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Melissa Aquilina, Just 15 Years Old, Wants To Become Malta’s First Deaf MP

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One inspirational deaf Maltese girl is determined to become Malta’s first hearing-impaired MP – and her perseverance to do so might just lead to a change in the way parliamentary debates are broadcast around the island.

Parliamentary Secretary Julia Farrugia Portelli announced that after meeting Melissa Aquilina, the winner of #TakingTheLead, a leadership skills based competition, she will be calling for sign language translation to accompany major debates on Parliament TV.

“An inspiring leader, 15-year-old Melissa Aquilina, the competition winner of the ‘Be the British High Commissioner and President of Malta for a day’. Being deaf didn’t stop her dream. Will discuss with Speaker of the House to have sign language on Parliamentary TV when discussing important reforms,” Farrugia Portelli tweeted after she met Melissa.

During her visit to Castille, where Farrugia Portelli briefly spoke to Aquilina in sign language, the 15-year-old was introduced to Prime Minister Joseph Muscat, and also met President Marie Louise Coleiro-Preca during the day.

Melissa has been open about living with deafness, speaking about it in social media posts

“I am a deaf person. I wake up every day with a vibrator alarm or a light signal, which sometimes becomes intolerable. Yes, I am a deaf person. I watch TV, not with sound but with subtitles, or by watching an interpreter. Yes, I am a deaf person.”

“When I am moving or on a lunch break, alone with my friends on Facebook, phone, Facetime… My mobile is my salvation. Yes, I am a deaf person.”

“I do not hear the sound of wind, birds, rain, or melody, but my eyes see what my ears can’t appreciate.”

“It is my most valuable personal element. It is the window of my soul. And my hands are the bridge that connects me to the world; I use them to talk, write, understand and express my thoughts, which are not so different from yours. We are the same, I just do not regret that I could not hear and talk like you… Yes, I am a deaf person.”

“I’m not like you, but I’m not stupid. I can be wrong, mistakes are human, but if I’m wrong because I did not get it, and if I did not, it’s because we did not make any effort to explain or because you explained it badly, but that does not make me silly. Yes, I am a deaf person.”

“I can speak. Some can understand me. Others… not so much. Sometimes it’s hard to understand, in the same way that you do not understand the Chinese. Yes, I am a deaf person.”

“I mean, in my way. But I do the same things you do: Study, work, travel, driving, games, sports, getting married and becoming a parent or scientist… in fact, I have a life, and I run like you! Yes, I am a deaf person.”

Though she is deaf, Melissa hasn’t allowed her hearing impairment to change her dream: to become a Maltese MP in the future

The announcement, which came on International Women’s Day, could see major debates that occur in Parliament broadcast with a deaf translation on screen, allowing deaf people to follow the debates, and increase participation in national discussions.

Do you think parliamentary debates should be broadcast with a sign language interpreter?

READ NEXT: WATCH: 16-Year-Old Maltese Student’s Sombre Message To MPs On His New Voting Power

Johnathan is an award-winning Maltese journalist interested in social justice, politics, minority issues, music and food. Follow him at @supreofficialmt on Instagram, and send him news, food and music stories at [email protected]

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