[Nyagdu] here is the guide dog story from Israel
Cheryl Echevarria
cherylandmaxx at hotmail.com
Fri Feb 4 15:37:01 UTC 2011
Eyes to the World
An Eye Opening Israeli Program
By Debbie Shapiro
Sunday morning I was up early to catch the number 110 bus to Modiin to meet
Lisa Baron Haet, International Liaison of IGCB, Israel Guide Dog Center for
the Blind. From the bus stop Ms. Baron Haet drove me in her bright yellow
car to the IGCB campus, located some twenty minutes south of Tel Aviv. I had
seen these amazing animals at work, leading blind people through the
treacherous Jerusalem streets, where cars are often parked smack in the
middle of the sidewalk and piles of building material and low-hanging trees
make pedestrian navigation a real challenge even for those fully sighted,
but I only recently found out that these dogs are now being bred and trained
not far from my home.
In the last ten years, IGDCB has given hundreds of blind Israelis the gift
of independence. When Guy Simchi became blind at the age of 33, he felt the
outside world close before him. "The fear and despair was so powerful, I
just wanted to go to bed and stay there for the rest of my life." He hated
using the cane. "Everywhere I walked, I was accompanied by the noise of its
tap-tapping on the ground. Once in a while, I would inadvertently hit the
legs of people passing by and often bumped into things- electric poles,
trees, people. I felt like a failure."
All that changed January, 2007 when Simchi was paired with Turner, a black
Lab. "Today, Simchi and Turner in practically inseparable. The dog
accompanies him when he walks his son to preschool and even joins him while
he counsels clients in his position as a psychiatric social worker. For
Simchi, his dog, Turner, has "lit up the darkness for me."
IGDCB is the brainchild of Noach Braun. Braun, a former kibbutznik, got his
first experience working with dogs while serving in the Israeli Defense
Force. Upon completing his service, he decided to become a guide dog
trainer, as it would combine his love of animals with his desire to help his
fellow Israelis. He took his initial two years of training in the Guide Dog
Mobility Instructor Training Program at Pilot Dogs, Columbus, Ohio, and then
continued his studies in England. In 1991, Braun returned home to open the
first guide dog school in Israel. Meanwhile, his wife, Orna, studied a dog
breeding, which, in today's high-tech world involves genetic research to
produce intelligent and resilient animals.
IGDCB's first graduating pair was Chaim Tzur, a concert violinist from
Jerusalem with Tillie, a Labrador retriever that was given as a puppy to
Noach by the guide dog school in London. Tzur lived together with Braun and
his family while receiving his instruction and training. Since then, Braun,
together with his wife and twenty-two staff members, have graduated three
hundred and thirty-seven partnerships.
@A Visit to the Center
Pulling up into the parking lot just outside the center, I have visions of
huge German shepherds jumping on me while trying to lick my face, and pray
that I don't faint on the spot. But although I see many people walking
around and pass an obstacle course designed to train dogs to navigate
difficult terrain, I don't encounter any dogs, nor do I hear barking
(whew!).
As we walk up to Ms. Baron Haet's second-floor office, she says, "I got
involved with the Center when I fostered one of their puppies. When puppies
are about two months old they're sent to foster families that teach them the
skills they will need to begin their training program. The foster families
get them used to being around people and introduce them to a variety of new
situations, such as construction sites, busy highways and crowded shopping
malls. We train them not to beg at the table or chase cats, and to obey
basic commands such as 'sit' or 'come.' After I started working here, I
would bring my puppie, Angie, to work with me" - she points to an empty spot
next to the wall - "that was where he would stay while I worked. After
devoting hours to walking him and taking care of his needs, when he was one
year old, we returned him to the Center, where he started the intensive five
month training course to become a Guide Dog."
Angie was one of the 40% that do not pass the Guide Dog Training Course.
Although itsucceeded in navigating the obstacle courses and obeying the
trainer, it was slightly hyperactive and did not have the patience necessary
to guide a blind person. Instead, Angie is living with a blind child and his
family, to acclimate the child to having a dog in the house so that it will
be easier for him to get used to working with a guide dog when he get older.
Sometimes dogs that don't pass the test are given to autistic children to
help them learn to communicate with the world around him.
