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First bar for the deaf opens in Colombia where deaf customers discuss the menu through sign language at the "Sin Palabras" (Without Words) coffee bar in Bogota.
The Sin Palabras Cafe Sordo is the first of its kind in the country,
Maria Fernanda Vanegas, one of three owners, said.
It is located in the trendy Chapinero neighborhood of the Colombian
capital, surrounded by heavy metal, gay and reggae joints.
"Its aim is for us, people who can hear, to adapt to the deaf, and
not the other way round, which is always the case," said Vanegas.
The No Words cafe has large screens playing music videos with the lyrics
in sign language, and a dance floor that pulses with music to dancers who cannot
hear it.
The menus are also translated into sign language and there are games
such as Jenga or dominos for customers to play.
- Finally able to dance -
Vanegas and her partners Cristian Melo and Jessica Mojica all have good
hearing, but dreamed of opening a cafe for the more than 50,000 people in
Bogota who do not.
Colombia has more than 455,000 deaf or hard of hearing people, according
to the last census carried out in 2005.
People with normal hearing also frequent the bar, which is as noisy as
any other in the capital. But the difference is that here, most of the talking
is done with hands.
"It's the first time I can feel the music," said Erin Priscila
Pinto, a first-time client enjoying a drink with her old friend Carol Aguilera.
"That makes me really happy because it's the first time I can
dance," said the 23-year-old photography student.
All six waiters at the bar are deaf too, and even though many of the
clients do not know sign language, they manage to convey their orders with
gestures or by writing them down.
The bar also features small cards showing the basics of sign language
for drinkers interesting in expanding their repertoire.
"I feel much more at ease with waiters who are deaf. Everything is
much easier," said Pinto.
- Occasional 'odious' guests -
There is no need to actually speak in the bar.
"Communicating with people with normal hearing can be a bit tricky
at first because we don't understand them," said waiter Juan Carlos
Villamil, 26. "But we get by somehow or other."
Some new clients are surprised at first, but they end up getting the
hang of sign language, he said.
The idea for the cafe came to the owners when they saw a group of deaf
people having a coffee, and asked them about their social lives. Now they want
to open more bars like this across Colombia and elsewhere.
It is not all plain sailing however.
Some "odious" guests occasionally take advantage of the
waiters' deafness to slip out without paying or to smash glasses, said Vanegas.
The bar opened on June 16, and with its exhibitions, story-telling and
other cultural performances by hearing-impaired artists, it is already well on
its way to becoming one of Bogota's more hip watering holes at weekends.
"We want to show the world that deaf
people have talent," said Vanegas, as Pinto used her smartphone to record
a video to show her mother the bar where people listen with their eyes and
speak with their hands.
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