On Its 75th Year, Blind Relief Association Has Its Eye Towards The Future

Celebrating its 75th year of service, the Blind Relief Association stands at the brink of reinvention, expansion and more inclusion

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Celebrating its 75th year of service, the Blind Relief Association stands at the brink of reinvention, expansion and more inclusion

On a crisp spring morning, the sun streams through a single window in a small, whitewashed room, around 5 feet by 10. A column of wooden table-chair pews line one wall while the other has single-seater desks with benches. The happy chatter and good-natured ribbing of eight 12-year-old boys fills the air until a young woman in a navy salwar kameez and multi-coloured shawl speaks in a strong, practised voice. The boisterous bunch instantly simmer down and listen with rapt attention. Some gaze in her direction, though not at her face or eyes, others have their heads bent all the way to the side as they focus on her words. Class is in session and in this one, listening is key.

The students are among the 200 visually impaired children who live, study and play at the JPM Senior Secondary School, an institution run by Delhi’s Blind Relief Association (B.R.A), which celebrated its 75th anniversary in February this year.

Founded in 1944 in Lal Kuan, Badarpur, by activists Anusuya Basrurker, a medical practitioner and social worker, along with her husband, Umesh Anand Basrurker, an engineer and freedom fighter, the B.R.A began as the Industrial Home and School for the Blind. “The centre was intended to act as a place where non-sighted individuals could not only find dignity and acceptance, but also be educated and learn trade-skills in order to become contributing members of society. The first two students—14-year-old Dayaram and 15-year-old Mualidhar—joined in 1946,” says executive secretary Kailash Chandra Pande, 73, one of B.R.A’s longest-working members. As the institute grew, it received support and visits from a number of iconic Indians including Vinoba Bhave, Dr Rajendra Prasad, Dr Zakir Hussain, Thakkar Bapa, Jawaharlal Nehru, Edwina Mountbatten, V. V. Giri and Indira Gandhi. In fact, the centre’s foundation stone was laid by Helen Keller in 1955.

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