Helen Keller, the little deaf and blind girl was
triumphed over adversity to become world famous. Helen was born on June 27, 1880 in Tuscumbia,
Alabama, to Captain Arthur Henry Keller, a confederate army veteran and a
newspaper editor, and Kate Adams Keller.
By all accounts, she was a normal child.
But at 19 months, Helen suffered an illness – scarlet fever or
meningitis that left her deaf and blind. Her family wondered how a deaf and
blind child could be educated. At the
age of six, her mother managed to get a teacher, Anne Sullivan, to teach
Helen. After studying at the Wright
Humason School for the Deaf and the Cambridge School for Young ladies, Helen
entered Radcliff College in 1900 and finished her graduation in 1904.
The
Story of My Life shows, Helen Keller’s life is neither a miracle nor a
joke. It is a tremendous
achievement. It is destined to be
imprisoned in darkness and isolation for the rest of her life, Helen built upon
the brilliant work of her teacher, Anne Sullivan, to become an inter-nationally
recognized and respected figure. In 1908
Helen published “The World I Live In”, an account of how she experienced the
world through touch, taste and scent. In
magazine articles she advocated for increased opportunities for the blind and
for improving methods of reducing childhood blindness. In 1909, Helen joined the Socialist Party of
Massachusetts and supported many progressive era causes, including birth
control, labour unions and the right of women to vote. In 1924, her popularity somewhat recovered,
Helen began working as a lecturer fund-raiser for the American Foundation for
the Blind (AFB).
In
1955, she published the biography of Anne Sullivan “Teacher”, and in 1957 “The
Open door”, a collection of essays. In
1964 she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest
civilian honor, by President Lyndon Johnson.
On 1st June, 1968, she died at her home in Arcane Ridge, Connecticut.
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