Wow, just had to share this inspiring story from gooo/” target=”_blank” rel=”noopener”>Punch with you guys, enjoy!
photographer checked the angles to ensure the ‘balance’ was good. She
then felt the buttons on the camera. Then, she looked into the lens.
Camera. Ready. Action!
routine of a photographer. Yes it is. But, what makes it extraordinary
is that Taiwo Lawal, the photographer, is totally blind.
to our correspondent and explained with a smile, “At the start, I kept
wondering how a blind person could learn photography. I thought it was
impossible. But the person who introduced me to it said it was possible.
So, I agreed to do it.”
mastering the art of photography, Lawal said she uses her sense of
hearing and touch to take pictures.
would go to where the person is, and feel his location; then I would
communicate with the person to sense the direction, as the sound of the
person tells me where he or she is.
nature, I first feel the object by touching it, then move back and take
the picture. When I touch a flower, for instance, I see the colours in
my mind. I can also tell if someone is happy or sad, because I know it
would be reflected in the picture.”
expressed doubt on the ability of a blind person to take photographs.
Immediately, I took my camera and demonstrated to him,”she said,
laughing.
learnt some few trades which included: bead-making and bag-making. These
took her four years.
her places. Recently, she won an award at the International Day of
Persons Living with Disabilites, which held in Port Harcourt, Rivers
State.
I’ve ever heard of. She’s an inspiration,” said Mrs. Bitebo Gogo,
Executive Director, Keeping It Real Foundation, which organised the
event.
continue with my work. I was happy meeting him, because I never thought I
would ever meet such important people. Now, I no longer feel bad
because I do not see. If I were not blind, maybe I wouldn’t have gotten
to where I am today,” Lawal said, adding that she wants to pursue a
career in photography.
has helped me forget my past sorrows, when some people didn’t
appreciate me and I endured a lot of insults,” she said.
Lawal. Lawal and her twin sister were born blind. And surviving had been
a major challenge.
raped by a man in a village in Ondo State. When the man later found out
that the twins were born blind, he absconded.
only panties. People treated us badly, and sometimes, they threw stones
at us. We were fed five-day-old food. We didn’t have any choice then but
to eat it. Now, I can laugh about it because it’s in the past.”
discovered Lawal in Oshodi, Lagos, after accepting her request to lead
her to the bus park, she is not only an inspiration, she has shown
courage in the face of adversity.
but she overcame all that. Our journey took 25 minutes instead of five
minutes. But, it has been one of the best 25 minutes of the last 25
years of my life. I saw a blind person who spoke like someone who could
see,” Effiong-Bright recollected.
only six years to live. Her twin sister is now married with two
children. “But I don’t want to marry a blind person,” Lawal said,
laughing.
Effiong-Bright and her photography instructor, Mr. Seun Akisanmi, Lawal
has hope for a bright future.
(Elophotos) where Lawal takes classes thrice weekly, described teaching
her as both challenging and interesting.
Training her is like two to three times longer than that of a sighted
person. But I’m also learning from her. I didn’t know how sharp her
other senses were, and she always looks happy. She’s a bright student,
and has learnt a lot. There are some settings we can’t teach her but she
can use auto-mode. She knows enough to do a mini-session for someone,
which is a good start, and she can take good pictures. If I would put
the cost of training so far, it would be about N500,000.”
photography, was Lawal’s specialty, called on individuals and
organisations to support her so she can fend for herself and her
seven-year-old daughter.
we need more support from individuals and corporate bodies. Also,
Lawal’s foster mother, Mrs. Yetunde Adu, has done so much for her and in
taking care of her daughter. With more financial support, more can be
done for her,” he said.
Pacelli School of the Blind in Primary Three because of lack of funds.
Now, she said she would like to go back to school, and also pursue a
career in photography.
in other developed parts of the world, Lawal is the first in Nigeria and
Africa, noted Effiong-Bright.
photographer based in California, US, who started photography only after
going completely blind in 1980, a year after Lawal was born. “I’m a
very visual person. I just can’t see. Sighted photographers always talk
about the difficulty of what they call ‘seeing.’ I tell them ‘If you
can’t see, it’s because your vision is getting in the way,’” said
Eckert, in a feature by TIME.
challenges faced by people living with disabilities in the country, said
Executive Director, Persons with Disabilities Action Network, Betram
Ubaka.
noted that with the right social infrastructure, people living with
disabilities can have a better life, as well as discover and harness
their potential, just like Lawal.
every other Nigerian. Unfortunately, we have a system and leadership in
the country that is very unserious about the development or care for
persons living with disabilities. More than 95 per cent of the 25.5
million Nigerians with disabilities in Nigeria are living in the rural
areas,” he said.
not done enough in meeting the United Nations Convention on the Rights
of Persons with Disabilities, which among other things, states that
“everyone is entitled to all the rights and freedoms set forth therein,
without distinction of any kind.”
should embrace people with disabilities and respect their human rights.
He said, “There is no pro-active response by the society to accommodate
their social needs, such as good education and health-care facilities,
even the road networks and public places don’t have structures to
accommodate them. There needs to be more care for such persons, and more
awareness that living with disability is not inability.”
