In a world shaped by audio, screen readers, and AI, it’s easy to assume that access alone equals inclusion. But listening is not the same as reading.
My latest piece, The Language of Touch—and the Right to Read, looks at why Braille still matters—not as legacy technology, but as the foundation of literacy for blind readers. From classrooms and exams to work and everyday independence, Braille enables something audio cannot: full, equal participation in a written world.
Even in the digital age, the right to read through touch remains central to dignity and opportunity.
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/blogs/presbyopic/the-language-of-touchand-the-right-to-read/

