Sound, Smell & Touch Compass
Sound, Smell & Touch Compass
My Hols: For Sir John
Wilson: Sound, Smell, and Touch Are His Compass
by John Hatt
From the Editor: The following story first
appeared in the April 26, 1998, edition of the London Sunday Times. Sir John Wilson is a
seasoned traveler. His methods do not always reflect the techniques developed in recent
years by competent blind travelers, but his confidence and willingness to go anywhere and
do what needs to be done are precisely what the best travel teachers strive to communicate
to their students. It is reassuring to be reminded that people have been successfully
developing and using effective techniques as long as competent blind people have been
around.
Sir John Wilson, who is seventy-nine and lives in
England, was blinded as a child. He attended the prestigious Worcester College for the
Blind, in those years an academically rigorous secondary school for young men only. He
then graduated in law at Oxford. Over the next thirty years he pioneered efforts that
restored sight to more than one million people in the British Commonwealth. In 1983 he
founded Impact, a UN initiative that leads a worldwide attack on cases of avoidable
disability. Sir John and Dr. Jernigan corresponded over the years and occasionally
entertained each other in their homes. Here is the story:
I was already blind during the earliest holidays
that I can remember. Apart from the usual holidays on a beach, my father, an amateur
archeologist, took me on caving expeditions. My job—for which touch is probably
better than sight—was to sift with my fingers through piles of debris in search of
fossils, pottery, or occasionally an ancient coin.
Since then I have been a frequent traveller in my
work for disabled people and, during visits to more than eighty countries, have often had
opportunities for brief holidays in exotic places. Many apparent problems for blind people
are surmountable. For instance, it used to worry me that I couldn't see the
fasten-seat-belt sign on a plane; but I solved that problem by finding my neighbor's seat
belt, then sitting on it. Then, as a result of his tugging, I would know when it was time
to fasten up. Nor is it a problem being unable to use conventional maps: I use Braille
ones, which have the advantage of being three-dimensional, so you can feel the mountain
ranges.
During much of my traveling I have been alone,
but in my experience fellow travellers and hotel staff are very helpful. I have especially
happy memories of a West African hotel, where I heard the concierge say to my porter,
"You treat this man proper; otherwise I cut you and screw your neck." In some
situations I can navigate by sound. In an Indian hotel my problem was needing to cross a
large, crowded lobby to the dining room. Fortunately, the hotel band played at meal times,
and there was also traffic noise from a door to the street. I found that a line bisecting
those two points of sound would usually lead me through the lobby to the restaurant. My
maneuvering used to amuse two residents who, sipping beers on their veranda, placed bets
on whether I would get there without knocking over the plant pots.
In a crowded room it is helpful if there is an
air conditioner: it provides a static point of sound around which you can navigate like a
sailor steering by the North Star. A revolving fan has the reverse effect: you turn to
face a voice, and find you are just facing a draught; and it can be disconcerting when the
verbena perfume that you have identified with the bank manager's wife instead appears to
waft from the deep-voiced captain from the Salvation Army.
Of course there are some small difficulties for
me. In Borneo I don't feel completely at ease when climbing up a notched tree trunk to get
into a long house. Nor did I like the revolving doors of New York hotels, which need to be
negotiated at supersonic speed. Americans, reared to this, often go through butt end, but
if you can't see what you are doing, you can get a nasty crack on the skull. Once inside
the hotel, I'm not very popular when I mistakenly press the red button in the lift,
causing an alarm to screech through sixty floors. Even when I reach the correct floor,
there are hazards: I once entered the wrong bedroom and found an alien foot in my bed. Now
I identify my bedroom by bending a pipe cleaner around the door handle.
My enjoyment of travel and holidays owes much to
my early training at the Worcester College for the Blind. There we learned to compensate
for our blindness by developing an acute sense of hearing, touch, and smell. Smells carry
the memory of many holiday places. In Corfu the pines have a heavy scent, like retsina
wine. In Grenada, during the nutmeg harvest, the woods smell like a spice box. Zanzibar is
the scent of cloves and frangipani and, at night, the moonflowers. The local Arab women
wear a perfume called ylang-ylang, which is distilled to an ancient recipe from pure
blossom and is said to be the scent that beguiled Solomon.
At the great Hindu temple in Madurai in India, it
was more my sense of touch that gave me pleasure. I can still remember the carved features
of a laughing child and the angular contours of the goddess of smallpox. A great treat was
the Getty Museum in California, where they turned off the alarm system so that I could
feel the exquisite Greek and Roman sculptures. At the Parthenon I could sense the pattern
of sun and shade, so I got an exact impression of the symmetry of the colonnade.
Blind people often develop acute hearing. In New
York, for instance, when a siren sounds from the harbor, you can hear the Manhattan
skyline. An occasional thunderstorm can also illuminate the landscape. During a monsoon in
the Himalayas I remember a clap of thunder bellowing through the valley, making the
foothills stand out in a silhouette of sound, while a huge, slow echo loomed back from the
great mountains.
At the Victoria Falls I enjoyed a fascinating
variety of sound. Shrieks came from the Devil's Cataract, which was seething into the
grotto: a lower, thunderous tone resonated from the enormous power of the main falls; a
subterranean earth-quaking rumbled through the nearby rain forest, where flabby ferns
quietly dripped with moisture.
In the West Indies some of the best calypso
singers are blind, and I spent an uproarious holiday with them at a carnival in Trinidad.
For two days Port of Spain vibrated to the sound of competing steel bands, their rhythm
carried along every road by shuffling, dancing feet. In every part of the city the most
sedate citizens were unable to resist jumping up; every baby shook its rattle; and I was
told that the patients in the hospitals could be injected only during the rare lulls. For
days afterwards I felt the rhythm in my feet, just as one feels the motion of waves long
after leaving a ship.
Since retirement in 1983 I have continued—on
a voluntary basis—my work for the disabled. Thanks to the generosity of British
Airways, my wife Jean can now travel with me, and in some respects my travels now seem
like holidays—but working holidays with a purpose. In the Asia-Pacific region alone
there are still more than 100 million people with disabilities, most of which were
preventable, and many of which are curable. I recently stayed with Impact's hospital train
at a remote Indian railway station, where a group of surgeons (on a working holiday) had
been hard at work for four weeks. Their efforts had produced scenes that were biblical:
the deaf could hear, the blind could see, and the paralysed could walk. I couldn't help
but agree with one of the surgeons, who told me: "This is the best holiday that I
could ever have had."
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