Cheerful signs: A still from 'Beyond Silence'
Vidyut Latay.
“When I see waves, I can’t hear the sound, all I can
see is the waves and the beauty of the waves,” gestures Prakash, miming
the movement of the waves. “I have no use for sound. God made me deaf
and I have accepted my deafness.”
Prakash, who aspires to become a film editor, is one of central characters in Vidyut Latay’s documentary Beyond Silence, “which acknowledges the existence of a living, competent and thinking deaf community that has the ability to communicate…”
The
idea for the film was triggered in 2008, when Vidyut was studying in
San Franscisco. “I saw an interpreter signing an address by the
President of the university. In all my years in India I had never ever
witnessed any scene like that! This experience was truly new and
intriguing for me. I was a bit disturbed and very inquisitive at the
same time to know more about why India had no acknowledgement of this
language…” she says.
The major part of the shooting
took place in Mumbai in 2008-09. Since the director wanted to record the
interviews amidst natural sound, the interpreting happened after the
entire film was shot. The film has been screened at several film
festivals, first as a 15-minute short, and now in its nearly
40-minutes-long form.
According to a statistic
furnished in the documentary, there are just 250 practising interpreters
for nearly 18 million deaf people. This lack is at the heart of the
breach between the hearing and deaf world, that keeps broadening through
the refusal to acknowledge sign language. The deaf are marginalised at
home by parents reluctant to learn their language, and because of
schools which insist on teaching through oral methods.
“Most
parents and teachers have not accepted that deaf children and students
need not be converted into hearing to lead a ‘normal’ life. The concept
of normalcy is created by the hearing world and everybody tries to look
at deafness through the lens of normalcy…” Vidyut says.
For
any kind of positive change in the attitudes toward deaf people,
awareness of sign language and sensitisation about deaf culture is
pivotal. Vidyut suggests a number of ways this can happen — through the
introduction of sign language studies in school curriculum, by making
knowledge of sign language mandatory for teachers in deaf schools and
through closed-captioning services in the Indian electronic media.
“Having
worked myself as an executive producer and director in Indian
television channels, this is one of the most important policy changes I
would like to see for hearing impaired people. Currently, the deaf
community is totally deprived of any information and entertainment
through the electronic media and they have an equal right to it like any
other hearing person,” she says.
The deaf are a
self-confident lot, and do not need pity. The film challenges the view
that deafness is a ‘handicap’. As one of the deaf characters in the
film, speaking to a hearing audience, says, “When you go to France you
are all happy, you are enjoying the sight seeing, you like the place,
but communication is going to be a little difficult there. Because they
speak a different language from you. It’s the same for us everywhere.”
Source : The Hindu , 12th April 2013
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