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The Jewish Chronicle

How deaf and blind Yossi found his voice

April 27, 2012 14:36
Life in the fast lane: Yossi Samuels (right) at Silverstone

ByJessica Elgot, Jessica Elgot

2 min read

Yossi Samuels is a current affairs devotee, a qualified wine-taster and an expert on cars.

But the 35-year-old Israeli is also blind, deaf and largely confined to a wheelchair, able to communicate only through sounds and by outlining Hebrew letters on his brother's palm. He is in the UK to promote the disability charity founded by his parents.

Born healthy, a faulty vaccination at 18 months caused his blindness and deafness and left him abnormally hyperactive. He had no way of communicating until he was eight. Most of the babies vaccinated with the same batch died - the others are in a permanent vegetative state.

With his brother Avi interpreting, Mr Samuels declared: "The state of Israel ruined my life. We spent eight years battling the state for what they did. When I couldn't communicate, I was very angry. I was hyperactive, full of an energy I couldn't let out."