Wonderful, such stories have immense potential to ignite unaware minds
who hold pre-conceived notion about blind people' duable capabilities.
Kudos to The Hindu for doing a story on Diwali from (BRA...)
http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-newdelhi/diwali-brings-cheer-and-light-into-their-dark-world/article6521331.ece

"The first thing is stop calling them 'they'," says K. C. Pandey,
management head of the Blind Relief Association (BRA), while referring
to the visually-impaired people.

He is right. The visually-impaired enjoy Diwali as much as any one
with two pairs of eyes do, and especially if they are among friends in
a hostel, as parents often get overprotective about them while they
light firecrackers on their own.

There are three kinds of visually-impaired people, and for each
category Diwali holds a different meaning. For those blind by birth,
the festival of light is just a medley of sounds. For the partially
blind it's a blurred of vision of sparkling lights and some can even
peer at the brands and check the ones they like. For those, who are on
the verge of loosing sight it's the time to pack in memories of lights
and colours. At the hostel here they have an edge over the other two
categories, who often "seek help" from them to identify the
firecrackers and the 'danger' they pose.

At BRA, the residential senior secondary school, students of all ages,
however, are having a gala time this season. The fun includes bursting
firecrackers and decorating diyas in the hostel. For most of the
students' rocket bomb, sutli bomb, 'bullet' bomb, anar bomb and
woollen bomb are outright favourites.

"I love rocket bomb. 'Voh mast phootta hai'. I crack them after
placing them in a bottle." says Pawan Kumar.

"Once we had put all our rockets in an almirah and somehow they caught
fire. Since the rockets didn't find space to go up, they went
spiralling down. Later, we saw numerous holes in the bottom of the
almirah," recalled Mahtab, a student of Class XI, as everyone around
laughed aloud. Imran, another student, said: "There is no count of
naughty stuff we do during Diwali. We fire crackers inside spare
desks. I love to fire crackers inside a mouse trap, hold it and run
with it."

A Class XII student Daman Preet Singh chipped in: "Though we can't see
the firecrackers but burning them is fun. Our parents/guardians tell
us the colours and sizes and make us touch them to feel their shape.
So, we all practically know what they look like. I even know and have
touched the ash of the 'snake' tablet. To be on the safe side, though,
some of us fire the crackers by wrapping them in papers."

Gaurav Mishra, who is partially visually impaired, lights the crackers
by hand. "I am perceptive to light. When I can see it flickering
hazily I leave the cracker to burst. When we light the bomb, its mild
'surrr' sound alerts us to run away."

Another student Deshraj, who is slowly losing sight, said earlier he
loved to take risk with fire crackers and is particularly fond of
anars. "I can hazily see a shadow of the anar flashing as it flowers
up."

Students unanimously agree that they love to celebrate Diwali with
their friends rather than at home. "Parents are too protective at
home. We have less fun there", many of them said in unison.

For some children in the primary section here, Diwali is also an
occasion for "eating unlimited amount of sweets".

"I eat rasgullahs and balooshahi endlessly and love lighting up the
bullet and sutli bombs," said Aditya from Haryana, a Class V student.

His views were echoed by Tushar, his class mate who loves to fire
crackers "from the gun for safety reasons." Nihal, who is slowly
losing vision, said he loved Diwali more when his sight was better.
But, he insisted that with friends around, he was slowly coming to
accept his disability. "This year, I will also enjoy the way I used
to," he declared.

The visually-impaired also often commit dangerous mistakes while
lighting firecrackers. Some of the boys narrated how they took a slow
burning bomb to be a defused one and had to run when it exploded. Some
narrated how they threw a burning firecracker towards a friend by
mistake and how often the sutli bombs simply burst under their feet.

Damanpreet concluded by asking: "Even sighted people face this scenario,


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

Clean India Campaign: Let us also chip in!



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