Ms. Baron Haet introduces me to some of the staff. Many of them have also
adopted puppies, and their dogs come with them to the office. I am amazed
that the animals remain quietly on their mats. But the moment Ms. Baron Haet
starts petting a large white Labrador, the animal grabs a toy and brings it
over to us, hoping that we'll play with him.
In the last office, I meet Yitzchak Ben Dovid, IGDCB's Community and
Corporate Public Relations Director, and a Guide Dog user since 1994. While
Yitzchak is busy answering emails and responding to telephone calls, his
Guide Dog is off duty and free to roam the halls or sniff the flowers. But
the moment Yitzchak harnesses him with the special Guide Dog harness, it has
one mission - to guide its partner and lead him away from danger.
In the hallway, Ms. Baron Haet introduces me to Sagit Kirson, IGDCB's
Volunteer Coordinator, who's training a group of volunteers to work with the
clients. I notice that the volunteers are carrying blindfolds. "As part of
their sensitivity training, they're going to experience for a short time
some of the challenges of being blind, especially navigating new terrain,"
Ms. Kirson explains.
It takes an entire month of intensive one-on-one work with a trainer for a
blind person and a dog to become a genuine team. The students spend three
weeks working with a trainer at the center, and an additional week of
training at home, where they learn to navigate the specific challenges of
their own neighborhood. "At first, most of our clients find it extremely
difficult -- even traumatic -- to leave their familiar surroundings and live
at the Center. At home, they know where everything is and are able to get
around easily. But here, everything is new and different and it's a real
challenge for them to learn to get around."
As we walk through the Center, Ms. Baron Haet points out that everything in
the building is designed to make it easier for people with limited vision to
find their way around. There is a wide yellow strip running down the center
of each hallway and path, and bathroom fixtures are all bright yellow.
"Yellow is the last color that blind people lose the ability to see," Ms.
Baron Haet explains, "so some of our legally blind clients with residual
vision are able to discern it." The flooring in front of the stairs and
outer doors is also yellow, and include raised bumps to warn the clients to
be careful of the steps ahead. In contrast, the flooring adjacent to the
walls is black and roughly textured to prevent the clients from bumping into
them. There is a large tactile model of the entire campus prominently
displayed near the front entrance. Its removable roof allows the students to
get a hands-on feel of the building layout, and, when pushed, numerous
buttons provide audio explanations of every detail. For a split second, I
close my eyes and imagine what it must be like to "feel" my way around the
world.
Before leaving the main building to meet the dogs, Ms. Baron Haet takes me
to the dormitory. In addition to the spacious bedrooms, there are two dog
grooming rooms, where the clients are taught to care for their dogs. "Many
of our clients live alone, so train them how to use their sense of smell and
touch to detect any abnormality in their dog, such as a runny nose or cut
paws. Since we remain responsible for the dogs' veterinary care, if there's
any problem that the client can't cope with, we send one of our trainers to
take care of it, and return the dog to the client in top condition."
@With the Trainers
Outside, several trainers are working with the dogs. I watch, fascinated, as
one trainer holds a piece of hot, aromatic sausage in front of the dog's
nose, then flips it in the air and shakes it up and down to entice him to
eat, while the dog's main trainer quietly tells him not to. "We're teaching
the dog to conquer his yetzer hara, which in a dog is its instinct," the
trainer laughs. "That's because when a dog is in its harness, 'at work,' no
matter how strong the desire or pressing the need, the animal's energies
must be channeled into serving its partner." After all, a dog going off to
the side to smell the flowers will drag his partner with him.
"We use this tiny apparatus, called a clicker, to train the animals." Ms.
Baron Haet points to the tiny piece of plastic in the trainer's hand. "When
pressed, it makes a clicking noise. At first, when the trainer clicks, he
simultaneously gives the dog a tiny treat, so that the dog associates the
clicking sound with a treat. Then the click itself becomes positive
reinforcement, and the treats are given only occasionally. Eventually, the
behavior is so ingrained that the dog doesn't need the positive
reinforcement to behave as trained."
After watching the dogs navigate a seesaw and climb stairs, Ms. Baron Haet
shows me the sensory garden, dominated by a raised fishpond. Using the same
method of positive reinforcement that is used to train the dogs, the
trainers have trained the fish to enjoy being stroked. For many blind
people, this is their first opportunity to actually 'see' a fish."
