I am a part of NGO which is running a cause for people with disabilities.
An inspirational speech for the disabled people to motivate them to become successful.
Target Audience: Persons with disabilities except for deaf & dumb people.
Hello Friends,
How are you?
Doing great? good well,
I would begin asking you one question What do you think of yourself?
Do you think that you people are waste.. u r the extra baggage which this earth is carrying the society sees towards you with sympathy and nothing else.
If your answers to these questions are yes…. Then I will prove you wrong
And if the answers are ‘no’ then you are on right track and I will aid you
Look how
I am sure that ur thinking will change once I give you examples of
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list of famous people who are considered dyslexic: physicist Albert Einstein, painter Leonardo Da Vinci, Walt Disney, novelist Agatha Christie, Thomas Edison, painter & sculptor Pablo Picasso, and actor Abhishek Bachchan
4. In 1928, Franklin Roosevelt was elected as the governor of New York. He then started campaigning for the presidency, and he became the 32nd president of the United States in 1932. Furthermore, by defeating Alfred Landon in 1936, Wendell L. Wilkie in 1940, and Thomas Dewey in 1944, he became the only American President to serve more than two terms. In 1921, Franklin Roosevelt contracted a near fatal case of polio that left him with limited physical activity. He established a foundation at Warm Springs, Georgia to help other people who had polio, and he directed the March of Dimes Program that eventually funded an effective vaccine. As a result of polio, Roosevelt used a wheelchair and stood with the aid of steel leg braces. He tried numerous treatments, but was never able to walk on his own again.
5. Helen Adams Keller (June 27, 1880 – June 1, 1968) was an American author, activist and lecturer. She was the first deafblind person to graduate from college. The story of how Keller's teacher, Annie Sullivan, broke through the
president to be elected four times, Franklin D. Roosevelt led a strong presidency and overcame multiple challenges throughout his terms. The banking crisis in which the banking sector had undergone a meltdown leading up to the closure of approximately 11,000 banks was the immediate challenge Roosevelt encountered after his inauguration on March 4, 1933. Widespread fear and panic was caused among the people who had lost their life savings overnight. Another large challenge that Roosevelt faced was the lost faith of the people. The American population had lost total faith in government and were faced with questions based on its capacity to make sound economic and financial decisions. At this point he had to create a means of installing the lost confidence of the people that was caused mainly by the depression. Through President Roosevelt's New Deal, the people were reassured that everything was going to be okay and even though the political, social, and economic situation was desperate, he was going to continue to protect them in all means necessary. Prior to his election, Roosevelt was vacationing in Canada and was diagnosed as having contracted polio. Originally it was difficult for him to accept that he was permanently paralyzed, so he tried multiple therapies to enhance his performance and did almost anything to find a cure. Despite all of his hard work and dedication, he never regained the use of his legs. Over the next several years, he worked to improve his physical and political image. He did this by only using a wheelchair when he was not in public and by walking short distances with braces on his legs. He worked through his illness and never let it affect the way he ran the country; always putting his people before himself. Despite all of the roadblocks that Franklin D. Roosevelt may have encountered, he forged through and accomplished many amazing
After his term ended as Secretary of the Navy, Franklin’s life changed forever when he contracted polio in the summer of 1921. Despite his disease, Franklin was determined to stay in politics and he decided to run for Governor of New York in the 1930s. He won with over sixty percent of the vote. During his time as governor, the first foreshocks of the Great Depression hit. Franklin took action and set aside twenty million dollars to help New Yorkers stay out of poverty. After being governor, Franklin decided to set his sites for an even bigger target, the presidency. In January 1933, Franklin won by a landslide and was inaugurated as president. Throughout his presidency, Franklin Delano Roosevelt demonstrated that he was a strong, intelligent, and courageous leader.
In pain and no longer able to walk, the doctors had diagnosed him with polio, an incurable disease that causes severe and permanent damage to the nerves and often leads to paralysis (Feinberg 9-46). Even though he was paralyzed from the hip down, a determined Roosevelt continued to get involved in politics. According to Eleanor Roosevelt, "Polio gave him patience and increased his understanding of what suffering meant" (Brinkley). Even though he was unable to do many of the things he used to do, the effects of polio made him stronger and more determined to be involved in politics. It also drove him to create a fundraiser called the "March of Dimes" that would later raise enough money to develop a vaccine to prevent the disease from ever occurring in children (Feinberg 9-46). Roosevelt became involved in politics once again in 1924 where he gave a speech, nominating Al Smith for president of the United States. Al Smith lost the election to Hoover, but Roosevelt ran in the next election and became president himself, in 1932, at the start of the Great Depression (Beschloss, and Sidey).
