Ravi Dhaliwal
Batala, November 7
Batala’s Ramandeep Kaur, a simple housewife, is a success story all by herself. A decade ago when her hearing-impaired daughter was denied admission by private schools in the city, she vowed to learn the sign language.
Her motto was: “If you cannot teach children with disabilities, I will teach them.” She spent a long time trying to master the sign language. Finally, when she achieved proficiency, she opened a four-room institute, ‘Jaisman School for Deaf’, in her house. The school has 30 students, all differently abled. Ramandeep was a young mother in Australia when she got to know her daughter Jaisman was suffering from a deformity. “When doctors in Melbourne informed me about it, I was distraught. I and my husband decided to return to Batala. After some time, we opened the institute,” she says. Ramandeep says her daughter is currently preparing for Class X examination, and that her infirmity will in no way hamper her progress. She speaks highly of her proteacute;geacute;s, especially Mehakdeep Kaur, terming her as a “computer for all problems”.
She says her children match the ability of those studying in private schools and challenges anybody to test their skills.
Journey from Australia to Punjab
Ramandeep Kaur and her husband returned to Batala from Melbourne when told that their daughter Jaisman could not hear or speakDenied admission by schools, Kaur learned the sign language, opened own instituteThe institute at her residence now caters to 30 students