Braille







 without borders the right to be blind without being disable



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ENGLISH:
Newsletter JUL 2011
Annual report 2010
Annual report 2009
Annual report 2008

Newsletter AUG 2008
Annual report 2007
FILM "BLINDSIGHT"
NOW ON DVD

Erik Weihenmayer

TIBET:
Medical massage clinic
Newsletter AUG 2007

Annual report 2006


PARTNERS

DEUTSCH
:

JAHRESBERICHT 2007

"DAS SIEBTE JAHR"

cover Das siebte Jahr





BOOK INFO

My paths leads to Tibet
by Sabriye Tenberken


Sabriye Tenberken & Paul Kronenberg interview

PROJECT IN TIBET  
- What/who is BWB
- Achieved goals
- VISITING HOURS
- Theatre play "What A Beautiful Sight"

Newsletters
- Newsletter May 2006 -
- Annual report 2005 -
 

- SEE CCTV9 TALKSHOW
- Interview NPR 2005 - 



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RADIO INTERVIEW 12 March 2008
http://whyy.org

NPR Boston

The World Radio Interview

THE NEW YORKER (July/28/2003)
The Mind's Eye, What the blind see.
by Oliver Sacks

In his last letter, Goethe wrote, "The Ancients said that the animals are taught through their organs; let me add to this, so are men, but they have the advantage of teaching their organs in return." He wrote this in 1832, a time when phrenology was at its height, and the brain was seen as a mosaic of "little organs" subserving everything from language to drawing ability to shyness.
Read more >


NEW YORK TIMES (Sept 2003)
Saturday Profile: A German Voyager's Bold Vision for Tibet's Blind
by Jim Yardley


LHASA, Tibet -- Upon arriving in Tibet, Sabriye Tenberken decided to tour the countryside,  not from the comfort of a car, but atop the hard saddle of a horse. It was a chancy decision, not only because the rugged Tibetan landscape can be unforgiving and treacherous, but also because Ms. Tenberken is blind.
Read more >


HONG KONG MORNING POST (October/13/2003)
A vision of hope

German Sabriye Tenberken lost her sight in her teens but never felt blindness was a handicap. Through her Braille Without Borders organisation she is helping others like her in Tibet think the same way, writes Tschang Chi-chu Blindness is sometimes compared to being in prison, the darkness acting as a barrier to the outside world.
Read more >


XINHUA NEWS AGENCY (October/30/2003)
German "Helen Keller" helps Tibetan blind children out of darkness.

LHASA, October 30 (CEIS) - For their work in setting up a Tibetan rehabilitation and training center for the blind, Sabriye Tenberken and Paul Kronenberg, a couple respectively from Germany and the Netherlands, are well known and respected by the people in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region.
Read more >