Helen Keller's story tells one thing in 50 words.

Helen Keller, an American blind and deaf woman writer, lost her sight and hearing due to illness at the age of 1, which is unimaginable and unbearable for ordinary people. But Helen didn't give in to fate.

She overcame the disease with strong perseverance, learned to speak, "obeyed" her fingers, and mastered five languages. At the age of 24, she graduated with honors from the famous Radcliffe Women's College of Harvard University. Later, she devoted her whole life to the cause of speculating for the blind and deaf people in the world, and was praised and praised by authorities and citizens in many countries.

1959, the United Nations proposed the "Helen Keller" activity. Her autobiographical work The Story of My Life has become a classic of English literature, translated into many languages and widely published.

Extended data:

Helen Keller famously said:

1. Darkness will make people cherish light more, and silence will make people love sound more.

2. Because in the long dark night of my life, the books I read and the books read to me by others have become a great and bright lighthouse, revealing to me the deepest source of human life and human spirit.

The most beautiful things in the world are invisible and intangible. Feel it from the heart.

Love is invisible, but you can feel the sweetness she brings.

I can feel so much happiness just by touching. Then, if I can see it, how many better things I find!

6. The biggest disaster in life lies not in the trauma of the past, but in giving up the future.

7. Nothing can be done without hope.

8. All atoms in my body are vibrators. I can guess what happens every day by the vibrations I feel everywhere in the house.

9. Use your eyes as if you would lose them tomorrow.

10, Death just moved from this room to that room, but I may be different from others, because I can see with my eyes in that new room.

References:

Helen Keller-Baidu Encyclopedia