- Cultural Calendar
Deafblind Awareness Week is observed every year during the last week of June in honor of Helen Keller’s birthday on June 27, and was first commemorated by President Ronald Reagan. Helen lost her sight and hearing in early infancy, and she became a celebrated representative of the deafblind community and its potential during her lifetime. This year, Deafblind Awareness Week will be observed from June 22-28, 2025.
Born on June 27, 1880, in Tuscumbia, Alabama, Helen Keller became deaf and blind at 19 months, and lived in a shadowed, silent world in which communication was difficult and near-impossible for her until she was taught fingerspelling by teacher and companion Annie Sullivan in 1887. Keller’s brilliant mind quickly absorbed her new abilities and opportunities to communicate, and after mastering more communication methods, including Braille, speech, touch-lip lipreading, typing, and others, she went on to an outstanding educational career that included Radcliffe college and a lifetime of writing, lecturing, and more.
As a leading representative of the deafblind community, as well as its most famous advocate, Helen Keller was able to raise awareness of deafblindness, spotlight the contributions of the deafblind to their communities, and accentuate the importance of providing those with the condition every opportunity for learning, support, employment, and independence, as well as increased overall awareness.
Learn more at https://www.britannica.com/biography/Helen-Keller.