Braille Without Borders

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Braille Without Borders
AbbreviationBWB
Formation1998
FounderSabriye Tenberken, Paul Kronenberg
Founded atLhasa, Tibet, China

Braille Without Borders (BWB) is an international organisation for the

in 1998.

Overview

BWB's mission is to give hope and practical skills to the blind and in particular to teach braille to the blind in developing countries; if no braille script exists for a particular language in a developing country, BWB must first develop it.

Formerly known as the Project for the Blind, Tibet, in September 2002 the project adopted the name Braille Without Borders.

Schools and centres

Tibet T.A.R

  • School for the blind: The first centre, a school for blind Tibetan children, was established in Lhasa in 1997.
  • Massage centre: A clinical massage centre run and operated by the blind in Lhasa.
  • Vocational Training Farm: A second centre, a farm and cheese factory, for the vocational training of adults has been established at Pelshong 270 km west of Lhasa near Shigatse.

In August 2017 it was made public that Chinese authorities will shut down the school for the blind as well as the vocational training farm without giving reasons.[1]

India

Achievements and events

In 2004, Paul and Sabriye and a team of their blind students from Lhasa embarked upon the Climbing Blind expedition in Tibet under the leadership of blind Everest mountaineer Erik Weihenmayer. The prize-winning documentary Blindsight about this expedition was released worldwide to cinemas in 2006.

References

Literature

  • Tenberken S. (2003) My Path Leads To Tibet, Arcade Publishing.
  • Tenberken S. (late 2006 or early 2007) The Seventh Year - From Tibet to India

Media

External links