Hello all


I am pasting below a posting made by our member.



It is a long speech, Therefore, please don't reply to this message.

Any comments should be made on a seperate mail.

Harish.

  

The Edge of Tomorrow

THE FUTURE FOR THE BLIND

 

Address by MARC MAUER, President, National Federation for the Blind

Delivered to the Banquet of the Annual Convention of the National Federation of 
the Blind,

Louisville, Kentucky, July 7, 2005

 

In art, perspective is the depiction of objects with proper alignment, clarity 
of detail, and depth. In thought, perspective is the contemplation of ideas 
from a vantage point that allows maximum understanding, clarity of detail, and 
depth. Although perspective was once the science of sight (sometimes known as 
optics), it has come to mean in part the capacity to understand-to penetrate 
the com­plex and to illuminate the obscure.

 

For an illustration of perspective consider the earth and the billiard ball. 
The earth, we are told, is round. How­ever, it is covered with oceans, 
mountains, cliffs, and val­leys; our observation tells us mat it is only more 
or less

round.

 

A billiard ball is round; when we hold it, we know this is true. The 
observation is born out by the Billiard Congress of America, which tells us 
that the billiard ball is com­pletely round. However, the standards for 
manufacture of billiard balls permit a deviation in the diameter of the ball. 
The diameter is two and one-quarter inches, and the permitted deviation is plus 
or minus five-thousandths of an inch. Therefore, the deviation is one out of 
225.

 

The highest point on the earth is just short of six miles above sea level. If 
in considering the roundness of the earth, the land mass is examined and the 
oceans are ignored (a thing very difficult to do because more than two-thirds 
of the globe is covered with water), the lowest point of land is just short of 
seven miles below sea level. The diameter is approximately eight thousand 
miles. There­fore, the deviation in the diameter of the land mass of the earth 
is thirteen eight-thousandths or approximately one out of 615. The arithmetic 
shows that the percentage deviation from roundness of the earth is less than 
the per­centage deviation in the roundness of a billiard ball. If a billiard 
ball with the maximum deviation were to be ex­panded to the size of the earth, 
it would have a mountain on it more than twice as tall as Mount Everest. The 
earth is rounder than a billiard ball. It's all a matter of perspec­tive.

 

The concept of perspective seems so simple; a new position from which to 
observe or a new pattern of thought makes altered comprehension possible. 
Enhanced com­prehension provides additional knowledge. Additional knowledge 
permits more informed decision making than had previously been achievable, with 
more productive plan­ning as a result. Surely, added perspective will always be 
sought, always embraced, always welcomed, always val­ued. However, our 
experience demonstrates that this sup­position is not always the case. Enhanced 
perspective is sometimes greeted with suspicion, or even more violent reactions.

 

 

Altered thought patterns always challenge the accepted formulations of previous 
observation, and they challenge the authority of those who espouse such 
formulations. Human beings find it hard to admit error and harder still to 
reconcile themselves with the proposition that somebody else possesses greater 
insight than they do. Furthermore, newly gained knowledge requires altered 
patterns of be­havior, and old habits are hard to break. Consequently, 
perspective demands courage, the self-confidence to cor­rect the 
misapprehensions of a former time, the flexibility to alter a point of view 
when circumstances make this necessary, and the determination to act in 
accordance with the newly revealed truth. If progress is to occur, these 
elements are essential, but they are not easy to achieve or simple to apply. 
They exact commitment and sacrifice and work. However, without this combination 
there can be no progress, and we must and will have progress. We possess the 
determination, the self-confidence, the flex­ibility, and the courage. We dare 
to have perspective- the perspective of the National Federation of the Blind.

 

More than six decades have come and gone since the gathering that brought our 
Federation together in 1940 at Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, under the prodigious 
leader­ships of Dr. Jacobus tenBroek, our founder and first Presi­dent. 
Conditions for the blind are dramatically different today from those he 
described at the founding of the Federation, but the task before us established 
by our founders which was of enormous proportions at the beginning of our 
movement remains monumental still. It is the reshap­ing of the patterns of 
thought of our society to recognize the ability within us, to value the talent 
we possess, and to welcome the contributions we have to make.

