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Sri Lanka 2011 Tour Vision

26 Dec

Friends,

Many of you know that in 2006 and 2007, I lived and worked in Sri Lanka for nine magical, unforgettable months. I was a volunteer at Rohana Special School, a school primarily for deaf children in Matara on Sri Lanka’s southern coast. I wrote extensively about my experiences at my blog, Found In Ceylon (www.foundinceylon.com).

Even years later it’s difficult to overstate the impact that Sri Lanka made on my life. I worked hard—both by myself and with other volunteers—to empower the students, the teachers, and the overall Deaf community in Matara. We made sports uniforms, retrofitted the classrooms with whiteboards, published a dictionary, found jobs for graduates, set up sign language classes for residential staff, and implemented Deaf education training programs for teachers. Together we transformed the school into one of the best special schools in the country. My journey in Sri Lanka has made me who I am now, a Deaf kindergarten teacher at P.S. 347, an ASL-English bilingual school in New York City.

But my nine months in Sri Lanka weren’t just about the school. The country has a wealth of amazing ruins, temples, monuments, wildlife, beaches, forts, and jungles. The New York Times called Sri Lanka the #1 place to visit in 2010. Millions have visited the country; many have kept coming back. People say the country is imbued with an extraordinary aura, a spirit of luck, serendipity, and loving-kindness. I believe them, because I’ve seen and felt it.

And now it’s your turn to see Sri Lanka. Leading a tour to Sri Lanka for Deaf and signing adults has been one of my dreams, and I’m doing it. Next summer is your chance to visit this island. This recreational trip will be about sightseeing, journeying, and relaxing. Check out the amazing itinerary below—you’ll be experiencing the best Sri Lanka has to offer.

But no trip is complete without some measure of “giving back,” and as guests, you will plan and provide two short workshops at Rohana Special School focused on sign language and arts & crafts. We will also visit deaf associations and meet Deaf people working in various professions.

Arthur C. Clarke, Sri Lanka’s most famous expatriate, wrote, “The island is a small universe; it contains as many variations of culture, scenery and climate as some countries a dozen times its size.” What are you waiting for? Sign up now and get ready for an unforgettable experience—an intimate, all-signing group traveling through the Pearl of the Indian Ocean in July 2011.

Warmly,

Adam Stone

The Beginning of This Journey

14 Dec

I never explained how I first came to Sri Lanka. My journey started with an e-mail that I blew off for three months.

It was an e-mail from my mom titled “Fwd: Deaf & Blind Orphanage,” a forward from my parents’ good friends Jim and Julie Regan. They had written to their friends about an orphanage they had visited in Sri Lanka. “Jim and I visited the facility and were quite impressed…they are looking for volunteers who understand the deaf and blind.”

My mom asked me and my sister, “Can you think of anyone or an educational agency that would be interested in this project?” I don’t think she ever expected that I’d be that “anyone” who went over there.

But it was March 2006, six months before I hopped onto the plane for Asia, and I was still gainfully employed in my first full-time job as a consultant for a government contracting firm in Washington, D.C. “Consultant” is a rather broad term in D.C.-speak and I got to work on a lot of different projects as well as manage DeafDC.com.

Back to the e-mail. “Can you think of…an educational agency?” Eh. Yet another e-mail about some poor deaf school in a remote part of the world. Not really my problem, I thought. I’m a little busy right now. And off the edge of my browser window it went, buried under a torrent of more pressing, more current, more local e-mails.

Three months later at the end of June, I found myself on a quiet Sunday morning cleaning out my Gmail inbox. I remember it very clearly: lying on my back on my bed covered with that awesome striped blue and white Nautica comforter. Exposed brick walls all around me in my basement room at 427 16th Street SE. My knees were raised so I could stretch out my lower lumbar. My iBook G4 resting on my waist.

My mom’s e-mail comes up once again, and this time I read it more carefully. It’s actually a forward of a forward; the original composer is Nerissa Martin, a friend of Julie. “Anyone with skills re teaching deaf kids would be fantastic. Maybe the best thing would be to get them to email me.” And then in the middle of the e-mail is Nerissa’s address.

By then I’ve grown disillusioned with my D.C. life. My dreams–travel! see the world! do something outrageous!–were slipping away as I continued to define myself by a job that I no longer loved. I was weary of endless DPHHs and had recently decided that I didn’t want to go to law school anymore. What was ahead of me but yet more questions?

Even now, I’m not sure what drove me to clicking on Nerissa’s e-mail address and composing a new message.

