Since last we looked
at blindness, I thought this week I will write a little about Louis Braille.
He was born on 4
January 1809 in the village of Coupvray, near Paris, France. He was an educator
and inventor who created the Braille writing system, a tactile code that
enables blind and low-vision people to read and write by touch.
He lost his sight as
a child after an accident in his father’s workshop. As a student at the Royal
Institute for Blind Youth in Paris, he became interested in improving the
limited reading methods available to blind students. Inspired by a military
“night writing” system made of raised dots, Braille developed a simpler and
more flexible six-dot cell system when he was still a teenager.
Braille’s system
could represent letters, numbers, punctuation, music notation, and later many
specialised symbols. Although it was not widely adopted during his lifetime, it
eventually became the standard reading and writing system for blind people around
the world.
His achievement is
important because Braille gave blind people much greater access to education,
literacy, independence, and employment. Today, his name is remembered not only
as an inventor but as someone who transformed accessibility and communication.
He never married and
his life involved a demanding teaching schedule at the Royal Institute for the
blind. As well as developing and promoting the braille system. He also suffered
from tuberculosis from his mid 20’s.
By his 30s, his
health had declined significantly, and he spent long periods unable to teach.
He died at just 43, on 6 January 1852 in Paris, France.
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