 

At the beginning of the Federation there was a mea­sure of hope, but almost 
nothing else-no money, virtually no employment, almost no program to support 
the blind at the state or federal level, few books, little prospect of a 
college education, almost no chance to engage in business either within the 
newly established vending stand program or without its support, almost no 
acceptance within soci­ety of our capacity as human beings, and no organized 
method of changing these conditions. A few, a very few, blind people were 
employed-but most of these had jobs at pitifully low wages in the sheltered 
workshops.

 

By the mid-1950s Dr. tenBroek could declare that the National Federation of the 
Blind had grown to more than forty affiliates, that blind people were employed 
in a wide array of professions and callings from shoemaker to physi­cist, that 
education was becoming more generally avail­able to the blind than it had ever 
previously been, and that the employment rate of the blind had risen 
dramatically. By the 1960s, Dr. Kenneth Jernigan, the second great leader of 
the National Federation of the Blind, had fash­ioned within the Iowa programs 
the most astonishing train­ing facility for blind Americans that had ever been 
created to that day. Granted a presidential citation in 1968, Dr. Jernigan was 
regarded widely as the most influential di­rector of programs for the blind in 
the world. The reason for this success was the vigorous implementation of the 
philosophy of the National Federation of the Blind.

 

 

In the 1970s, we had grown to have affiliates in every state and the District 
of Columbia, and we established the National Center for the Blind. In the 
1980s, we continued to expand programs at the National Center for the Blind and 
inaugurated orientation centers in Louisiana, Minne­sota, and Colorado. In the 
1990s, we added Puerto Rico to our family of affiliates, and we created the 
Interna­tional Braille and Technology Center for the Blind, the NFB-NEWSLINE® 
program, the Kernel Book series, and other innovative initiatives. In the first 
decade of the twenty-first century, we have constructed and begun to operate 
the National Federation of the Blind Jernigan In­stitute, the only research and 
training facility for the blind established by the blind, operated under the 
direction of blind people, and incorporating the individual experiences of the 
blind of the nation.

 

With all of this growth, with all of these expansions in the work we are doing, 
with all of the new challenges we have addressed, our perspective has changed. 
We have not altered our fundamental beliefs or modified our dreams, but we have 
come to realize that our role is not only to observe, to challenge, and to 
offer critical comment but also to lead, to demonstrate, and to expand the 
horizons not only for ourselves but also for others within the field of work 
with the blind and in broader context within our entire society. If we find 
(and we sometimes do) that training programs are inadequate, we must show how 
to make them better. If we find that research regarding blind­ness is often 
flawed, frequently without foundation, and sometimes marred from the false 
assumptions about us that have bedeviled the lives of the blind for centuries, 
we must design programs of our own that lead in a direction to inspire others 
to have faith in us and to explore horizons that have never before been 
reached. If the perspective of the blind is not a part of program development, 
research, and training, these matters will inevitably be incomplete. 
Consequently, we have established our own programs in­corporating our 
perspective, and we are seeking partners to join with us. Because we dare to 
have perspective, the opportunities that will belong to us are presently beyond 
the horizon.

 

How does our perspective compare to that of others? What vistas for us have the 
administrators in programs of rehabilitation, the journalists, the 
representatives of the business community, the scientists, and the members of 
the public imagined?

 

In a newspaper article from October of 2004 that ap­peared in Portland, Maine, 
Steven Obremski, the chief executive officer of The Iris Network (formerly the 
Maine Center for the Blind) announced plans to remodel a 100-year-old building 
to create a place containing thirty-one apartments specifically designed for 
the blind. The name of the organization, The Iris Network, is noteworthy. The 
iris is* of course, a part of the eye. Apparently it is in­tended to convey the 
notion that this agency will, in some figurative sense, help the blind to see. 
Or, perhaps this is a warning that The iris Network is watching us to make sure 
that we don't get out of line. What kind of vision does Iris have in mind for 
the blind? What environment are the Iris people trying to create? What are the 
pros­pects for the future of the blind from the Iris point of view? The article 
does not leave us in doubt.

 

As we examine the published report of the plans of Iris, it is worth 
remembering that Mr. Obremski has served as president of the National 
Accreditation Council for Agen­cies Serving the Blind and Visually Impaired 
(NAC), one of the most controversial and oppressive organizations ever to exist 
in the field of work with the blind. Here, in part, is

what the article says:

 

For those who are totally blind, the complex will offer amenities such as signs 
in Braille and textural changes to help residents navigate on their own. For 
example, a switch from carpet to floor tile will help them to tell that they're 
moving from the living room to the kitchen or from the hallway to a stair.

