Google Doodle pays tribute to ‘Father of the Deaf’

Google Doodle pays tribute to ‘Father of the Deaf’

Google Doodle on Saturday honoured 'Father of the Deaf' Abbe Charles-Michel de l'Epee on his 306th birth anniversary. Epee founded the first public school for the deaf and even developed a visual method that became the blueprint for the teaching of the deaf.

Born in Versailles in 1712, l'Epee, was a French educator who is credited to have established the first public school for the deaf. A son of an architect, he studied theology and law before devoting his life in service for the poor. His journey to serve people with impaired hearing began when he tutored two deaf sisters who lived in the slums of Paris and communicated through their own sign language.

Later, challenging the misconception that people with impaired hearing were incapable of learning, he developed a visual method that eventually became the blueprint for teaching the deaf. In the coming days, Epee's method changed countless lives at a time when many deaf people were discriminated against.

In 1760, using the money acquired through inheritance, he established the Institution Nationale des Sourds-Muets de Paris, a school for the deaf that was open to all.

For his contribution to the society, according to Google blog post, "the French National Assembly recognised him as a 'Benefactor of Humanity' and asserted the rights of deaf people under France's Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen. His school went on to receive government funding and remains open to this day renamed as Institut National de Jeunes Sourds de Paris."

His school remains open till day and is known as Institut National de Jeunes Sourds de Paris.

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