Louis Braille - Modern trail blazers
Louis
Braille - Modern trail blazers
Basic English
Louis Braille Introduction
Louis Braille born on 4 January
1809 died 6 January 1852) was a French educator
and inventor of a system of reading and writing for use by the blind or visually impaired. His
system remains virtually unchanged to this day, and is known worldwide simply
as braille.
Born
4 January 1809 Coupvray, France
Died 6
January 1852 (aged 43) Paris, France
Resting place Panthéon, Paris and Coupvray
Known for Braille
Parent(s) Monique
and Simon-René Braille
Louis Braille Day Theme
Determination does triumph over
physical deprivation. Happy Braille Day. Louis Braille's unchallenged
invention of a reading & writing system for the blind has changed the world
of the blind forever. Braille is not a language but a code that can be
translated into many languages.
Louis Braille Summary
Louis
Braille was a son of farmer as well as a leather worker who lost his both
eyes by an accident at his early age. Braille had mastered his disability while
still a boy. He attended Hauy’s school in 1819 and excelled in his
education and won scholarship from France’s Royal Institute for Blind Youth.
Later he taught there. While still a student there, he began developing a
system of tactile code that could allow blind people to read and write quickly
and efficiently. He soon became determined to fashion a system of reading and
writing that could bridge the critical gap in communication between the sighted
and the blind.
In
1821, Braille learned of a communication system devised by captain Charles
Barbier of the French Army. Barbier’s “Night Writing”, was a code of dots and
dashes impressed into thick paper. These impressions could be interpreted
entirely by the fingers, letting soldiers share information on the battle field
without having light or needing to speak.
The
captain’s code turned out to be too complex to use in its original military
form, but it inspired Braille to develop a system of his own. Braille worked
tirelessly on his ideas, and his system was largely completed by 1824, when he
was just fifteen years of age. From Barbier’s “Night Writing”, he innovated by
simplifying its form and maximising its efficiency. He made uniform
column for each letter, and he reduced the twelve raised dots to six. He
published his system in 1829, and by the second edition in 1837 had discarded
the dashes because they are too difficult to read. Crucially, Braille’s smaller
cells were capable of being recognised as letters with a simple touch of a
finger. This unique discovery of script for the blind filled happiness in the
lives of millions.
Basic English
The Story of Louis Braille
Explanation
Part 1: 'The Story of Louis
Braille'
In 1812, in the small village of
Coupvray (Kupray), France, 3-year-old Louis Braille played in his father's
harness shop next to the family's house. His father was one of the best harness
makers in the area. Mr. Braille also made reins, saddles and collars for the
villagers' horses. He cut strips of leather and punched holes in the
leather with sharp tools. Louis had been warned that he was too young to play
with the tools in the shop.
That day, Mr. Braille stepped
outside the shop to help a customer. Louis thought he would try to punch a hole
in a piece of leather just like his father did. He grabbed the tool and tried
to push it through the leather.
He didn't have the strength
of his father. He tried again, pushing harder. The tool slipped from his hand
and flew up and into his left eye. Louis screamed with pain. His parents, two
sisters and brother ran to help him.
They put a cloth over his eye.
There was no hospital in Coupvray. The closest doctor was very far away. They
took Louis to a woman in the village who used herbal medicines to treat
injuries and sicknesses. She dipped a cloth bandage in a wet herbal solution
and placed it on Louis' eye. But his injured eye became infected and the
infection spread to his other eye. Within a short time, Louis lost sight in
both eyes and was permanently blind.
At that time, most people who
were blind were helpless. They had to depend on others. Only the wealthy or
those of a high position had any hope of getting an education or earning a
decent living. Many ended up becoming beggars.
Tuesday: What would become of Louis?
Part 2: 'The Story of
Louis Braille'
The story so far: At age 3, Louis
Braille became blind after playing with a tool in his father's harness shop.
Mr. Braille carved a small wooden
cane for Louis to help the boy feel things that were ahead of him when he
walked. When Louis was 6, a new priest came to town. The priest gave Louis
lessons for a year, but Louis wanted to go to the village school with the other
children. So a classmate agreed to pick him up each morning and lead him to
school. Louis listened to the teacher and memorized what he heard. Even though
he couldn't read or write, he was the best student in the class. He studied
there for three years.
At times Louis was frustrated
because he could not read or write. The priest and the principal thought Louis
would do better in a school for blind students. There was only one school like
this in France — the Royal Institute for Blind Youth. It was in Paris, 25 miles
away. Louis' parents were reluctant to let him go away from home. He was only
10 and the school was very expensive. The priest persuaded his parents to
apply. The school accepted Louis and even paid for him to go to class and live
there.
The school was in a rundown old
building. It was damp and dark, and the students were given very little food.
After his classes, Louis learned to play the cello and the piano. He couldn't
read music, but he memorized the notes. Louis was looking forward to learning
to read. Unfortunately, there were very few books available for blind students.
