[Faith-talk] Blind people and their legal representation in thesociety.

Paul oilofgladness47 at gmail.com
Wed Jul 23 00:05:15 UTC 2014


Mostafa, have you and/or your colleagues there in Egypt ever thought of 
forming a coalition with other disabled people-groups? I would hope that, if 
you would do that, that such endeavors would make your cases stronger.  I 
realize that some groups may fall "between the cracks" in such situations, 
but here in the United States The American Council of the Blind has done 
this with very positive results for all disabled people-groups represented. 
Anyway just a suggestion from Paul.
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Mostafa via Faith-talk" <faith-talk at nfbnet.org>
To: <Undisclosed-Recipient:;>
Sent: Tuesday, July 22, 2014 4:07 PM
Subject: [Faith-talk] Blind people and their legal representation in 
thesociety.


>
>
>
>
>
> Hello.
>
> Are you frustrated being made to feel marginalized?
>
> Are you feeling ripped off, stuck in a corner and misapprehended?
>
>  Why you do not have a genuine representation in the society?
>
> In giving respect to your incredible credentials, why are you being 
> treated as a piece of wood?
>
> Most of the time, we as blind people expend much of our criticism focused 
> on reprobating the skeptic attitude of the society.
>
> We basically give it much attention, and then we get no  wellfare out of 
> that.
>
> Why we want to plead for their aid whilst we quite recognize that they 
> even cannot represent us?
>
> When scrutinizing  blind people social crisis, the conversation leans 
> somehow towards a sort of emotional influence.
>
> Well, that is not my interest nor the purpose of posting this.
>
> I am here to basically wage my strident repudiation against charity based 
> organizations, which are
> miserably manipulating our issue.
>
> We are not soliciting for financial support, but unfortunately, our 
> charity based organizations are constantly chasing for this material 
> privilege  on our behalf, until we looked like money mendicants to the 
> public arena.
>
> I recognize it is a rough thing to admit but, it basically complys to the 
> truth.
>
> I will particularly restrict my strident criticism to the current 
> situation of blind people in Egypt.
>
> I will suggest what I think of what should have been implemented after the 
> revolution, in order to significantly improve the situation of blind 
> people in Egypt, and to thoroughly rehabilitate them about their rights 
> from the legal perspective.
>
> Blind people in Egypt should have sought for establishing a legal 
> committee, and this committee is faithfully obliged to attain the 
> following.
>
>   1; • To officially represent blind people in the parliament.
>
> 2; •To help blind people raising awareness and comprehensive advocacy 
> about their legal rights, and to increasingly qualify eligible proponents 
> to speak up for blind people legal rights in even the supreme court if 
> that is necessary.
>
>    3; • To broadly dispense its legal exertion into the maximum strength, 
> to unfeignedly ensure that blind people are being recruited based on their 
> qualifications, and to critically seek for  legally confronting any 
> discrimination from employers or business owners.
>
>   I comprehend I am being enormously theoretical but, it is the only 
> respectful manner for us to have actual representation and licit presence 
> in the society.
>
> Otherwise, we will just talk and nothing will change.
>
> Thank you and blessed last ten days of Ramadan for those who share.
>
> Mostafa.
>
>
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