 

[I interrupt to ask if the officials at Iris really believe that blind people 
don't know when they've left the living room and entered the kitchen. They must 
think that the blind are as stupid as a creosote post. But, there is more.]

 

Behind the residence [the article says] will be a sen­sory garden with raised 
flower beds filled with flowers with varying scents and textures. Residents 
could use the area to learn to garden and to practice their mobility skills 
with a cane.

 

They [the residents] have lived in the dormitory, which functions like a 
boarding house, for years-some for de­cades. They welcome the thought of having 
a bathroom in their own apartment instead of sharing one down the hall and 
having more space, but they're worried about how they would handle tasks such 
as cooking on their own.

 

John Lee, thirty-five, who has lived in the dormitory for nearly sixteen years, 
said what scares residents is "the prospect of transition."

 

But Obremski, himself visually impaired, assured them that current services, 
such as meals cooked in a commu­nal kitchen, will continue as long as needed.

 

This is what the article says, and the picture of service to the blind in Maine 
is dismal indeed. Some of the resi­dents have lived in the dormitory for 
decades. At least one began his tenure before he was twenty and has re­mained 
for sixteen years. Residents apparently do not know how to cook for themselves, 
and their travel skills are so severely limited that they need to practice in 
the flower garden in the backyard.

 

Can these residents expect employment, participation in the community, the 
procurement of a home, the estab­lishment of a family, matriculation at 
educational institu­tions, or other activities of citizenship? The answer is 
no, but at least they get a private bathroom and a flower gar­den. Of course, 
according to Obremski, they might not be able to use these amenities unless the 
contrast in the floor covering is sufficiently great to warn them that they've 
entered a new location. The blind can't tell that they've left the kitchen 
unless a contrast in the texture of the floor warns them that this has 
happened. How many kinds of floor covering are needed for this ideal home for 
the blind? Kitchen, bathroom, bedroom, living room, hallway, stair­way, and 
flower garden-all these must feel different to the feet or the blind will be 
lost at Iris-wandering aimlessly in this specially designed home for the blind.

 

Half a century ago Dr. tenBroek proclaimed that blind people were employed as 
shoemakers and physicists, as lawyers and professors. Steven Obremski must have 
missed this information. He has been living in the stifled atmosphere of 
Iris-an atmosphere of custodialism and curtailed potential. He has apparently 
missed the news that the blind have rejected ward status and have claimed their 
rights as full and equal citizens.

 

Several years ago in his capacity as president of the National Accreditation 
Council, Mr. Obremski came to our convention to ask us to acquiesce in his 
proposal that he serve as the leader in setting standards for all blind people. 
Is there any wonder that we rejected this overture? He wants to set the 
standards that will circumscribe our lives and blight our futures, but he will 
not do it, for we will not let him. Despite his blindness, his perspective is 
limited and his imagination withered. We do not seek custody but emancipation, 
and we dare to have the perspective that gives our future the broadest range of 
opportunity.

 

To Steven Obremski and all like-minded ilk we say, "Not on your life!" Learn if 
you can about the restless vibrant spirit that lives in the hearts of the 
blind. Become part of that spirit if you have the courage, and join with us in 
al­tering the future if you have the will. Otherwise, stand aside; get out of 
the way; the force of our aspirations can­not be resisted. We will not permit 
anything to stop our progress. We dare to have perspective-the perspective of 
the organized blind.

 

An article found on the Internet with the copyright of RP International bears 
the title "The Eyes of Christmas." It says that Christmas is a warm joyous 
celebration for many, but not for the blind. The blind think of Christmas as 
dark, lonely, and sad (according to this article) because they "live without 
the light." To alleviate somewhat the lot of those with this miserable 
condition, Helen Harris reached out on Christmas Eve with a program entitled 
"The Eyes of Christmas," designed especially for those who "cannot see 
Christmas for themselves." "A host of celebrity describers [the article says] 
told what Christmas looks like: the colors of the season, messages on greeting 
cards, the latest children's toys, and messages of hope in medical research."

