NPR

A Mom Fights To Get An Education For Her Deaf Daughters

There were no schools for the deaf near her village in India. And she had to stand up to the bias against deafness — and the use of sign language.
Rima Prajapati with daughters (from left) Jhoti, Aarti and Sangeeta. Jhoti and Aarti were both born deaf. Rima moved her daughters from their village to Mumbai so they could attend a school for the deaf.

In a country with over 28 national languages, Jhoti Prajapati did not speak at all. Her family, who lived in an Indian village in Maharashtra, was worried. When the child turned 3, her mother Rima took her to a doctor and got an explanation for the silence: Jhoti was born deaf.

The diagnosis spurred Rima into action. For two years, she says, she worked diligently to acquire the disability certificate needed for Jhoti's admission to a school for the deaf. There are only 388 such schools in India, and none near her village. So at age 5, Jhoti moved with her mother to Mumbai.

That first year, however, Jhoti could not attend classes. The admissions cycle had closed by the time she received her certificate. Rima says Jhoti sometimes sat outside a school's gates, watching and hoping

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