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189th Birthday of José Álvares de Azevedo
Today’s Doodle celebrates the 189th birthday of José Álvares de Azevedo. He was titled the Patron of Education for the Blind and creator of the first school for the blind in Brazil. His birthday is also National Braille Day.
Azevedo was born on this day in 1834 in Rio de Janeiro. He was born blind and was known to be extremely intelligent and endlessly curious as a child — he investigated the world around him through touch. His family sent him to the Royal Institute of Blind Young People in Paris, the only school specialized in education for the blind, from age 10 to 16. Azevedo attended the school at a time when it was experimenting with the newly-introduced braille writing system.
He returned to Brazil in 1850 inspired by two goals: to advocate for the social inclusion of blind people in his country, and to create a school much like the one he studied at in Paris. Azevedo gave lectures about the ease and importance of educating the blind wherever he could, from family homes to the Imperial Court. He also taught his fellow blind Brazilians how to read and write in braille.
One of his students was the daughter of the Imperial Court’s physician. The doctor, impressed by his daughter’s development, organized an audience with the Brazilian emperor. Azevedo gave a moving presentation and showed what a visually-disabled person could achieve.
He was granted the resources to open the country’s first school for the blind, the Imperial Instituto dos Meninos Cegos (or the Imperial Institute of Blind Children). Today, the school continues its education program as the Instituto Benjamin Constant, and has expanded its offerings to include physical education, acting classes, self-care and daily living guidance, and more.
Happy birthday, José Álvares de Azevedo!and as always have a chilled day from the viking
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