 

The pith of this article is that those who can see have joy; those who cannot 
do not-those who can see the light gain happiness; those who are in the dark 
are lonely and sad.

Is this the meaning of Christmas for you? Whence came all this dismal 
dreariness? Is it not one more ex­pression of the fear of the dark?

 

We who are blind appreciate competent description effectively done as much as 
anybody else. However, to leap from the notion that we might like to hear a 
good description of a scene to the thought that without a verbal rendering of 
the visual images of the season we are left in a dark depression is to create 
trouble where none exists. Christmas is the season of hope-of renewal. But in 
the minds of those who have created "The Eyes of Christ­mas," there is only one 
reference to hope, the hope of medical research. Joy, warmth, family 
togetherness, the hope of renewal inherent in the season may exist only if the 
scientists performing medical research find a cure to the devastating condition 
for those "who live without the light."

 

The description is false, the assumptions about us that underlie the 
description are false, and the implications that flow from the underlying 
assumptions are false. We who are blind are not without hope. Although each of 
us has felt loneliness at times, our blindness has not served as the means for 
creating it. Rather, it has been the misunder­standing of others that has 
contributed significantly to our separation from society-the misunderstanding 
exempli­fied by the article "The Eyes of Christmas." If the writ­ers of such 
articles think of us as lonely, they will help to create the isolation that 
makes it so. If they imagine we are sad, they will be less responsive to our 
joy, and they will make us work harder to have joy. Nevertheless, they cannot 
change what we are. The most fundamental ele­ment of Christmas is love, and we 
have that. We receive it, and of equal importance, we give it to others. Not 
only does our perspective tell us that those who believe we are living without 
the light have formed an erroneous conclu­sion but, beyond that, the joy and 
love of Christmas belong to us. The light that exemplifies these virtues is 
ours, we are living within it-we are part of it. This, too, is the perspective 
of the National Federation of the Blind.

 

An agency for the blind in Birmingham, England, named Focus on Blindness runs a 
sight-loss course. An article which appeared in the Birmingham Post on June 
26,2004, contains reflections of the reporter about her experiences being 
blindfolded in this course. Her overwhelming reac­tion to the course was a 
feeling of dependency. Here, in part, is what the article says:

 

If you are able to read this, you should thank your lucky stars that you can 
also negotiate that bag left on the stairs or fill up the kettle [for your 
morning tea].

For the blind and partially sighted it is not so easy.

Every day poses new challenges to carry out the sim­plest of tasks that a 
sighted person would take for granted.

 

A staggering 95 percent of what we perceive in the world around us is gathered 
through what we see. But it wasn't until I took part in a sight loss awareness 
course that my eyes were really opened to blindness.

 

How on earth would i thread a needle or peel a potato [without sight]?

 

And even more frightening was the prospect of being blindfolded and having to 
refy totally on and trust my part­ner to guide me through doors, down ramps, 
and around chairs.

 

But whatever the condition [that causes blindness], they all make sewing a 
button on a shin, writing a letter, read­ing a newspaper, or using a calculator 
ten times more dif­ficult, if not hopeless.

 

However, one of the key things I learned while blindly being led around by my 
guide was trust.

Feeling helpless, vulnerable, and lost in a world where everything seems to 
revolve around image, I was com­pletely dependent on all she said to me.

 

Whatever else may be said about this article, it is not subtle. When the 
reporter decides that a put-down for the blind is in order, she lays it on with 
a trowel. The blind are completely dependent, unable to sew a button on a 
shirt, write a letter, use a calculator, get through a door­way without help, 
get down a ramp without guidance, or get around chairs without being led. We 
can't thread needles or peel potatoes, and we miss 95 percent of what may be 
perceived in the world around us. Despite these disadvantages, the article 
tells us, our condition does help us learn trust.

