Hate crime and the deaf

Miss-Delectable

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Daily Vanguard - Hate crime and the deaf

Some forms of hate lead to war or murder, but hate can also lead to oppression and hegemony.

Carl N. Schroeder, president of the Oregon Association of the Deaf (OAD), gave a lecture last Wednesday called “Hate Crime and the Deaf.” Schroeder’s lecture examined how oppression impacts the Deaf community.

Schroeder moved from Holland to the United States at age 10, where he attended the Maryland School for the Deaf. Deafness has been common in his family since the 11th century.

“I grew up in a Deaf family, a vast Deaf family, and I never realized the world was full of people who hear through their ears until I was 5,” Schroeder said.

In the lecture, Schroeder said that public schools in California teach Deaf children orally—teaching speech and lip reading as opposed to sign language. Many members of the Deaf community, Schroeder said, oppose oralism, not only because they doubt its efficacy, but also because “the Deaf do have language and culture heritage” Schroeder says on the OAD Web site (www.Deaforegon.org).

In discussing the naturalness of signing, Schroeder referenced a study that revealed that many people find it difficult to speak without free movement of their hands. He also mentioned Italians as an example of notorious gesturers.

Schroeder suggested that many crimes against the Deaf begin at birth. According to Schroeder, after doctors diagnose a child as Deaf they tell parents about what is wrong with American Sign Language (ASL) and tend to encourage the use of cochlear implants, also a subject of contention in Deaf culture.

Schroeder recalled one child he taught who had a bad experience with a cochlear implant. He described the implant’s effect as “noise in his head” and, after becoming ill, had it removed.

Schroeder also noted that, while hearing mothers often embrace ASL when they learn that their child is Deaf, many fathers reject signing and consequently have limited interactions with their Deaf children.

Key to understanding Schroeder’s mission is a rejection of audism—a term he defines as “the belief that the ability to hear and speak is better than being Deaf”—and the belief that ASL is in any way less of a language than spoken languages.

Schroeder traces the suppression of sign languages to the International Congress on the Education of the Deaf held in Milan in 1880. The end result was government suppression of sign language. Deaf teachers of the Deaf were replaced with hearing teachers to instruct using oral methods.

To illustrate how the hearing have oppressed the Deaf through the suppression of ASL, Schroeder recounted how, at his first teaching job, a school official reported him for using sign language in the classroom. The school at which Schroeder taught was overtly oratory in its teaching and to get the job, Schroeder had portrayed himself as an oralist and supportive of the school’s goals.

According to Schroeder, another crime against the Deaf is the frequent placement of ASL in Special Education departments, which unfairly implies that the Deaf are learning disabled. PSU is in the process of moving ASL to the foreign languages and literatures department from the speech and hearing department.

“Denying the full status of ASL as a language inspires belittlement and hate crimes,” Schroeder wrote on the OAD Web site.

In an interview after the lecture, Schroeder said, “I want to empower people to discuss what hate crimes are and how they are generated.” He also wants people in the hearing community to recognize “that some of their actions are wrong and they have hurt Deaf people and Deaf children.”
 
Schroeder is not the only one. We, the Deafies, have been trying to explain over and over many times not to fix us so that we can be natural with natural sign language like ASL. If the people and family members hate having their children who are deaf and want to fix them to be like them like a robot. Good grief. I think that is what he meant about the hate crime and the deaf.

Of course we do not want to go on Social Security if we only find the job with accessing the accommodations like TTY or VRS plus using the computer for e-mail. Plus we really need ASL interpreters for our jobs, and other places like Doctors, Churches, Courts, get married in the chapel and other important places. CI is just for surgery that might hurt the deaf babies and early age children. There is always a risk. It is okay when they are older and can decide what they want to do with their life like having a CI or remain being Deaf.

But it is getting to be a tiring trying to let the hearing people know that we want to remain deaf and there are some deaf who would like to be hearing like them unless the parents brainwash them. The hearing parents and other Audists do not need to save them from their misery of being silence. That is up to us being used to or adapted to being deaf. We do not want to go oral-only environment. We still like to have ASL the best because it is visual, have a lot of expressions (facial and body langauge) and it is easy for us, Deafies, understand than lipreading. We want deaf people to be with other Deaf people too. We have a Deaf culture which is about us.

Many hearing parents do not understand us at all ever. They only look at us from the outside and not inside of us. They do not know nothing about us anyway. They should just leave us be the way we are.
 
look at the comments. He really got people all riled up, didn't he. But I knew it would. I noticed from mostly hearing people than deaf people.
 
look at the comments. He really got people all riled up, didn't he. But I knew it would. I noticed from mostly hearing people than deaf people.

Where can I find those comments in response to Carl Schroeder?
 
I often wondered why ASL was not taught as a language class at many schools. At my son's high school ASL I and ASL II are credit classes.
 
I often wondered why ASL was not taught as a language class at many schools. At my son's high school ASL I and ASL II are credit classes.

They should. School is suppose to be about education, not about molding kids to the point that only certain things can and cannot be taught.

I mean afterall,every time a new technology or science comes out, they teach it to the kids because it is educating. They could teach kids to use a pen and paper, but that would lose the who purpose of school if education was still at the basic level. Thank goodness they teach computers, or in my time typewriter (we hardly had a computer in our school, just a typewriter) , and such. Therefore, if kids want to learn ASL, let them.
 
Oral-only education did opprese me big time. I agree with Carl.
 
Carl Schroeder asserts that there's nothing wrong about being deaf, deaf life, American Sign Language, and deaf leisure as the pursuit of happiness.

 
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