CBSE BOARD X, asked by mrauspicious13, 11 months ago

Helen's life was filled with both turbulence and triumph. explain.

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Answers

Answered by snigdha1604
1
hey if your talki g about Helen Keller, yes her life was filled with both turbulence and triumph , turbululence wise she deaf , could not hear and blind , it was really difficult for to communicate , society didn't accept her equally, but yes triumph she did achieve as she found recognition with her determination for finding place and to fight against disable people's equality


hope this helps friend
Answered by tanvimanvi222
1

For the first 18 months of her life, Helen Keller was a normal infant who cooed and cried, learned to recognize the voices of her father and mother and took joy in looking at their faces and at objects about her home. "Then," as she recalled later, "came the illness which closed my eyes and ears and plunged me into the unconsciousness of a newborn baby."

The illness, perhaps scarlet fever, vanished as quickly as it struck, but it erased not only the child's vision and hearing but also, as a result, her powers of articulate speech.

Her life thereafter, as a girl and as a woman, became a triumph over crushing adversity and shattering affliction. In time, Miss Keller learned to circumvent her blindness, deafness and mutness; she could "see" and "hear" with exceptional acuity; she even learned to talk passably and to dance in time to a fox trot or a waltz. Her remarkable mind unfolded, and she was in and of the world, a full and happy participant in life.

What set Miss Keller apart was that no similarly afflicted person before had done more than acquire the simplest skills.

But she was graduated from Radcliffe; she became an artful and subtle writer; she led a vigorous life; she developed into a crusading humanitarian who espoused Socialism; and she energized movements that revolutionized help for the blind and the deaf.

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