Franklin D. Roosevelt was governor of New York for two terms before he was elected as president in 1932, three years into the Great Depression. His background was much different than Hoovers. Roosevelt was raised an only child by his excessively wealthy parents. During his young years he was inspired by his fifth cousin, Theodore Roosevelt whom was president in 1900. Franklin was diagnosed with polio at the age of 39. He tried a wide variety of therapies but nothing worked to cure him, but that didn't stop him from being successful. He attended law school at Columbia and was a clerk on Wall Street after graduating until he entered politics in 1910, by the position of a democratic state senate. Woodrow Wilson appointed him as assistant secretary of the U.S. Navy. He held that position for seven years and then entered the White House when he was reelected as Governor in 1930. Two years later, he won the presidential election and was inaugurated March 4, 1933.When he was
He was nearly paralyzed, but remained in politics with the encouragement from his wife. Eleanor kept FDR name familiar in political circles by being a public speaker. In 1928, Roosevelt ran for governor of New York and won by 25,000 votes. Later, in 1932, Roosevelt defeated the incumbent Republican president, Herbert Hoover. He won the presidency in a landslide with his talk of a “New Deal”.
During his vacation at Campobello, Mr.Roosevelt was diagnosed with polio at the age of 29. He was first in denial that he contracted it, and would be paralyzed. He later on created a foundation at Warm Springs to help others and instituted the March of Dime’s program that in time funded an effective polio vaccine. For a long period of time, Franklin was set on this being the end of his career and that he should now retire. Due to the encouragement of both Eleanor Roosevelt and Louis Howe, Franklin worked to improve his physical and political image.
The Roosevelt family is one of the most popular and familiar names in history. The Roosevelts brought America through numerous crises. In particular, Franklin Delano Roosevelt led America through two of the greatest crises in American history: the Great Depression and World War II. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, also known as FDR, is one of the most influential political leaders in the history of the United States of America. He began his political career as a New York Senator in 1910 and made his rise on the political ladder. During his political run, he did things that no one had attempted before. He introduced an unprecedented amount of acts and bills, and he is the only president to serve more than two terms. He was elected President of the United States in 1932 to become the 32nd president in the wake of the Great Depression (Dinunzio 2). Because of his actions during the Great Depression, he is remembered as one of the most significant presidents. FDR came into the presidential office during the third year of the Great Depression and helped return the United States to a superior nation, politically and economically. He also was the leader of America during World War II. His decisions during the war changed America as well. Aside from fighting America’s battles, he was also fighting personal demons. During his historical political career, FDR suffered from polio. Polio, although it is almost eradicated today, was a common but extremely aggressive disease that
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, born on January 30, 1882, in Hyde Park, New York became the 32nd U.S. president in 1933. He was diagnosed with polio in the year 1921, making him paralyzed from the waist down. This, however, did not impede him from being the only person who has run for, and won, the presidency four times. Franklin died in 1945 from his illness but with great honor. FDR led this country through the Great Depression by implementing government spending programs that provided jobs in local areas, as well as leading the U.S through World War II with the help of this fine speech.
As many people know, Franklin D. Roosevelt was one of the greatest presidents of the United States. In his early years, he attended Harvard University and Columbia Law School. In 1910, he won the election in New York and became a state senator. At the age of 39, he was diagnosed with poliomyelitis.That didn 't stop Franklin D. Roosevelt from his political career.To regain movement in his legs he practice swimming. In 1924, he appeared in the Democratic Convention to nominate Alfred E. Smith. In 1928, he became Governor of New York.
Franklin D. Roosevelt was an extremely important man. He led the United States through the great depression and most of World War II. Franklin D. Roosevelt grew up rich and healthy, until one day, in 1921 while sailing at his family’s cottage in New Brunswick Canada. Roosevelt fell off of his boat into the freezing cold waters. The next day, Roosevelt felt weaker and his skin was very sensitive. A couple of days later he was diagnosed with polio.
The positive impact words had on the three people's lives is mind blowing; and these three short essays can prove it. Helen Keller was born in 1880 she was blind and deaf. She couldn't communicate any issue's she had with people because she didn't know how to. When she was seven her parents got a special teacher for her condition.
Helen Keller was the first deaf and blind woman to achieve so many goals in her life despite her disabilities. Keller was considered to be a leading figure of the 20th century. She is best known for all her accomplishments. Keller was the most powerful blind and deaf advocate of her time. She transformed the way others viewed handicapped people. In Helen Keller’s later years, she attended Radcliffe College (perkins.org).
Helen Keller was the first deaf and blind person to earn a college degree. She graduated from Radcliffe College, with honors, in 1904.
Franklin D. Roosevelt was the 32nd U.S. president and served four terms. He saved from March 4, 1933 until he suffered from polio and died. Mr. Roosevelt was luckily the only president to serve four terms. He happily served for 12 years in office. (https://www.biography.com/people/franklin-d-roosevelt-9463381)
n 1910 and 1012, he ran for Senate of New York and was elected. But in 1914, he was defeated after he had created political enemies. The first time he ran for Vice president, he was defeated but that had given him experience. Franklin D. Roosevelt was diagnosed of having Polio, but refused to admit it. With his wife’s help we was able to succeed in his political career and his health successfully. In 1928, he ran for governor of New York and was elected, he regained confidence which enabled him to run for President.