English, asked by jeny9882, 10 months ago

Role of Alexander Graham Bell in helens life for ten marks



Answers

Answered by fruitwargi
2
hey mate here is your answer dear..

Helen Keller's parents sought help from Dr. Alexander Graham Bell, who was famous for inventing the telephone.  He had family members who were deaf, so he had sympathy for Helen's plight.  In her autobiography, Helen described him as being full of "tenderness and sympathy" toward her.  When her parents took Helen to see him, she was a little girl.  She recalled sitting on his knee as he let her play with his watch.  Dr. Bell even "understood [her] signs, and [she] knew it and loved him at once."  Dr. Bell was patient and understanding with Helen in a time when not everyone was.
Helen's parents did not know what to do about their daughter.  They
wanted her to be educated and helped.  Dr. Bell suggested that they
contact Mr. Anagnos of the Perkins Institution, which was a Boston
school for the blind.  It was through Mr. Anagnos that Helen's teacher,
Annie Sullivan, came to help Helen learn to communicate.  Helen noted
that at the time of their visit to Dr. Bell, she could not have
"dream[ed] that that interview would be the door through which [she]
should pass from darkness into light, from isolation to friendship,
companionship, knowledge, love."   

When Helen was older, Dr. Bell showed her around the World's Fair.
She also visited his home on Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia.  He was a
dear friend to Helen.  He was a man who "[made] every subject he
touche[d] interesting."  Though he was an important and famous person,
he made time for Helen and was sympathetic to her.  This showed that he
was patient and understanding, as well as caring.  He was a loyal
friend.

Alexander Graham Bell was a person of great wisdom and kindness. He understood Helen's likes and dislikes and stayed by her side in all tough situations. Bell advised Helen's parents to send her to attend speech classes at the Horace Mann School for the Deaf in Boston. And his advice had definitely given the fruit of a strong base to Helen in her career. Again it was on Dr.Bell's advice that Helen's father wrote Mr.Anagnos  and found Miss Anne Sullivan, a dedicated, understanding and caring teacher, to teach Helen. One of the most memorable times of Helen's life has always been the World Fair. Helen had learnt many things in this fair, thanks to Dr.Bell. He patiently taught the working of every single exhibit and helped in developing Helen's interest towards machines and technology. This was especially in the case of him explaining the way in which diamonds are mined to Helen.  Helen notes that Dr.Bell was a humorous person and a poet with an unlimited love for children, especially for the deaf. No wonder Helen has dedicated her book to Dr.Alexander Graham Bell. The dedication reads, "TO ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL; Who has taught the deaf to speak and enabled the listening ear to hear speech from the Atlantic to the Rockies, I DEDICATE This Story of My Life.
Answered by Aanya599
2

When Helen Keller remembered the first time she met her future benefactor Alexander Graham Bell as a child, she wrote that she felt he understood her and she "loved him at once." Today, on Bell's birthday, here's a look at the enduring friendship between the two historical greats.

Eclipsed by his fame as inventor of the telephone, phonograph, metal detector, and early forms of the hydrofoil (among other machines) is the extensive work that Alexander Graham Bell did with the deaf throughout his life. Indeed, it is both his personal family history and his interest in and study of voice and speech that would directly lead him to his most famous accomplishments. And despite the world-changing, historical significance of his contributions as an inventor, it was this work with the deaf that, later in life, Bell himself would describe as “more pleasing to me than even recognition of my work with the telephone.”

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