Gerald M.Kass
Gerald M.Kass
Dr. Jernigan and Gerald Kass
Gerald M. Kass
From the Editor: Gerald Kass is the
Executive Vice President of the Jewish Braille Institute of America. The October, 1998,
issues of The Jewish Braille Review and the JBI Voice, the organization's flagship
publications, were both dedicated to the memory of Dr. Jernigan. The "JBI
Corner," written by Gerald Kass (as he told Dr. Maurer) "in tribute to Dr.
Jernigan's gifts of mind and spirit," is reprinted here.
JBI Corner
Dear Reader:
Earlier this week a great and historic leader in
the emancipation of blind persons passed on. There are those who adored Dr. Kenneth
Jernigan and those who found controversy with him, but none would deny that he gave
character and direction to the blind civil rights movement in America and beyond. He
believed with a firm faith that blindness was not a way of life but rather a human
characteristic which for reasons of public attitude and access deprived many of their
present rights and future hope.
Kenneth Jernigan was a golden-tongued orator. His
banquet speeches at the annual conventions of the National Federation of the Blind were
eloquent blueprints of his vision of the future— one in which blindness would no
longer define educational possibilities, employment possibilities, and citizen
participation. I well remember many years ago when Dr. Jernigan invited me to Baltimore to
the city which at that time was the new home of the National Federation of the Blind. I
was not only impressed with what I saw but also with the details of how every square inch
of its enormous building would be used to advance the well-being of blind people. Later
that evening, over dinner at his home, when the conversation became more personal, I
marveled at his strength of purpose, graciousness, and enormous sense of humor in the
midst of so many pressures. Ken Jernigan enjoyed being the host, and his guests enjoyed
him.
The Jewish Braille Institute joins all those who
deeply care about the future of blind people in paying tribute to his life and now his
enduring memory.
Sincerely,
Gerald M. Kass
Executive Vice President
The Jewish Braille Institute of America
[PHOTO DESCRIPTION: On these two pages is an
array of nine pictures of Dr. Jernigan reading Braille. The caption for each picture is
the year in which it was taken. In some pictures he stands, and in some he sits. In some
he is serious, and in some he laughs. His hair style changes, but in all he is wearing a
suit and tie. The dates of the pictures are as follows: 1968, 1970, 1975 (2 pictures),
1979, 1981, 1991, 1993, and 1996. CAPTION: For Dr. Jernigan, Braille was an integral part
of every day. Through the years he used it to do research, to teach, and to entertain.]
Share a Comment