June 25, 2006

Hi Nerissa,

My parents are close friends of Judy and Jim Regan…they passed along your e-mail a few months ago…I’m wondering if you’re still looking for volunteers to participate in the project…I can create a website…write often…supplement learning…enrich their education…I’d like to grab this opportunity to contribute in any way I can.

Thank you,
Adam

Adam, you sound great; please come. Uh, Nerissa, I don’t need to do an interview or fill out a form? Adam, nope, just come. Okay, Nerissa, I’ll be there September 19.

Mom and Dad, is it okay if I go to a war-torn island thousands of miles away and teach deaf children for free? Sure, Adam, follow your dreams.

Tonight, two years and seven months later, I’m in my room, having just wrapped up a webcam session with my dear friends Amila and Lakmal. I haven’t talked to them since my second trip there last June, and we catch up on the news. Amila’s now a full-fledged computer teacher and matron at Rohana Special School. I show them my hoodie jacket and a pomegranate fruit, and introduce them to my mom, who promptly asks both of them if they’re married. I wonder if my mom was Sri Lankan in a past life. They tell me that this week nine students are traveling to Tangalle to take the O/L exams.

After saying good-bye and closing the chat window, I consider that I’m in the middle of my first year of graduate school, studying to become a bona fide teacher of the Deaf two years after I taught my first English class. I now have dear friends on the other side of the world, just a phone call away, and a lifetime of photographs and experiences from that special island. Did all that happen with just one e-mail from a friend of my parents?

Earlier today, I watched my parents say good-bye to that friend, Jim Regan. He suddenly departed this world shortly after Thanksgiving, leaving us all behind to ask an anguished “Why?” At the memorial service, set in verdant surroundings that rivaled the Sri Lankan jungles, heartfelt stories were told about a gregarious man who touched countless lives. My father was the emcee; his old law partner Richard delivered the main eulogy.

Last week, I was communicating with Nerissa and David, typing out the details which they needed to know. I ask David if he recalls that the Regans were the reason I found out about them and Sri Lanka in the first place.

He responds, “I do remember that it was through Julie and Jim that we came to know you. It does make one reflect on how a life can leave such positive vibrations behind even if the life itself ends in tragedy.”

Vibrations…through an e-mail. Through a video chat. Through a handshake or a hug. Can entire lives be revealed and resolved through these vibrations?

Thank you, Jim and Julie, for everything–for the journey to Sri Lanka, and for the journey I’m now on.

“Deaf Can!” So Say The Rohana Special School Children!

27 Jun

During one lesson in the Deaf Studies class, I showed them a short video from California School for the Deaf’s Middle School PAH! Day celebration. The children were so inspired that they wanted to make a video themselves. I suggested the “Deaf Can!” theme and they ran with it. About half of the footage were filmed by the children themselves!

Watch the children of Rohana Special School proudly proclaim, “DEAF CAN!”


“Deaf Can!” So Says Rohana Special School! from Adam Stone on Vimeo.

The Video Dictionary Non-Project

8 Jun

I made some mention of a video sign language dictionary filming project in partnership with Ruhunu Sumaga Circle of the Deaf. I would like to update everyone and explain that this did not happen after all due to a succession of reasons. But the last reason is the best one of all: the Central Federation of the Deaf (CFD) is making one anyway to be completed in July or August! So I am looking forward to that; some funds will probably need to be raised to supply the school and pupils’ families with as many video dictionaries as possible.

Today is my last day in Sri Lanka but there are still several last-minute things to accomplish. Most notably is the “WE CAN!” celebration of sign language beginning in just two and a half hours. Mala will be filming it so you’ll get to watch a YouTube version soon!

Lunch is at 1:45, and I’ll leave school at 2:30. Then the van departs at 3:00. Mala, Lakmal, Naushan, and possibly a couple others will join for the long ride up (and they get to ride back south!). We’ll stop briefly in Hikkaduwa to get a couple of cool t-shirts with a graphic of a surfboard tied atop a three-wheeler. Sri Lanka, unfortunately, is lacking in cool t-shirts unlike other countries like India or Thailand, so this is quite an important mission for us. Next is a fine dining experience at Pizza Hut in Colombo. Lakmal requested this! Maybe he saw an advertisment somewhere. I’m happy to introduce my friends to the wonders of pizza! Then the airport. Apparently I can take two friends into the ticketing area with me, so I’ll do that and tell them all about what happens inside an airport.

Then the flight to Hong Kong with maybe a three-hour layover in Singapore, and then the world beyond Lanka’s shores.