 

The Focus on Blindness agency may have sought to foster this reaction for the 
purpose of showing how im­portant its services are. Those who run the program 
may want to be regarded as benevolent experts contributing their time and skill 
to the unfortunate blind. If this is their intent, they seem to have succeeded, 
but at what cost to the blind? How can the image of such helplessness and 
dependency stimulate blind people to meaningful partici­pation in society? How 
can this image foster an atmo­sphere in which the capabilities of the blind 
will be recog­nized? '

 

We in the National Federation of the Blind sometimes conduct the same kinds of 
classes, but the results are vastly different. We show sighted people that 
being blind need not be fearful and that the routines of life can be per­formed 
effectively without vision when the proper tech­niques are used. As with so 
much else involving blind­ness, the result to be achieved depends on the 
perspective of the planners who create the program. If we expect dependency, 
that is what we get. If we expect indepen­dence, that too is what we get.

 

It is essential that we be clearly understood. We are not trying to say that 
blindness is an irrelevance or mat it has no impact. It can be a hellish 
experience if it is not properly understood. However, becoming blind does not 
necessarily denote the loss of independence, the inability to learn, a 
diminished capacity for contribution, or the ab­sence of a full and active 
life. Part of the altered perspec­tive in the programs we operate is that we 
ask blind people to do the teaching. The perspective of blindness must be a 
part of education about blindness, or the program is in­adequate. When the 
perspective of blindness is incorpo­rated in the teaching, a dramatic increase 
in effectiveness occurs. For this reason, we dare to have perspective, and we 
ask others to share it. We are no longer prepared to be regarded as helpless or 
dependent, and we demand that our opportunities reach to the far horizons. This 
is the perspective of the National Federation of the Blind.

 

An advertisement for a vitamin drink which has ap­peared here and there lately 
invokes the images of sight and blindness. The drink, called Focus, is 
accompanied by a caption, "See more. Drink Focus." The vitamin A in the drink 
is supposed to assist with vision. In the adver­tisement there is a woman 
apparently performing a strip­tease dance and a man with a white cane and dark 
glasses holding money not toward the dancer but into empty space. One of the 
implications of the advertisement is that the blind man can't find his target 
and that if he would only drink Focus he might better be able to focus on his 
objec­tive. (I leave to one side the suggestive implications of the 
advertisement arising from the juxtaposition of a striptease dancer with the 
slogan, "See more. Drink Focus.") Un­like the comments regarding the course on 
sight loss from the agency Focus on Blindness in England, this advertise­ment 
does not describe the blind man as completely help­less. Although he is holding 
his money in the wrong direc­tion, he has sufficient observational skills to 
know that, in the circumstances, he might want to spend it. Further­more, 
before he met the dancer, he found some method of getting the funds for later 
use.

 

However, to portray us as socially inept as a means of selling their product is 
not only reprehensible but mislead­ing. My observation of blind people is that 
those who seek unusual and delicate social situations perform as well as 
anybody else. My advice to the people who make Fo­cus is that they leave us out 
of their advertisements, or we may decide to focus our attention on them.

 

A blind psychic from a small town in Germany asserts that he can tell people's 
futures by feeling their buttocks. Articles from newspapers in Baltimore and 
Australia give details. Here are excerpts:

 

Forget palm-reading-a blind German psychic claims he can read people's futures 
by feeling their naked but­tocks.

 

Clairvoyant Ulf Buck, thirty-nine, claims that people's backsides have lines 
like those on the palm of the hand, which can be read to reveal much about 
their character and destiny.

"The bottom is much more intense-it has a much stron­ger power of expression 
than the hand in my experience," Mr. Buck told the Reuters news agency.

"It goes on developing throughout your life." [To which one is tempted to 
interject, I bet it does.]

 

By running his fingers along a number of lines on the surface of a client's 
posterior, he says he can tell them about their future monetary success, family 
life, health, and happiness.

 

Such are quotes about the blind psychic from Germany. Although the psychic does 
not say that blindness causes him to be able to recognize the future in such an 
unusual way, he does tell us that being blind has its advantages. His clients 
do not have to worry that he will later recog­nize their faces. Blind people 
recognize others through a handshake, the pattern of a walk, the tone of voice, 
the characteristic knock upon a door, or some other indicator. This blind man 
has introduced a new type of recognition factor. He might not know a face, but 
there are other ways to come to know people.

What a bunch of nonsense. If the man were sighted, his weird behavior would not 
be tolerated. We insist on new perspective, but we are circumspect in the way 
we do it. Taking liberties is intolerable, and we who are blind know that if we 
expect to participate fully in our society, we must meet the standards of 
behavior that have been established for all. We must not take advantage of 
blind­ness. This too is our perspective.

