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“There is no limit anywhere. We can practically do anything that we want to do. If you want something bad enough you can have it; if you can think about it, you can surely achieve it.”By Sharmain Grainger“Our school system has failed our deaf people.”Quincy RichardsThis notion has long been recognised by Quincy Richards and has been a tremendous bother to him. It is no wonder that he is part of a movement to help incorporate, into the public education system, an Adapted Deaf Curriculum.What’s interesting about Richards, though, is that he is not deaf neither has he any relatives, he knows of, who are deaf. In fact his introduction into the world of the deaf was all coincidental. Although rather challenging, at first,Cheap NFL Jerseys China, it turned out to be one of those experiences that are meant to occur to achieve a greater good. As a matter of fact, Richards would have had it no other way.Today he is a one of the three directors of the Deaf Association of Guyana (DAG) and has even co-authored a book ‘Signing for Health’ which is essentially a manual supplemented by a Digital Versatile Disc (DVD) to assist health care providers to communicate with the deaf.But Richards was at first invited to be part of a very informal movement spearheaded by the President and Founder of DAG Sabine McIntosh, who is grandmother to a deaf child.The vibrant, rearing-to-go Richards was seen as a suitable addition to the group to help propel the interests of deaf people to another level. Together they, and other like-minded individuals, have defied the odds and showcased the deaf, not as a disabled faction of the population, but very capable individuals who merely lack the ability to hear.But it wasn’t until 2010 that the entity became a formal organisation, registered under the Friendly Society as the Deaf in Guyana and then later as the Deaf Association of Guyana.Signing at a recent forum at NCERDDAG, with Richards as a key player, has travelled throughout the country doing research in sign language in the quest to advance the interest of the deaf population and simultaneously empower them.At the recent launch of the Adapted Deaf Curriculum, which represented a collaborative effort between the Ministry of Education and DAG, Richards was the designated signer.The forum, which was held at the National Centre for Educational Resource Development (NCERD), saw Richards being tasked with communicating to the deaf what was said by each of the several speakers.According to Richards, who has been involved in youth development, he functions on the notion that “there is no limit anywhere. We can practically do anything that we want to do. If you want something bad enough you can have it; if you can think about it, you can surely achieve it.”Against this background, the now evolving author and playwright is convinced that anyone, even an individual with a disability, can realise their heart’s desire.“SINGING WAS MY THING…”Our ‘Special Person’ is always willing to share ideas.Born Quincy Dane Richards, on December 23, 1980 in Mabaruma, Region One, he was the fourth of six children. His biological mother, now deceased, was Joycelyn Richards. Although he remembers living for a period with his mother in Queenstown, Georgetown, and in Mabaruma with his maternal grandmother, Yvonne Richards, for awhile, most of his boyhood memories are with his mother’s aunt, Ms. Helena Walcott.He recalled that his aunt, who had no children, opened up her heart and home and raised him as her very own. Home with his aunt was at a domicile in East Ruimveldt, Georgetown.He remembers attending nursery, primary and then secondary schools in the capital city. But he was quite an introvert, and this was especially noticeable during his days at Christ Church and then the Brickdam Secondary schools.However, it was during his very introverted days in secondary school that a singing talent that was long being nurtured in church would surprisingly come to the fore.What many at school didn’t know was that Richards grew up in the Ebenezer Seventh Day Adventist Church and was even a part of a vibrant singing group.“Singing was my thing…I think it has always been my passion,” said Richards as he revealed that he was also a member of the Ministry of Culture’s brass band back in the day. He was a smooth handler of the cornet, a musical instrument similar to a trumpet. As he reminisced on those days, with a smile on his face, he mimicked playing the instrument.In deep thought.But because of his reclusive nature he didn’t feel too comfortable sharing his talent with his classmates. This would however change one day when he almost absentmindedly volunteered for a vacant singing role for a school event.“I did the piece and the rest is history…they didn’t want to let me go. Since that happened (event), everything the school had my name was called and I had to perform,” Richards recounted.But his involvement in th