BAMAKO, Mali (AP) 鈥 Amadou Ndiaye meticulously ran his fingers across bumps in a piece of paper, making sense of the world he can no longer see.
Two hundred years have passed since the invention of braille, the tactile writing system that has transformed the lives of many by offering a path to literacy and independence.
鈥淏raille helped me live my life," said Ndiaye, a social worker in who lost his eyesight as a child. 鈥淏efore, people asked themselves the question: Here is someone who can鈥檛 see, how will he make it? How will he integrate into society?鈥
The West African country, with a population of over 20 million people, has long struggled to integrate blind and partially sighted people. According to eye care charity Sightsavers, around 170,000 people in Mali are thought to be blind.
The 47-year-old Ndiaye was fortunate to attend the institute for the blind in Mali, where he learned to write in braille, and told himself: 鈥淩eally, everything that others do, I can do too.鈥 He later attended university.
He said braille has allowed him to develop his main passion, playing the guitar, which also emphasizes the importance of touch.
鈥淓ach pressure on the strings, each movement of the finger on the neck, becomes a living note, loaded with meaning," Ndiaye said.
The guitar is an integral part of Mali's griot tradition, the cultural practice of storytelling through music. Musicians adapted the guitar to emulate the sounds of traditional string instruments like the kora. Local artists such as Ali Farka Tour茅 have fused Malian melodies with elements of the blues, creating a soulful, hypnotic sound that has gained international acclaim.
Iconic Malian musical duo Amadou and Mariam awakened Ndiaye's passion for the instrument when he was a boy.
鈥淥ne day, near a photography studio, I heard their music resonating through the window, which pushed me to discover this universe,鈥 he said.
Known as 鈥渢he blind couple from Mali," the duo of Amadou Bagayoko, who lost his vision at age 16, and Mariam Doumbia, who became blind at age 5 as a consequence of untreated measles, rose to international fame in the 1990s with their fusion of traditional Malian music, rock, and blues.
The couple met at Mali's institute for the blind, where Doumbia was studying braille and teaching classes in dance and music.
At such places, braille has allowed students to overcome educational barriers such as taking longer to learn how to read and write. They can then take the same exams as anyone else, which allows them to seek employment, said Ali Moustapha Dicko, who teaches at the institute for the blind in the capital, Bamako.
Dicko is also blind. Using a special typewriter, he can create texts in braille for his students. But he says his students are still at a disadvantage.
鈥淲e have a crisis of teaching materials,鈥 Dicko said. He has one reading book in braille for his entire class of dozens of students.
But with the development of new technologies, some blind and partially sighted people hope that educational barriers will continue to fall.
鈥淭here is software, there are telephones that speak, so there are many things that are vocal,鈥 said Bagayoko of the musical duo. 鈥淭his allows us to move forward.鈥
But Moussa Mbengue, the Senegal-based program officer for inclusive education at Sightsavers, said such advances still don't make the leap that braille did two centuries ago.
"It cannot replace braille. On the contrary, for me, technology complements braille,鈥 he said.
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