NOTE TO GRAPHIC ARTIST: PICTURE OF HAND IN WATER, WITH FISH SUCKING FINGER
@Meet Yariv Melamed
Ms. Baron Haet introduced me to Yariv Melamed, an ex-kibbutznik who began
his career as an apprentice in the Center, and later received a scholarship
to spend a year in Melbourne studying the clicker method of training Guide
Dogs. When asked what he loves about his job, he replied, "It's wonderful to
help people open a new page in their lives. I've had clients break into
tears of joy after successfully navigating the obstacle course. With their
new-found independence, they regain their sense of self-respect and join the
world around them. After a month of working together on a daily basis,
facing and overcoming fears and limitations, I develop a deep, personal
relationship with my clients. Although I don't always manage to get to all
of their simchos, all the trainers make annual home visits to iron out any
problems, and of course, we're always there if other issues arise."
@From Astro to Zorbo
Visiting the kennels, I learn that the dogs are named according to their
litter - with the names beginning with the same letter of the alphabet. So
Jingle, Jupiter and Janglo all have the same genetic makeup, which makes it
easier to keep track of their behavior, information that is used to decide
the genetic makeup of future litters. "We never give the dogs typical Hebrew
names," Ms. Baron Haet explains. "After all, the chances are small that
someone in a crowded mall will call out 'Hey, Jupiter.'"
Mother dogs with their newborn litters are kept in a separate area, a canine
kimpaturin heim replete with soothing music, lots of stuffed pillows, toys
and extra-nutritious meals. The pups remain with their mother for the first
two months of their lives. Then they are sent to their adoptive families,
which lavish them with love and attention and prepare them for the rigorous
five-month Guide Dog training course.
**********
Ever since Hashem commanded the First Man to "rule over the fish of the sea
and over the fowl of the sky and over all the beasts that tread upon the
earth" (Bereishis 1:28), man has trained animals to serve him. Yaakov Avinu
kept a herd of between 600,000 to 1,200,000 dogs to tend his sheep (Bereshis
Rabba, Vayetezei, parsha 73). Dovid Hamelech raised dogs, presumably as
watchdogs (Rashi, Shmuel II, 3:8). Today, dogs are trained to detect bedbugs
and drugs, track down people, warn an epileptic of an impending fit,
determine sounds for a deaf person and open up new horizons for the blind.
TEXT BOX
Blind Etiquette
Never pet or otherwise distract a Guide Dog while it is wearing the harness.
It is not a pet. Distracting a Guide Dog while it is working can endanger
the blind person's life.
If the Guide Dog is not wearing its harness, ask permission before petting
it or playing with it.
Never offer food or drink to a Guide Dog. Its owner carefully monitors the
dog's food and liquid intake so that he will know when to allow the dog to
relieve itself.
Never grab or steer a person while his Guide Dog is guiding him, or attempt
to hold the dog's harness.
In the Hebrew-speaking Chareidi community, Ariella Savir is a household
word. A blind mother of eight - including an autistic son - she's produced
dozens of popular children's tapes and CDs. She appears regularly to
all-women audiences from Ofakim to Tsfas, where she weaves songs and stories
as she talks about the many challenges facing her as a visually impaired
woman living a normal life.
Since receiving a Guide Dog three months ago, Ariella has been appearing on
stage with her dog, Zorba, who sits patiently at her side waiting for her to
finish so that he can guide her backstage.
Ariella graciously offered to tell Hamodia how her Guide Dog has enriched
her life.
"My husband was always there to help me and guide me. But when he suffered a
minor heart attack, I suddenly realized that I must have my independence,
that I can't be completely dependent on him for everything. Getting a Guide
Dog was like being released from a golden prison. Yes, I had everything I
wanted, and everyone was more than happy to help me, but now I have wings to
fly solo. Every morning, I go for a walk and meet my friends. Sometimes,
later on in the day I walk to the post office, or do some shopping. Zorbo is
my key to the wonderful world around me."
The biggest compliment you can pay me is to recommend my services!
Cheryl Echevarria
Independent Travel Consultant
C10-10646
http://www.Echevarriatravel.com
1-866-580-5574 or 631-456-5394
Reservations at echevarriatravel.com
Affiliated as an Independent Contractor with Montrose Travel CST-1018299-10
Affiliated as an Independent Contractor with Absolute Cruise and Travel Inc.
More information about the NYAGDU
mailing list