Somali Sign Language Explained

Somali Sign Language
Also Known As:SSL
States:Somalia, Djibouti
Speakers:?
Familycolor:sign
Iso3:none
Glotto:keny1241
Glottoname:(with KSL:) Kenya-Somali Sign Language

Somali Sign Language (SSL) is a sign language used by the deaf community in Somalia and Djibouti.

In the 1980s a school for the deaf was established in the Somali Kenyan town of Wajir by Annalena Tonelli. Students there became fluent in Kenyan Sign Language. In 1997, three graduates from Wajir helped establish the first school for the deaf in Somalia called the Annalena School for the Deaf named after the late Annalena Tonelli, in Borama. One of the teachers at Boroma soon founded a school in Djibouti, and, with a bit more difficulty, another was established in Hargeisa.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Woodford . Doreen E. . The beginning and growth of a new language: Somali Sign Language . 2006 . Enabling Education Network . 30 August 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131029191657/https://www.eenet.org.uk/resources/docs/somali_sign_language.php . 2013-10-29.