 

A CNN report from London, England, dated July 15, 2004, reiterates the 
oft-repeated opinion that the brains of the blind are not the same as the 
brains of the sighted. Bearing the headline "Infant Blindness Boosts Music 
Acu­men" the article says, in part:

Infants who go blind at a very young age develop musi­cal abilities that are 
measurably better than those who lose their sight later in life or retain full 
vision, according to a new study.

 

It has long been known that blind people are far better than their sighted 
counterparts at orientating themselves by sound.

 

But now scientists at Canada's University of Montreal have found that blind 
people are also up to ten times better at discerning pitch changes than the 
sighted-but only when they went blind before the age of two.

 

"It is well known that you have great musicians that are blind, and a lot of 
piano tuners are blind. But until this study there was no quantifiable evidence 
to demonstrate that blind people were indeed better," [Pascal Belin lead 
researcher for the study] added.

 

The research, published in the science journal Nature, attributed the clear 
differences in performance to brain plasticity-the formative period when the 
infant brain is akin to a sponge and soaking up all sorts of stimuli.

 

Belin said his research suggested that deprived of in­put, the section of the 
brain that would have processed images was reassigned to enhance other sectors.

 

"When these people became blind, the part of their brain that would have been 
used to process visual information reorganizes to take over other functions."

 

With those mighty thoughts rolling about in your reor­ganized brains, consider 
the inevitable question. This ar­ticle says that our perception of sound is 
different from the perception that sighted people have. But what else has 
changed? Why is the plasticity limited only to hear­ing? Some say our sense of 
touch is enhanced, some argue that our sense of smell is improved, and some 
as­sert that our taste is superior to that of others. Could all of it be true? 
Does the taste of our dinners explode in our consciousness with an impact that 
is ever so much greater than that experienced by the sighted? Do those who have 
been blind from birth have an inchoate superior olfactory ability? Are we 
merely in need of training to become blind bloodhounds? And what of touch? Do 
we feel better than others?

 

Are the findings of the study born out in personal expe­rience? Some blind 
people are very talented musically, but this artistic ability seems to have 
missed a good many of the rest of us. If I had my choice, I would want my brain 
plasticity to reassign my mental functioning to intel­lect. The part of my 
brain that had been assigned to see­ing should be reorganized into thinking. If 
this were so, the blind would be smarter than the sighted. The intellec­tual 
class would be made up of blind people. We ask the professors at the 
universities to work out this interesting experiment in plasticity. In the past 
blindness has almost always been a disadvantage; let us make all blind people 
geniuses.

 

Fanciful supposition may be all right for an Internet chat, a comedy club, or a 
federal grant, but perspective demands that we be more realistic. We expect to 
create greater opportunity than has previously belonged to us, and we dare to 
have the perspective that makes it possible. How­ever, our perspective depends 
not on fancy but on fact. Next time they want to speculate, let them learn of 
our experience and the perspective of the National Federa­tion of the Blind.

 

At the National Center for the Blind we conduct many meetings, seminars, and 
classes. During one of these I talked with blind professors, blind technology 
experts, blind students, and blind lawyers about the meaning of blind­ness and 
what collectively we can do to improve condi­tions for the blind. After the 
meeting had ended, one of the participants came to talk with me in my office. 
The conversation was comparatively brief, but it was packed with significance.

 

The man said that he had been blind all of his life, that he had attended 
elementary and high school, that he had gained a college degree, and that he 
was successfully employed with a major American corporation, doing im­portant 
work and earning a satisfactory living. However, although many of the indicia 
of success were present in his life, he had always felt that there was 
something miss­ing. In school, at play, in extracurricular activities outside 
the classroom, in sporting events, in social interaction, and in seeking 
employment, he has been repeatedly admon­ished that he is different because of 
blindness-not includable as a regular human being in the routine commerce of 
everyday life. The admonitions were not meant to be brutal but gentle and kind. 
Nevertheless, they separated him from others and created isolation. They were 
always there, and it hurt. Growing up he read the children's story Pinocchio, 
and like the fairytale figure, he has forever longed to be a real boy.

