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About The Book
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Defying everyones advice armed only with her rudimentary knowledge of Chinese and Tibetan589~ set out to do something about the appalling condition of the Tibetan blind who she learned had been abandoned by society and left to die. Traveling on horseback throughout the country she sought them out devised a Braille alphabet in Tibetan equipped her charges with canes for the first time and set up a school for the blind. Her efforts were crowned with such success that hundreds of young blind Tibetans instilled with a newfound pride and an education have now become self-supporting. A tale that will leave no reader unmoved it demonstrates anew the power of the positive spirit to overcome the most daunting odds. Author Biography:589~ was born in 1970 near Bonn. When she was two years old she was diagnosed with a retinal disease that caused her to go blind at the age of 13. She took up Tibetan studies sociology and philosophy and is currently running a school for the blind in Lhasa. In 2000 she received the Norgall Prize of the International Womens Club. Editorial Reviews When Tenberken whose battle with retinal disease left her blind at age 13 was in her 20s she studied Tibetan culture at the University of Bonn. Frustrated by the awkward character-recognition machinery she had to use to read Tibetan materials she devised a Tibetan braille alphabet so that once translated works could be directly readable by the blind. What followed seemed natural to her: shed go to Tibet and start a school to teach this braille to blind Tibetan children. Traveling on horseback over treacherous mountain passes sleeping in rat-infested huts and dealing with self-interested charitable bureaucracies Tenberken managed to keep her humor and courage. She succeeded in establishing a school and her organization Braille Without Borders continues the literacy mission in other countries. While stories of triumph over adversity are often co