The Sunday Times, Sri Lanka

School for the Deaf and Blind "finding it difficult to feed children"

Breaking barriers of impairment, they reach out for knowledge
Mar 14 2009

Set up in 1912, The Ceylon School for the Deaf and Blind in Ratmalana that 
relies on funding from 
the state, NGOs and wellwishers provides its students the same level of 
education as in a mainstream 
school

By Dhananjani Silva, Pix by Sanka Vidanagama

Eleven-year-old Shalini (name changed) is transported to another world the 
moment she feels she has 
entered the school library. She walks up to a table in a quiet corner and 
impatiently waits for 
someone to place a Braille book in front of her.
She reads and reads; asks for more books and even refuses to leave the library 
saying “ane teacher 
mata thawa poth kiyawanna one (please teacher, I want to read more).”
An ardent lover of books, Shalini is a fast reader, says her teacher at the 
Ceylon School for the 
Deaf and Blind in Ratmalana. Bubbly and talkative though visually impaired, 
this young girl tells us 
about her Amma and Appacchi who are in the village in Doragala, Gampola.

CAPTION: Computer technology and braille text books: Opening doors to step into 
society as 
contributors and not dependents.

The School for the Deaf and Blind in Ratmalana has many students like Shalini 
who, as quoted in the 
school’s Mission statement, are “progressing from handicapped dependent to self 
managing 
contributors in society”. Some have successfully completed their studies and 
been able to obtain 
employment in banks, garment factories as well as in leading private sector 
companies as telephone 
operators, graphic designers etc.
The Ceylon School for the Deaf and Blind in Ratmalana established in 1912 cares 
for about 150 blind 
and 200 deaf students. In 1956, another school was also set up in Kaithady 
Jaffna called Nuffield 
School for Deaf and Blind and caters to about 180 students with both types of 
impairments.
Children in these schools receive the same level of education as normal 
children and the curriculum 
followed is as in a mainstream school, says Executive Director of the School 
L.P.R. Mendis.
Accommodation is provided during term time as 90% of the students are from 
remote areas. The 
services are provided to these children free of charge and the school’s main 
source of funding is 
through donations received from the government, public and various NGOs.
Classes are conducted from primary up to Ordinary Level with the use of special 
technical aids like 
vision enhancers in assisting the handicapped to read and write.
In 2007, 10 students out of the 17 who sat for O/Ls qualified for Advanced 
Level. Several have even 
gained university entrance. Government texts books are converted into Braille 
books in the school’s 
printing room. The process is quite time consuming, the Sunday Times learns as 
the entire book needs 
to be typed before being translated into Braille.
The ‘talking library’ is for the students to listen to lessons in specially 
adapted CDs and MP3 
players. “Traditionally though vocational training was given in weaving, sewing 
and agriculture, now 
we are more focussed on getting them into the mainstream,” says Mr. Mendis 
pointing to areas like 
graphic designing, printing, communication etc.
The school’s ‘Sponsor a child programme’ is a way for the public to help the 
students. A sponsor can 
choose to sponsor a child from the Deaf school or Blind school for one year or 
more to support 
his/her education. Under the Friends of School programme, people are also able 
to help in activities 
such as sports meets, prizegivings etc.

The school has been my pillar of strength: Melanie

In 2007, she walked away with the title of Telephone Operator of the Year, 
having competed with 
participants of 58 other companies. Incredibly she was the only blind student 
to have taken part in 
this competition.
Courageous Melanie Stephens is 30 years old and works as a Junior Executive at 
a leading insurance 
company.
“When I lost my vision at the age of 12 due to wrong medication given by a 
doctor, I completely lost 
faith in living and my desperation was such that I even wanted to commit 
suicide. I was without my 
parents…my mother left me when I was two and half years old and my father also 
left when I was about 
8 years. Thereafter it was my aunt who looked after me. Later I was introduced 
to the Deaf and Blind 
School in Ratmalana – the school became a pillar of strength to me at a time 
when I was feeling very 
down.
“From that time onwards, little by little I started learning. Today, I am 
moving on with the 
encouragement and immense support I received from the staff and the principal 
of the school. They 
were there with me all the time; I remember the way my teachers used to 
encourage me by saying how 
the blind in foreign countries are employed as telephone operators and so on,” 
Melanie said.
Melanie won an award at an all-island short story competition held in 1995 and 
also Gold and Silver 
medals at many national sports competitions.
She is no more a burden on society, says a proud Melanie who informs us that 
she has been living on 
her own since she was 18. “I have hopes; hopes to build a house etc,” she says 
and with her will and 
determination, one can only hope more of her dreams will become a reality.

Lack of meal donations

Three main meals and tea are provided for the children at the Ratmalana hostel 
every day. However, 
due to a lack of meal donations at the moment the school is finding it 
difficult to feed the 
children says Nilanthi Jinasena, Board Member in charge of the Meals Programme 
at the Ceylon School 
for the Deaf and Blind in Ratmalana.
“Due to the financial situation of the country some standard donors have backed 
out now. Also some 
of the NGOs we received considerable support from have pulled out from 2009 
reducing our revenue by 
about Rs. 7.5 million per annum,” Ms. Jinasena says adding that in January this 
year the school was 
facing a severe meal crisis.
Elaborating on the meals programme, Mrs Jinasena said that usually meals are 
cooked in school and 
the donor only has to choose a particular menu from the given options and make 
the payment. “The 
donor can also contribute to the Meals Fund where the money is utilized to buy 
provisions. If donors 
want to give a meal on a particular day, we can reserve the date. They can be 
present at the meal 
time and if need be we organize the prayers as well,” she says. 


PoEtEsS

"Happiness is the key to the foundation of satisfaction, contentment and 
acceptance…"Zohra Moosa (Deaf Poet)







       
                   


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{Invite (mankind, O Muhammad ) to the Way of your Lord (i.e. Islam) with wisdom 
(i.e. with the Divine Inspiration and the Qur'an) and fair preaching, and argue 
with them in a way that is better. Truly, your Lord knows best who has gone 
astray from His Path, and He is the Best Aware of those who are guided.} (Holy 
Quran-16:125)

{And who is better in speech than he who [says: "My Lord is Allah (believes in 
His Oneness)," and then stands straight (acts upon His Order), and] invites 
(men) to Allah's (Islamic Monotheism), and does righteous deeds, and says: "I 
am one of the Muslims."} (Holy Quran-41:33)
 
The prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said: "By Allah, if 
Allah guides one person by you, it is better for you than the best types of 
camels." [al-Bukhaaree, Muslim] 

The prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him)  also said, "Whoever 
calls to guidance will have a reward similar to the reward of the one who 
follows him, without the reward of either of them being lessened at all." 
[Muslim, Ahmad, Aboo Daawood, an-Nasaa'ee, at-Tirmidhee, Ibn Maajah] 
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