A deaf woman has applied for 1,000 jobs in 18 months – and not landed a single one.

Kellie Wilson, from Middleton Tyas, North Yorkshire, believes she is being snubbed by would-be employers because of her disability.

Every job application she has made since the summer of 2017 has resulted in a series of rejections.

Now, she is so desperate that she is contemplating cochlear implants knowing that they may not even work.

Now, she is so desperate that she is contemplating cochlear implants knowing that they may not even work.

Further read at: www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/deaf-woman-applies-1000-jobs-13985129

IDS update – IDS still at risk of closure. Still no news for the funding. IDS will meet Govt on Monday to discuss. We still need your support by sending us letter of support by email at [email protected] or U can send us your ISL video to our Advocacy phone 0864401443 to say why you want to keep IDS Advocacy and Education Services open, why you like to use our service etc. We would be appreciated if you could send us letters or ISL videos by today and tomorrow as soon as possible. Thank you for your support #SaveIDS

https://vimeo.com/irishdeafsociety/review/314965044/cdd006665f

DEAF people in Cork have raised concerns about the possible closure of the Irish Deaf Society.

The Irish Deaf Society (IDS) is facing closure by the end of March if core funding is not secured.

A year on since the passing of the Irish Sign Language Act, the organisation that led the campaign for ISL recognition for more than 30 years has enough finances to last just the next two months.

Further read at: www.echolive.ie/corknews/Irish-Deaf-Society-has-only-enough-funds-to-stay-open-for-two-months-4e94dc1d-0aa3-442e-a64b-cdbde0e02166-ds

Hello, colleagues of Irish deaf,

I’m Álvaro De Ramón Murillo, from the accessible tourism NGO Native. We have been one of the 6 projects promoted by the United Nations (UN) and its One Planet Sustainable Tourism Program. We are conducting our search for information on how people with minor hearing loss, severe hearing loss or total hearing loss would like to travel.

That is why we ask you to disseminate to your members this brief survey we have done to help improve the response and solutions for a more adequate stay for the elderly or with some type of limitation when traveling around the world.

I leave the link to the annual magazine of the World Tourism Organization (United Nations) that dedicates the photo of the cover and page 38.
http://cf.cdn.unwto.org/sites/all/files/docpdf/20172018amagfinalwithcopyright.pdf

The link to the survey is the following: https://goo.gl/forms/NkN1kZFDArD1oMpg1

Read more »

Alabssi is deaf, and the character he played in the TV series, Black Summer, is deaf, too.
Read this article on unapeda website,please click on
Mustafa Alabssi’s incredible journey: Nexflix debut the latest feat for deaf Syrian refugee
UNAPEDA
UNAPEDA The French association of parents of deaf and hard of hearing children

RTÉ has agreed to broadcast in the full the signed version of the National Anthem before Sunday’s All-Ireland senior football final.

The on-pitch performance will be simulcast on RTÉ News Now and will also be reflected in RTÉ’s live pre-match coverage on RTÉ2, the state broadcaster said.

Further read at: www.irishexaminer.com/breakingnews/ireland/rte-to-broadcast-signed-anthem-in-full-865745.html

Every morning, County Antrim woman Wendy Newbronner’s first task is waking up her three children.

Unlike most parents though, she cannot shout into their rooms and tell them to get up. All her sons are deaf.

Mrs Newbronner had to pay to learn sign language after her first child was born, and now supports calls for a sign language act in Northern Ireland.

Scotland is the only part of the UK with an act, but legislation was passed in the Republic of Ireland last year.

The problem is, without a functioning Stormont assembly, legislation for sign language in Northern Ireland cannot be introduced.

Further read at: www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-43814029

“All things bright and beautiful, All creatures great and small…”

The classic hymn by Cecil Frances Alexander has endured the test of time, 200 years after her birth.

But few know of the part both great and small that the hymn played in transforming the education of deaf children in 19th century northern Ireland.

And fewer still know the tragedy that befell its writer’s dream.

Cecil Frances (Humphreys) Alexander and her sister Anne were very involved in local church activities in Strabane, including visits to local families.

It was on one of these visits they encountered a small deaf boy from a poor home.

“They were concerned about the barrenness of his existence and the blank future he faced and also the fact he was cut off from knowledge of the love of God and the Christian way of life,” said Brian Symington.

Further read at: www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-44018269