stories found in the book. People
from different social strata, rich and poor, urban and rural, male and
female, old and young, people who had a congenital disability or whom
disability struck later in life, privileged and under privileged have
been portrayed sensitively. The vocations that they pursue are
mindboggling; we have a journalist, wild life conservationist,
musicians, sportspersons, IT professionals, standup comedian,
oncologists, and who not. There is not too much harping on the
suffering or pain, all this is subtly mentioned. Instead the emphasis
is on optimism, beauty, cheerfulness and celebration of the fighting
spirit. It is really astonishing that for many of these people, their
disability became a window to the pain of others and alleviation of
that pain and suffering then became the goal of their lives.

Malathi Holla, on her own, is nurturing 20 kids with disabilities,
Javed Abidi is working on inclusion policies, helping draft the
disability bill, Mohammad Sharif is teaching music to underprivileged
children. For each one of them, being physically disabled means being
more empathetic, kind, resource-sharing, helpful, sensitive and this
is the common thread that runs through all the stories.

Though, after reading some of the stories, the layout starts appearing
familiar and monotonous, having the same trajectory and turn of
phases. Style and approach becomes repetitive and there are a few
printing errors as well. However, these can be overlooked for the
reader-friendly format and simple language that makes the book
accessible to all.


-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU

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