Differently-abled, not different
March 20, 2018 10:24 IST

<http://share.rediff.com/bookmark/addbookmark?title=Differently-abled%2C%20not%20different&topic=&bookmarkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.rediff.com%2Fgetahead%2Freport%2Fdifferently-abled-not-different%2F20180320.htm&msgid=getahead&service=Rediff%20Getahead>

<http://mypage.rediff.com/messageboard/comments/getahead2018mar20differently-abled-not-different#write>


*For teams that work on projects to make art, culture and travel accessible
to the differently-abled, the experience of seeing faces light up is reward
in itself.Avantika Bhuyan reports.*


*IMAGE: Initiatives are coming up across the country to make art, culture
and travel accessible to the differently-abled. In this image,
differently-abled children celebrate Holi. Photograph: Shailesh
Andrade/Reuters*

A conversation with a dear friend made Yeshwant Holkar view accessibility
for the differently-abled in a new light.

"She had polio as a child and is a wheelchair user. In spite of doing
extensive research about places to travel to, she would reach a destination
only to find that the bathroom doorway was too narrow for a wheelchair to
enter," he says.

People believe that simply installing a ramp is enough to make a place
accessible to the differently-abled, but don't give a thought to other
spaces and services or to persons with other types of disabilities.

"To compensate for poor accessibility, most often the hotel guys will offer
to get three guys to pick a wheelchair user up and carry them inside, which
is not only humiliating but also dangerous. A person could slip during the
process or their wheelchair could get damaged," says Mumbai-based Holkar.

He realised that there was a need for detailed and dependable information
that could help the differently-abled travel with confidence.

And thus, he and his business partner, Ben Musgrave, founded UMOJA in 2014
-- the first and largest online platform of its kind that makes finding
accessible hotels easy, reliable and fun for travellers with disabilities.


*IMAGE: Last Supper by Madhvi Parekh, whose paintings were part of the
show, The Curious Seeker, at the DAG Modern gallery in New Delhi.
Photograph: Kind courtesy Madhvi Parekh and DAG Modern*

Slowly but surely, initiatives such as these are coming up across the
country to make art, culture and travel accessible to the differently-abled.

Another example is evident at the DAG Modern in New Delhi, where a group of
visually impaired students can be seen engaging with Madhvi Parekh's art as
part of the show, *The Curious Seeker*.

The vibrant world of folk traditions, childhood memories and rural deities
that inhabit Parekh's work have been recreated for them through tactile
toys and reproductions by heritage architect and access consultant Siddhant
Shah.

This is not the first time he has worked on a project such as this -- Shah
has been making tactile reproductions of masterpieces by Jamini Roy, S H
Raza and the Group 1980 artists for the gallery for the past two years now,
as part of the project, *Aabhas* -- a tactile experience, India's first art
education and experience programme for the visually impaired.

Specialists like Shah are still few, so one sees them running like a thread
through the various initiatives cropping up in the cities.

For instance, Shah's handiwork is also visible at Anubhav, a special
tactile gallery at the National Museum, New Delhi, which has 22 tactile
replicas of museum objects, carefully chosen from its vast collection
representing 5,000 years of Indian art.

The gallery, which opened in 2015, was developed with the help of UNESCO,
Saksham, the Open Knowledge Community, the Indian Institute of
Technology-Delhi, and the National Platform for the Rights of the Disabled.

It allows full tactile access, accompanied by an audio guide and Braille
labels.

"The reproductions range from the Indus Valley Girl and the Gandhara Buddha
to the Yaksha-Yakshini figures and coins," says Shah.


*IMAGE: Yeshwant Holkar realised that there was a need for detailed and
dependable information that could help the differently-abled travel with
confidence. Photograph: Kind courtesy Umoja*

Experiences such as the one faced by Holkar's friend have also prompted
cultural festivals to rethink their space design.

The main thing standing between a differently-abled person attending, say,
a major music concert or play is the hitherto widespread lack of
sensitivity to their needs.

It is to address this lacuna that Sunil Kant Munjal founded the Serendipity
Arts Festival as the first fully accessible cultural festival in the
country.

Almost all venues at Serendipity Arts Festival (the second edition was held
between December 15 and 22, 2017, in Goa) were "disability-friendly."

"There were wheelchair ramps and many projects were made accessible to
visually challenged audiences, with the artworks converted to Braille,"
says Munjal.

"We believe in inclusion and want art to touch as many lives as possible,"
adds Munjal. At

At one of the venues -- the Adil Shah Palace -- there were reproductions of
at least 12 artworks that included Braille reproductions of photographic
prints from *A Slow Violence: Stories from the Largest River Basin in the
World, The Music Stopped, But We Were Still Dancing* and more.

Apart from these, the festival also featured site maps and brochures in
Braille to help special-needs audiences make an informed choice about which
event to attend.


