Maureen Jackson, Volunteer at the Deaf Museum and Archive, UK
UK
Maureen Jackson, signing in BSL, English transcript, below. Interview: 9-11-2021
So I'll try and explain about my work here at the Deaf Museum. I started to get involved in it through my husband who is Peter. Has it been like a club for you? Yes, I suppose it has yes. Once a week to meet people has been better than nothing I suppose. I've really really enjoyed it, I've loved it. Before the coronavirus pandemic we had a big pool of of volunteers but now unfortunately they are categorized as vulnerable and they don't want to travel in. Some of them had to travel in from quite a long way. Some of them have said they will come back to volunteer next year. I do think the deaf museum is really important, especially for the future of our children. We've got artifacts from the1600s. And then what happened in terms of banning sign language. It's really important. I mean there's still this ban around sign language, but sign language is really really important. I think we need to preserve as much as we can for the future of deaf children. People should be as aware of the deaf history and also value it. I think a real life museum is better rather than an online facility. I mean a website is useful, but it's nice to touch things. On a website you can't do that. It's just 2D images. To actually be in the room with these artifacts and have a look around. But you know on the website you can perhaps have access to lots of things. It's different, but that's my view. I think that real artifacts are really important. Can you explain about this jumper? It's the only one of its kind. It was made in 2010. Somebody was just clearing up stuff in their house and was throwing stuff into a skip. A person saw this beautiful jumper and knew it was linked to the deaf community. They managed to save it and they donated it to the museum here and this is it. Well it's time it's very very valuable yeah with finger spelling on it. Do we know who owned it. Nobody knows anything about it. Great, thank you. This is a cabinet containing our rare books. They're very valuable. We have the proceedings of the Milan Congress in there. Really old books in there. Some of them do need some restoration, but we're hoping to raise some funds and get a grant for the restoration process of some of these things. They were very very valuable, but actually they are quite fragile. These are some of my favorite artifacts in the museum. One of the books is by a deaf lady that wrote it. It was a fiction novel. My husband looked it up in the internet, how much it cost. And it is over a thousand pounds for that book! It was there before on the shelf, so I immediately moved it into this locked cupboard. The title of the book is Prince Charles.
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Interview by Junhui Yang, UCLan - UK