Chandigarh gets sensory park for visually impaired
February 15th, 2010 - 6:16 pm ICT by ANIBy Sunil Sharma
Chandigarh, Feb 15(ANI): ‘Institute for the Blind’ has created a sensory park with the help of Chandigarh administration and Municipal Corporation for the use of visually challenged persons.
This park has been built to provide a safe place for the visually impaired to walk around in a fresh environment, away from traffic and pollution.
The Municipal Corporation of Chandigarh has spent 23,000 dollars to create the 0.41-acre park replicated from similar parks in Osaka, Japan. Many aromatic herbs and medicinal plants like jasmine, lavlena, albertine, mint, neem, tulsi and bamboo have been planted here. While creating the park, the corporation invited visually impaired children and noted their feedback and suggestions. “If one sense organ is defective, the other senses are more developed. Here we train the visually impaired kids to use rest of their organs to the fullest. Technically it is called compensatory mechanism,” said Jagannath, headmaster of the Institute for the Blind.
“In sensory garden, these kids can explore, smell and feel new things. They can share ideas and interact with the citizens of the society. In this way they will learn new things and also develop healthy relations with the community,” he added. The credit for helping the blind children in Chandigarh also goes to the Society for the Care of the Blind. Ever since its inception in 1972, it has been actively engaged in the education, training and rehabilitation of blind children and working for the prevention of blindness. The society runs the Institute for the Blind in Chandigarh’s Sector 26 to impart educational and vocational training to the blind children. It teaches handloom weaving, typewriting, music and Basic Computer Literacy to make them self-reliant. “A visually impaired person doesn’t have sight but has perspective. We educate the children so that they easily overcome various problems and difficulties in their life. It is our endeavor to make visually impaired children physically fit, mentally alert and emotionally well balanced,” Jagannath said.
“We also ensure that their all round development takes place as we function as a recognized senior secondary school. Nothing is bigger than knowledge, no worship is greater than truth, no sorrow is bigger than night and no happiness is greater than sacrifice. Only education can make a man wise and strong,” he added. Be it creating a sensory park or providing easy talk computers, the mission is to integrate the visually impaired into the mainstream of social life. Outfits like the Institute for the Blind aim to inspire and inculcate in the children the zeal and zest for life by ensuring equal opportunities. (ANI)
- Chandigarh gets sensory park for visually impaired - Dec 04, 2009
- Sensory park for visually challenged in Chandigarh - Jan 30, 2010
- A special park for the visually impaired in Chandigarh - Jan 30, 2010
- Winds of change for physically challenged (Feature) - Mar 04, 2012
- National Museum opens door to visually-impaired - Feb 28, 2011
- A car rally with blind navigators (With Images) - Feb 05, 2012
- Braille watches launched for visually impaired women in Mumbai - Jul 31, 2009
- Retinal Microchip Restores Some Sight in Blind Patients - Nov 06, 2010
- Kerala to set up centres for disabled children - Dec 02, 2010
- Card with a message: Nidhi Kaila's mission for the blind - May 25, 2011
- Our brain can 'see' an object just by 'listening to it' - Oct 20, 2010
- News at fingertips - for the blind (With Image) - Jun 09, 2011
- How nerve cells unravel jumbled information - Nov 21, 2011
- Potential cure for vision diseases that lead to terminal blindness found - Aug 05, 2010
- Contempt notice issued to Delhi chief secretary, MCD chief - Sep 20, 2010
Tags: acre park, aromatic herbs, basic computer literacy, blind children, education training, endeavor, feedback and suggestions, headmaster, inception, jasmine, medicinal plants, organs, osaka japan, prevention of blindness, safe place, sense organ, sensory garden, tulsi, typewriting, vocational training