*IMAGE: A tactile wall was created at the Blind School, Lodhi Road, New
Delhi, which was themed Bookscapes in the City. Photograph: Kind
courtesy Kyakarein.com <http://kyakarein.com/>*

For teams that work on these projects, the experience of seeing faces light
up is reward in itself.

To connect more people with the world of tales and fables, the Bookaroo
Trust has been working with the differently-abled as part of its outreach
programme for several years now.

In September last year, the team got Champa Saha, a Bengaluru-based
special-needs educator and counsellor, to conduct theatre workshops at Very
Special Arts -- an organisation that works with differently-abled children.

Another project brought Bookaroo and Shah together. As part of it, she
created a tactile wall at the Blind School, Lodhi Road, Delhi, which was
themed *Bookscapes in the City*.

"We also made a Braille booklet to explain the wall art to the children.
Radio Mirchi created an audio book to go with it," says Bookaroo director
and co-founder Swati Roy.

The 10th edition of the Bookaroo Children's Literature festival, which was
held in New Delhi between November 25 and 26, 2017, carried these efforts
further through panel discussions and book showcases.


*IMAGE: The inspiration for Planet Abled lies in founder Neha Arora's (seen
fourth from left) experience of planning trips with her parents, both of
whom have disabilities. Photograph: Kind courtesy planetabled.com
<http://planetabled.com/>*

Many of these initiatives have deep personal stories behind them.

For instance, the inspiration for Planet Abled lies in founder Neha Arora's
experience of planning trips with her parents, both persons with
disabilities.

"My father is blind and my mother is a wheelchair user," says Arora, who
started the company on January 1, 2016, after three years of groundwork.

For perhaps the first time in the world, Planet Abled applied the concept
of Universal Design to travel.

Arora has started trips for mixed groups -- groups that include people with
different kinds of disabilities and their families, as well as travellers
without disabilities.

"Often, people with a certain disability stay in similar disability groups.
But these trips give them an opportunity to understand the challenges
people with other disabilities also face, thus creating a unique human
interaction."

"You will find people with visual impairment, some who are wheelchair
users, deaf and mute, others with Down Syndrome, and more travelling
together on Planet Abled trips," she says.

It also plays a crucial role in sensitising travellers without disabilities
to how different and difficult the world can be for those who do have to
live with disabilities.

"Also, when these travellers go back, they start thinking of ways of making
workspaces more accessible and begin to hire more people with
disabilities," says Arora, who currently operates in 34-plus destinations
in 11 states.

She is very proud of the first-ever rafting trip for people with
disabilities in India that she conducted last year in Rishikesh.

"We had people with spinal injuries also do the rafting trip along with the
mixed disability group. A blind traveller was trained to do a solo
ziplining across the Ganga," she says.


*IMAGE: In March 2017, UMOJA launched #BeachWeek2017, an initiative to
raise awareness about accessibility by giving wheelchair users and their
families the opportunity to enjoy the beaches of Goa. Photograph: Kind
courtesy Umoja*

Yeshwant Holkar, too, is engaged in creating travel experiences that were
earlier considered out of bounds for the differently-abled.

For instance, in March last year, UMOJA launched #BeachWeek2017, an
initiative to raise awareness about accessibility by giving wheelchair
users and their families the opportunity to enjoy the beaches of Goa.

"We worked with the local authorities to create a 10-day fest in which a
ramp was created all the way down to the beach," he says.

A floating wheelchair allowed the differently-abled experience the joy of
floating in the sea, under the supervision of lifeguards.

"The local MLA has promised to make seven beaches in Goa accessible. We
hope to see that come to fruition," says Holkar.


*IMAGE: The Umoja team has also come up with the UMOJA card -- the first
discount card for the differently-abled. Photograph: Kind courtesy Umoja*

Besides writing the first wheelchair user's guide to Goa, the team has also
come up with the UMOJA card -- the first discount card for the
differently-abled -- which is a new way to experience benefits at
accessible restaurants, hotels, pharmacies, shops and more.

For this, the team worked with people with mobility impairments to
understand what their average purchases were in a month and the
difficulties they faced in the process of buying.

With those insights, it has put together a network of service providers
that includes Grofers, Swiggy and Pharmeasy who have created benefits for
the differently-abled.

"Through this, we want businesses to see people with disabilities as a
market and start making better products and services for them. When they
see thousands of people using this card, businesses will be able to
quantify this market and pay attention to it," he says.
Avantika Bhuyan

Source url -
http://www.rediff.com/getahead/report/differently-abled-not-different/20180320.htm



Search for old postings at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/accessindia@accessindia.org.in/

To unsubscribe send a message to
accessindia-requ...@accessindia.org.in
with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in


Disclaimer:
1. Contents of the mails, factual, or otherwise, reflect the thinking of the 
person sending the mail and AI in no way relates itself to its veracity;

2. AI cannot be held liable for any commission/omission based on the mails sent 
through this mailing list..

Reply via email to