Yes, I did wonder about the issue for long time but could not find even a 
fraction of a word written about it anywhere.

The most poignant words in the article, for that matter applicable to life of 
disabled in general are:

"So Helen had desires, but couldn't fulfill them.

But she tried anyway.
"


Perceived asexuality of the disabled is really a major challenge in social 
integration.
So, sometimes, I feel a sense of satisfaction when it is broken, at times 
violently and vehemently by cases of even rape committed by disabled on able 
bodied, though thankfully such cases occur only once in a blue moon, most of 
the times, disabled even rape other disabled only!!!!!!!
I know my statements are susceptible to misinterpretations by the uninitiated, 
but I am advancing them as instantiating  the claim of sexuality of the 
disabled....


-----Original Message-----
From: accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in 
[mailto:accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in] On Behalf Of avinash shahi
Sent: Wednesday, May 09, 2012 3:13 PM
To: accessindia; jnuvision
Subject: [AI] Rosie Sultan: Helen Keller's Secret Love Life

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rosie-sultan/helen-keller_b_1477393.html
Rosie Sultan.Author
Posted: 05/04/2012 1:10 pm

I've been fascinated by Helen Keller since I read my first slim
paperback about her when I was a child, and I've read most everything
about her since. I've seen the movie The Miracle Worker more times
than I can count, and still feel the emotional wallop of the dining
room scene: you remember the one -- a young Helen fights her new
teacher Anne Sullivan tooth and nail in the Keller family dining room
in Alabama, and amidst broken crockery and smashed plates Helen
finally, finally succumbs to Anne's demands that she eat from a plate.

And who can forget the scene at the water pump? A young,
hardscrabble-looking Helen flails about, still unaware of language,
until the stellar moment when Anne forces Helen's hand under the
splashing water of the pump in the yard and then. Then, suddenly, a
wave of light washes across Helen's small face. "W-a-t-e-r," Anne
spells rapidly into Helen's palm, and voila -- Helen stands up, alert
to the world around her, because finally she knows that everything has
a name.

My images of Helen Keller were, I'm a bit ashamed to admit, of a
"miracle" child and a rather "saintly" young woman who cared for
others and had few personal desires of her own.

So I can't tell you my surprise -- no, maybe shock -- when I picked up
a new biography of Helen a few years back. I was startled to read in
it a short chapter -- maybe six pages long -- that while in her
thirties Helen had a love affair, became secretly engaged, and defied
her teacher and family by trying to elope with the man she loved.

"What?" I put the book down and thought. "Helen Keller had a love
affair?" I, like many people, had not really thought of her as a woman
-- with normal romantic and carnal desires.

I shut the book and knew one thing: There was a story there. A big
story. And I was on my way to writing my novel, Helen Keller In Love,
where I imagine the love story Helen Keller could not -- or would not
-- tell.

Soon I had taken out all the books about Helen from my local library,
and delved into the Helen

Keller archives that hold a wealth of letters, newspaper articles, and
photos that document Helen's life. All the while I searched for clues
to this secret love affair with two questions in my mind: What was it
like for Helen to be in love? And why couldn't she marry?

I quickly learned that from the time Helen was young, she preferred
men to women. Even as a child, if a man came to the house Helen would
ask, "Do I look pretty?"

Yet Helen's family, her teacher, and most of the society around her in
1916, felt strongly that women with disabilities should not marry or
have normal romantic desires.

I was surprised to learn that when Helen was a young woman, at school
in New York City and later at Radcliffe College, other girls went out
with their boyfriends, while Helen studied or socialized with Anne.
During that time Helen secretly read romance novels, but if Anne
caught her she'd tell Helen to put the novel away and read something
to improve her mind.

I was also surprised to learn of other ways Helen's family tried to
keep her from having normal romantic desires: they wouldn't let her be
alone with a man. One time, at Radcliffe, a handsome young man was
assigned to proctor Helen's exam. Her mother had him replaced.

So Helen had desires, but couldn't fulfill them.

But she tried anyway.

The story of the romance as I tell it in Helen Keller In Love [Viking,
$26.95] is set against the backdrop of Helen's fascinating life story:
her vocal protests against the United States' entry into World War I,
her support of the NAACP and soldiers blinded by war, and her fight
for women's rights, birth control, workers' rights, and the prevention
of blindness.

In 1916, when Helen was in her thirties and world-famous, her teacher
and companion, Anne Sullivan, fell terribly ill. Anne's estranged
husband sent Peter Fagan, a twenty-nine year old Boston Herald
reporter, to be Helen's private secretary. The pair quickly became
infatuated. Peter rapidly learned the manual finger-spelling language.
Soon he spelled the content of letters, newspaper articles, and books
into Helen's open palm. In close contact with a man for the first time
in her life -- a man who shared her passion for politics, her zest for
life -- Helen felt alive, awake. The couple fell in love.

Yet Helen's family, her teacher, and most of the society around her in
1916, felt strongly that women with disabilities should not marry or
have normal romantic desires.

And Helen Keller was caught between loyalty to her family and her own
yearnings for love.

Yet perhaps Helen Keller's real untold story is this: her triumph over
multiple disabilities and her enormous celebrity had trapped her
within a constricting saintliness and an image of purity. Though she
could speak up about equality, the rights of others -- even,
occasionally, sexuality -- she was not granted the rights she sought
for others.

It turns out we didn't really know Helen Keller at all.

Isn't it time we did?

 FOLLOW BOOKS


--
"The best things and most beautiful things in the world Cannot be seen
or even touched. They must be felt within the heart."  - Helen Keller

Avinash Shahi
M.A. Political Science
CPS JNU
New Delhi India


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