The idea is simple: create a 3-minute video on the topic of gender and blindness. Winners will be featured in the World Community Film Festival in 8 locations across Canada starting in January 2010. First prize is a MacBook computer, second prize is a Flip video camera and all three winners will have the sight restored to a woman and a girl in their names.
On World Sight Day itself, Seva Canada is having a party. Two hundred people will be attending Seva's Eye Opener Benefit in Vancouver, featuring a 9-piece R&B dance band, a silent auction, door prizes and our special guest, Dr. Paul Courtright, the world expert on gender and blindness. Dr. Courtright arrives this evening in Vancouver and will be in Canada until October 11, where he'll be meeting with government representatives in Ottawa and Vancouver and doing media interviews about his work in Africa with the Kilimanjaro Centre for Community Ophthalmology and the barriers that women and girls face in accessing eye care.
Seva Canada is using World Sight Day as a launching pad for a year-long campaign to raise awareness about the 30 million women and girls who are blind. That is a staggering number... almost the population of Canada. It's been said before that people don't go blind by the millions, but one personal tragedy at a time. Here's a story we just got from the amazing team at Seva Tibet about one of those 30 million tragedies...
Chime Dolkar, blind from bilateral cataracts, has spent the last two years barely surviving by begging on the streets of Nakchu, nomadic town at an elevation of 4500 meters in northern Tibet. Since the age of 4, her little daughter Tashi has led her blind mother by the right hand through the streets, trying to get enough food to keep them both from starving. At night, they would crawl into a small and nearly worn-out tent stationed near a bridge in the upper town.
Chime and her daughter Tashi after one eye surgery Seva Tibet
There were times Tashi, now 6, begged by herself, telling her mother to rest in the tent. Several weeks ago, Tashi was begging on the street where the Civil Affairs office was located when an official, who was aware Chime’s blindness, told the little girl that a Seva medical team from Lhasa would be doing free surgeries for the blind and would be arriving in one week. He encouraged Tashi to talk her mother for treatment.![Chime and Tashi after surgery Seva Tibet Chime and Tashi after surgery Seva Tibet](/sites/default/files/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/Chime-and-Tashi-after-surgery-Seva-Tibet.jpg)