They were printed on heavy, waxed paper. The letters were formed by pressing
the paper onto pieces of lead that were shaped like the letters of the
alphabet. This process was called embossing. The books were very heavy. One
sentence could take up a whole page. Louis learned to run his fingers over the
pages so that he could feel each letter. It took a long time to read this way.
By the time he got to the end of a sentence, he would forget the words at the
beginning.
Wednesday: Was there a better way to make books
for blind readers?
Part 3: 'The Story of Louis
Braille'
The story so far: Louis Braille
studied at a school for blind students where the few books made for the blind
were heavy and hard to read. A retired French army captain, Charles Barbier,
came to visit the Royal Institute for Blind Youth. He had invented a way for
soldiers to send messages to each other at night without needing light or
having to talk. If they had to use light or make noise, the enemy could spot
the soldiers and shoot at them.
With a pointed tool, the captain
punched dots and dashes into heavy paper. The dots and dashes represented
different sounds. These marks were combined to form words and could be read
without light or sound. But the soldiers found it too difficult to use. The
captain thought blind students might be able to use it instead.
The students tried to read some
of the messages but they also found the system complicated to learn and
difficult to use. Many dots were required to represent a single word. Still, it
took up less space than the existing process of embossing actual letters from
the alphabet.
Louis was excited about this new
way to read. He spent most of his free time learning the system. He knew it
would have to be made simpler. He also had to find a way to include numbers and
punctuation. So in his spare time and late at night, Louis worked hard to
improve the captain's system. With a pointed instrument called a stylus and a
wooden writing board with paper, Louis continued working on it. After two years
of work, when Louis was 15, he finally created a new code. It was easier to
learn and quicker to read.
Louis brought it to the new
director of the Royal Institute. To test the code, the director read a
newspaper article aloud. Louis punched the stylus into the paper to write down
what the director said. When the director finished, Louis ran his fingers over
the raised dots and repeated back the exact words read by the director. The
director was very impressed.
Thursday: Would other
students be able to use Louis' new code?
Part 4: 'The Story of Louis
Braille'
The story so far: Louis Braille spent
his spare time at his school for the blind trying to improve on a night writing
system so blind students could learn to read and write.
Louis' classmates at the Royal
Institute for Blind Youth tried out his new alphabet system. They were
delighted to find how well it worked. Now they could take notes in class.
Memorizing long class lectures wasn't necessary any more. They didn't need
anyone's help to read or write.
Louis was very happy that his
classmates liked his new code, but he wanted other blind people to be able to
use it too. The school director wrote to the French government and asked if
Louis' dot alphabet could be made the official system of writing for the blind.
In the meantime, Louis became an
assistant teacher at the institute. His classes were very popular. He also
spent a lot of time copying books into his code. He even added symbols so that
blind musicians could read and write music. He eventually had a book published
describing his new code.
Louis also learned to play the
organ. He played so well, he worked as an organist at a nearby church. He soon
became a full-time teacher at the institute. In 1834, Louis demonstrated his
dot alphabet at the Exhibition of Industry held in Paris. All sorts of
inventions were shown there. He took notes as people spoke and then read back
what was said.
The French king was at the
exhibition and saw Louis' invention, but he didn't make it the official
language for the blind. The king also didn't offer any money to create books in
the dot alphabet.
Friday: Would Louis' invention ever be
used to help all blind people?
Part 5: 'The Story of Louis
Braille'
The story so far: Louis Braille
created a new dot alphabet for his blind classmates.
When Louis returned from the
Exhibition of Industry in Paris , he was sad that his invention wouldn't be
available to other blind people. In the last few years he had occasionally felt
tired. He also sometimes had a bad cough and fever. He grew sicker. His doctor
told him he had consumption, or what we today call tuberculosis. At that time
the only remedy for this disease was fresh air and rest.
Louis taught less and spent time
outside. He continued to improve the dot alphabet. He added the letter
"w" so that his code could be used to write English. And he worked on
creating math textbooks for blind students.
A new director came to the Royal
Institute for Blind Youth and wouldn't allow the students to continue using
Louis' new alphabet. The director was afraid that the students would become too
independent and would no longer need the teachers who could see.
Louis was very disappointed. His
health grew worse, and several times he went home to Coupvray to rest. He
worked on writing books and music in his dot system. He died in Paris in 1852.
Two years later, the French
government approved the dot system. It was called "Braille" after
Louis' last name. In 1878, the World Congress for the Blind voted to make
Braille the system of reading and writing for all blind people worldwide. With
the help of the United Nations, Braille has been adapted to almost every known
language.
Many books are available in
Braille. Some are created by typing the words on a computer that translates
them into Braille. They are then transferred onto paper or metal plates for use
on a press.
Louis Braille's house in Coupvray
, France, is now a museum. On the wall a plaque says that Louis Braille was
born in the house and that he invented the system of writing in raised dots for
the blind. It also says, "He opened the doors of knowledge to all those
who cannot see."
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