Showing posts with label Storytelling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Storytelling. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

For Deaf Tennis Player, Sound Is No Barrier

VIDEO: New York Times - Lee Duck-hee, 18, of South Korea, is ranked 143rd in the world in a sport in which hearing the ball is considered crucial.



ASAN, South Korea -- To improve its chances in the boys’ team tennis event at the National Sports Festival here, Mapo High School in Seoul brought in a ringer from Jecheon, two hours southeast of the capital. His name was Lee Duck-hee, and he had first caught the coach’s eye when he was in elementary school.



Mapo High’s players pressed against the fence beside along the dusty hardcourts and chanted in support while Lee, 18, crushed forehand winners past his bespectacled opponent in the final. The 6-1, 6-1 win took little time - no surprise, as Lee is the best teenage player in South Korea, and a professional ranked 143rd in the world.



“Seeing the level of skill, power and returning is totally different than high school level,” said Jeong Yeong-sok, his doubles partner at the tournament.



Lee is exceptional among professionals, too. He is Deaf, and no Deaf player in the sport’s history has reached these heights. In tennis, simply seeing the ball is believed to be insufficient. Hearing the ball, top players say, enables faster reactions - a crucial advantage in a sport where powerful serves and groundstrokes mean that every tiny fraction of a second matters.



Wimbledon's Rob Walker takes a look at Duck Hee Lee. Video Credit: Wimbledon



“There are so many different spins in tennis, and I can hear a lot of them coming off someone’s racket because I know what they all sound like,” said Katie Mancebo, a college tennis coach and volunteer coach for the United States Deaf tennis team. “But a Deaf player doesn’t know that sound, so they have to focus more on what the other person is doing, how they’re making contact, and what the ball looks like as it’s coming over the net.”



Joo Hyun-sang, the tennis coach at Mapo High School, said he was skeptical of Lee’s potential at first.



“When I met him the first time, I had certain doubts that being deaf would prevent him from being a great player,” he said. “But I grew confident from watching him develop and improve. I was very confident he could do it.”



Though already the second-highest-ranked player of professionals 18 and under, Lee has not fully broken through. He has yet to play a main-draw match at an ATP tournament or a Grand Slam, though he reached the final of a Challenger event, the level below the ATP World Tour, for the first time in September in Taiwan, and has made two semifinals since... Read The Full Story - New York Times.

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Deaf Army Rebel In The Syrian Civil War

VIDEO [CC] - Deaf Jordanian in Syria fighting against Al-Assad. الصم الجيش الله اكبر - Deaf Army Allahu Akbar!



Unofficial translation: “Insha'Allah, I’m fine. I am in Syria because in the name of Allah in his honor because in Syria lot of life were lost. Many have recently been killed. We successfully to take ennemis positions. We have good relations with hearings in the fighting. We work very hard with efficiency since I killed some in the name of Allah.



To activate this feature, press the "CC" button.


Insha'Allah I’m still alive and as you see, I have a perfect weapon to watch the front. Before it was warmer but now it is a little quieter. Despite four victims were beheaded not far around. Inshallah that keep us alive and our judge.” Source



Syrian opposition - Syrian Arab Republic (opposition)

A number of armed groups have involved themselves in the ongoing Syrian Civil War - List of armed groups in the Syrian Civil War



Related:

One-Eyed Deaf Man Fights With The Syrian Army

Deaf Militants Releases ISIS Propaganda Video

ISIS Using Sign Language To Recruit Deaf Terrorists

Stories of Deaf Syrian Refugees in Germany

Why Deaf Refugees Need Sign Language ?

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

The Pigeonhole Man & The Deaf Community

VIDEO: English Subtitles - A documentary film "The Pigeonhole Man" - De Hokjesman, afl. De Doven.



Very interesting television documentary about the Dutch Deaf people. This episode of the Hokjesman moves in the Deaf community in Netherlands.



Many Deaf people he meets consider the word Deaf as an honorary title and so happy to see that it is written with a capital D. What is so cherished Deaf Culture exactly? And how do the Deaf on that group of people where they need to relate to it so often: the hearing? Watch this documentary to understand about being Deaf.





For those who want it in Dutch can go here:

http://www.vpro.nl/programmas/de-hokjesman/doven.html



Follow Hokjesman:

http://programma.vpro.nl/hokjesman/

https://facebook.com/hokjesman

https://twitter.com/hokjesman



Related Dutch Documentary:

CODA Trolls Deaf Mother

The Pigeonhole Man & The Deaf Community

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Dutch Boy Trolls Deaf Mother

VIDEO [CC] - Video clip of the Dutch documentary - A Dutch boy (Tristan) trolls his Deaf mother.



AMSTERDAM, DUTCH -- The documentary about a boy (Tristan) shows us the perks that come with having Deaf parents. "You Should Hear" is a documentary from Netherlands about Child of Deaf Adults, often known by the acronym "CODA", is a person who was raised by Deaf parents.



Ten year old Tristan’s family is a little different from the others. Both of his parents are Deaf but Tristan and his sister have a normal hearing.



Tristan’s father wants to become the coach of his son’s soccer team but everybody thinks it is impossible. Tristan finds him the best coach there is. He even plays in Dutch Deaf team.





Watch The Full Film: Dutch Documentary



Related Story:

The Pigeonhole Man & The Deaf Community



Related CODA: #CODA

Child of Deaf Parent - My Family Culture

CODA Pride - Documentary Film

CODA Brothers: Deaf Mother's Intuition

CODA - Growing Up With Deaf Parents

CODA Kambri Crews and Burn Down The Ground

CODA Nate Tao - American Idol Season 12

CODA Tried To Kill Deaf Parents In House Fire

Deaf Parents Voice With CODAs ?

Deaf Parents Struggle With Kids - Supernanny

Dutch Boy Trolls Deaf Mother

Kambri Crews: Songs in American Sign Language

Korean CODA Sings For Parents Goes Viral