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The Importance Of Communication Among Deaf Americans

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Picture this, you are born Deaf and only communicate through American Sign Language (ASL) and end up in an emergency alone one day. You attempt to ask and receive the assistance you need but the other person cannot communicate or understand ASL. There is now a struggle on both ends to understand each other and communicate. With no interpreter to help, they decide to hand you a pen and paper and have you write everything down. You feel a sense of frustration; this is not how you want to communicate, you wish to be able to have a conversation with them. Why do you feel misunderstood? How can they properly help you if I cannot thoroughly communicate what is wrong? Will they be able to help in the way I need to be? These are the questions …show more content…

Deaf people’s rights are frequently and easily stripped away daily. Every day, deaf individuals attempting to interact with hearing authorities, emergency responders, or organizations are denied basic access to communication to the point in some situations where their lives are put into jeopardy. Worst cases where deaf people die after the hospital denies a critical medical diagnosis or some even resulting in deaf Americans wrongfully arrested after calling 911 for help. Even instances where ambitious students are denied access to medical school because the institution does not feel like fulfilling their legal obligation to provide an interpreter. Living in the ‘Land of the Free’, the deaf citizens of this country continue to be exploited by a disturbing lack of equal …show more content…

Deaf individuals are not asking for special treatment, they only want access to the same opportunities and right that all Americans should have. But when will the oppression stop? When will our society realize that deaf people are capable of everything hearing people can do except hear? There are more than half a million people in the United States who rely on American Sign Language to communicate, and it is 2015! Deaf patients in hospitals, deaf children in schools, and deaf citizens all over deserve equal opportunity.
The importance of cultural capability is becoming more popular in our society as civil rights advocacy invades the mainstream. In the fight for social justice, do not leave the Deaf community behind; treat their rights as important as anyone else. We are working towards solutions everyday and we can accomplish that with the involvement of as many organizations, businesses, and people around the country. Spread the word, make your friends, family, and peers aware so they can join you in making a change too. The more social we get the quicker the Deaf community can received the rights they

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