- Jeff McWhinney
Jeff McWhinney is a leader in the UK
deaf community .He was born in 1960, into a Deaf family in
Belfast , both his brother and sister are Deaf. His family did not escape the pain ofThe Troubles inNorthern Ireland when loyalists killed his cousin because she married aRoman Catholic . However, his family who usedNorthern Ireland Sign Language (NISL) and English, hasIrish Sign Language (ISL) friends and Jeff learned ISL on his fishing trips with his father’s friend Hugh Keenan. He says the result is he can communicate easily inAmerican Sign Language (ASL),French Sign Language (LSF), ISL, and othersign language s.He was educated at the
Jordanstown School inBelfast , where there was a teacher who also taught his father. He then went toMary Hare Grammar School for the Deaf in the 1970s.After he left school, he returned in Belfast, and was frustrated by that Deaf
club s and organisations were not managed by deaf people. He started theNorthern Ireland Workshop with the Deaf which invited speakers such asPaddy Ladd andGeorge Montgomery to speak about Deafliberation .While seeking employment in Northern Ireland, he encountered
discrimination due to his deafness. His big break in hiscareer withincharities for deaf people, came about in 1984 when he worked for Breakthrough (now DeafPlus), a charity working towards integration between deaf and hearing people.He career progressed, becoming the first
Secretary of theEuro Youth Deaf Council .In 1995 he became Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the [http://www.signcommunity.org.uk]
British Deaf Association (BDA), one of the largest societies for deaf people in the UK. From this position, he was involved in gaining UK Government recognition ofBritish Sign Language as an official language.He also became the Director of the Greenwich Association of Disabled People. Jeff has established eleven Deaf Image campaign groups in London and a number of sign language interpretation services.
He left his BDA management post in September 2004 to start up a new
video technology enterprise, asManaging Director of [http://www.significant-online.co.uk Significan't (UK) Ltd] . This company was considered to the fastest growing social enterprise staffed entirely by sign language users. He introduced the videophone to the deaf community and established the SignVideo Contact Centre, a centre which provides instant access to sign language interpreting through video conferencing. With the Greater London Authority and London Connects he succeeded in securing a grant of £500,000 from the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister's e-innovations programme. The SignVideo partners are CISCO, Tandberg, Prime Business Solutions and Tiger Communications. With this quartlet from the leading technology companies the platform developed by the SignVideo Contact Centre enabled full access by videoconferencing through many different avenues from the legacy ISDN videophones to the latest in 3G video mobiles. The SignVideo Contact Centre, was shortlisted for the prestigious national e-Government Awards for 2005 (winners to be announced at end of January 2006) the first deaf or disabled enterprise to receive this recognition.Jeff McWhinney have pushed the transition of the British Deaf Association from a Deaf organisation (with the '
Wheelchair Mentality') into a BSL organisation. In his September 2004 interview with SIGN MATTERS, he commented: "The word ‘Deaf’ has several different perceptions out there ranging from those deaf through old age to Deaf BSL users. Also there are hidden groups within the sign language community such asChildren Of Deaf Adult s (CODAs). Working for the sign language community means we can include all these people in our campaigns for language rights. A good quote I have used often express how I feel about this subject. ‘"Hearing people love English and its richness however it is seen by the Deaf as a tool to achieve equality. But no-one realise that Deaf people love sign language and its richness in the same manner above!"’ While the new vision is great, the real challenge for the new concept of Sign Language community is whether Deaf people are ready to accept that hearing sign language users belongs to this community. I led a group of Deaf youths inFinland back in 1987 and someone in the group asked our guide how many staff in the Finnish Association of the Deaf were Deaf. The guy started counting, then asked ‘why do you want to know?’ I thought this was fantastic, that it didn’t matter to him. British Deaf people have yet to arrive at this stage and I look forward to that!"External links
* [http://www.maryharehistory.org.uk/articles/speechday1974.html Speechday 1974]
* [http://www.signcommunity.org.uk/ Sign Community]
* [http://www.londonconnects.gov.uk/_db/_documents/Signvideo_Awards_nomination_press_release_Nov2005.doc Signvideo Awards nomination (.doc file)]
* [http://www.deaflawyers.org.uk/blawg/2004/06/bda_ceo_moves_on.html McWhinney's resignation]
* [http://www.significant-online.co.uk Significan't]
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