Blind Rwandans take up massage to fight stigma

Blind Rwandans take up massage to fight stigma

Blind Rwandans take up massage to fight stigma

Blind Rwandans take up massage to fight stigma

Advertisement

On a cold morning, Beth Gatonye loaded two vibrating chairs into her van and headed to the USA embassy in Kigali with 3 blind colleagues, prepared to offer rubdown therapy.

Since 2017, the forty three-yr-old has trained dozens of visually impaired women — and a few guys — in the artwork of massage, in an effort to develop jobs for a network that faces deep discrimination in Rwanda.

Even today, demand for the massage services offered by her company Seeing Hands is limited to foreigners, she said.

“Rwandans say that they don’t want their bodies to be touched by a blind person, that it can be a sign of bad luck,” she told AFP.

“It is as if Rwandans think that being blind is contagious.”

Advertisement

The stigma is widespread across the East African nation, with visually impaired citizens struggling to access educational or professional opportunities, according to the Rwanda Union of the Blind (RUB).

“They live in isolation and solitude. Some are… hidden from the public by their families because they represent shame,” RUB spokeswoman Rachel Musabyimana told.

Blind Rwandans were unable to attend secondary school until the 1990s when the curriculum was converted to braille.

They faced an even longer wait to access university education, which only became available in 2008.

“Rwandans consider us to be useless people,” said Immaculee Karuhura, a visually impaired massage therapist who works with Seeing Hands.

“They think we only survive through begging,” Karuhura told AFP.

Advertisement

 

– Sense of purpose –

 

Although the coronavirus pandemic hit their business hard, with massage services banned during Rwanda’s lockdown, these days Gatonye can’t keep up with demand.

“I have 15 blind women so far working as massage therapists… Getting back everyone who worked here before the Covid pandemic is difficult but we are trying,” she said.

Visually-impaired people comprise more than one percent of the country’s 13 million population, according to Rwanda’s 2021 National Blindness Survey.

Advertisement

The fundamental reasons for their condition are untreated cataracts and glaucoma — up to eighty percent of instances are deemed preventable or reversible.

Businesses like Seeing Hands keep out the promise of monetary freedom to blind Rwandans.

On average, the masseurs earn the equivalent of approximately $100 (92 euros) a month — greater than double the salaries of people which includes waitresses or housemaids

“Now I can take care of my life. I can pay rent and also pay for my children’s school fees,” Karuhura said.

But the job means much more than that to her, she added.

“When I am serving a client, I feel happy,” she said, pointing out how the work had given her a sense of purpose and belonging.

Advertisement

“It feels like I am communicating with my clients during a therapy session, and this is something that makes me very emotional.”

Advertisement
Advertisement
Read More News On

Catch all the Business News, Breaking News Event and Latest News Updates on The BOL News


Download The BOL News App to get the Daily News Update & Follow us on Google News.


End of Article

Next Story