 

But of course, he already is. The reasons for his feel­ings of isolation arise 
from the repetition of the idea that he should feel separate-that his life is 
not as good as that enjoyed by others, and that he is somehow distinctly 
dif­ferent from the rest of society. However, we know that what he has been 
told is incorrect. His life has value, and his worth is great. One element of 
the perspective that we have is the urgent need to support one another in the 
recognition of our innate normality and inherent value. We are blind, but we 
are not repulsive. In fact, we insist on being a part of this society-of making 
our contributions and having them recognized for what they are. We who are 
blind are as real as anybody else, and we intend to demonstrate it. This also 
is a part of the perspective of the National Federation of the Blind.

 

In 1968, when the Federation was twenty-eight, and Dr. Jernigan was giving his 
first banquet address as Presi­dent, he said; "The very symbol and substance of 
the new ideas, and the challenge to the old attitudes, can be found in the 
organized blind movement."

In 1996, twenty-eight years later, Dr. Jernigan addressed the convention again, 
this time on the revolution of the Kernel Books. He said, "... I am absolutely 
certain of the general direction our organization will take. Our mu­tual faith 
and trust in each other will be unchanged, and all else will follow. I never 
come into the convention hall without a lift of spirit and a surge of joy, for 
I know to the depths of my being that our shared bond of love and trust will 
never change and that because of it we will be unswervable in our determination 
and unstoppable in our progress."

 

One of the elements of perspective is time. I look ahead to that point in our 
history when the next twenty-eight years will have been accomplished from the 
moment of the speech Dr. Jernigan delivered in 1996, and I speculate about what 
we will have done. The leadership of the Fed­eration will be in other hands, 
and other minds will be imag­ining the programs we pursue. Our Jernigan 
Institute will have become fully operational, and it will have generated 
programs to expand opportunity for blind people in other institutions. Our 
state affiliates and local chapters will have gained strength, and training 
centers for the blind conducted in accordance with our thinking and under our 
direction will be more numerous. Research into the na­ture of blindness that 
incorporates the experiences of the rank and file of the blind of the nation 
will no longer be regarded as novel. The hostility that some agency 
admin­istrators and public officials have tried to revive in the field of 
blindness will have receded, and both respect for the opinions of the blind and 
the advantages of having blind people be a part of program development and 
administra­tion will have become accepted practice. Public attitudes about the 
blind will have shifted to a substantial degree, and the employment 
opportunities for blind people will have expanded. From the vantage point of 
2024 (I will then be seventy-three), we will look back and marvel at what some 
have thought about the blind in 2005.

 

Today the administrators of programs for the blind tell us that we need special 
floor coverings to get out of the kitchen and that our lives are virtually 
hopeless. The tele­vision personalities say that our Christmases are dark, 
lonely, and sad. The vitamin drink advertisers tell us that we can't find the 
dancer. The scientists say that even our brains have been reorganized to be 
different from those of the sighted. However, the people who make these 
state­ments have no perception at all. The summation of blind­ness contained in 
this catalog of misguided assessments is completely false. It cannot stand the 
test of time, and it will not survive the challenge of the organized blind.

 

Our perspective is not just for one day. It stretches back over the decades to 
the time of our beginning, and it reaches forward to the moment of the 
fulfillment of our dreams.

We stand at the edge of another day, and we probe the possibilities that may 
exist. We have come together to forge a mighty movement of the blind, united 
and with one voice-a movement with ideals, a determined purpose, a bedrock 
philosophical foundation, and a membership committed to mutual support. What 
makes our movement unstoppable is the dedication of our members, the people of 
the movement. When I come to the Federation hall, and 1 observe the great 
multitude of our membership, I am uplifted. For I know with all that is in me 
that we will never lose the faith that we have in one another-never lose our 
bond of shared love and trust. When 1 think of the past, what comes to mind is 
the great  family of the Federation-the people of the movement. When I think of 
the future, the image before me is the people of the

movement-always the people of the movement.

 

We stand on the edge of another day, and we know that tomorrow is bright with 
promise. Nobody else can create the future that must and will be ours; we must 
do that for ourselves. And do it we will. We have the imagi­nation, the 
courage, the spirit, and the will. We have the unity that makes us one, and 
nothing on earth can change our course or turn us back. We dare to have 
perspective, and we reach for tomorrow with joy. Come, and we will make it come 
true!
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