Politics, Economics, and Social Issues
English edition  
Nov  2002
214 pp.
36 color photographs 
Hardbound
15X23 cm
$24.50
LE 100.00
ISBN
978 977 424 693 7

For sale worldwide
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Silent No More
Special Needs People in Egypt
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Lesley Lababidi
In collaboration with by Nadia El Arabi
Foreword by H.E. Mrs. Suzanne Mubarak

Egypt’s groundbreaking disability programs


Disability knows no boundaries of ethnicity, religion, gender, or social background. Silent No More highlights the many developments that have taken place, especially during the past decade, in social perceptions of disability and disabled persons in Egypt and in the services that enhance their quality of life. The survey begins with a short overview of Egypt’s prominent role in providing medical care for the disabled from the Middle Ages to the present, and looks at how Egypt has today become the front runner in the Arab world in developing educational programs, services, and support for the mentally and physically disabled. Drawing on extensive interviews, Lesley Lababidi charts the changes of the present era by letting the disabled and their families, teachers and therapists, directors of government schools, and leaders in nongovernmental organizations speak for themselves. Their stories tell alternately of frustration, commitment, anger, progress, and courage. Most importantly, each person has a message that speaks to the future and the challenges that face Egyptians.

 

To visit the Lesley Lababidi's blog, click here.


Lesley Lababidi received her B.S. in Recreation from the University of Colorado at Boulder. She is the founder and sponsor of Middle East North Africa Youth Leadership Initiative, and is the author of Cairo: The Family Guide (AUC Press, 2001) and Paddle Your Own Canoe: An American Woman’s Passage into Nigeria.             Nadia El-Arabi, researcher and consultant on this book, is a graduate of the University of Helwan. Currently, she is working on her master’s degree at Ain Shams University in the Department of Mental Hygiene. She is also an art supervisor at the Right to Live Association and a member of the Very Special Arts Association.




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