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Passion overcomes disability

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You would not have guessed from talking to Mandy Tang, with her clear pronunciation and intonation, that she is deaf. She lost her sense of hearing due to a medical mishap when she was an infant.

Despite the unfortunate incident, Tang's mother would not allow her to waste away. After countless hours of practice in front of a mirror, Tang was able to 'listen' by reading lips and to speak like a normal person.

Unlike most hearing-impaired Hongkongers who could hardly make it past high school, Tang did not allow her disability to disrupt her studies. She is currently doing her master's degree in linguistics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) and is the chairman of Silence, a local charity group that looks after the welfare of the deaf. She is determined to help the deaf unleash their full-potential and not be discriminated against.

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How did you overcome your disability?

I was very lucky to attend a newly established primary school. I spent six years with the same teachers and classmates and they were very willing to take care of me. I always got to sit in front so that I could 'listen' by watching the teacher's lips. But things were not as smooth when I attended secondary school. The people there were less willing to attend to my needs so my family took me to Canada. The educational support for the deaf in Canada is much better than in Hong Kong. There were captionists who helped deaf students take notes, government subsidies for hearing aid and a special teacher for the deaf. The education I received there was more or less similar to what a normal person would get.

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In 2007, I graduated from the University of Victoria, major in visual arts, then I returned to Hong Kong in hopes of finding employment as a graphic designer.

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