Legal Seat – Helsinki, Finland
WORLD FEDERATION OF THE DEAF
An International Non-Governmental Organisation in official liaison with ECOSOC, UNESCO, ILO,
WHO and the Council of Europe. WFD was established in Rome in 1951.
PO Box 65, 00401 Helsinki, FINLAND
www.wfdeaf.org
Dr. Joseph J. Murray, President, World Federation of the Deaf
Ms. Victoria Manning, Board Member, World Federation of the Deaf
Statement at the 12th Session of the United Nations Forum on Minority Issues
29 November 2019
Geneva, Switzerland
The World Federation of the Deaf (WFD) is an international non-governmental organisation
representing approximately 70 million deaf people worldwide. We recently released a Charter
on “Sign Language Rights for All” which is available on our website (www.wfdeaf.org/charter )
for governments, organizations, and other stakeholders, including individuals, to sign as an
endorsement of the principles of full inclusion for deaf people as sign language users. We
emphasise the paradigm shift from the medical model of disability to the human rights model
of disability. Deaf people are human rights holders entitled to equal opportunities to participate
in society in the same way as other citizens.
Deaf communities are part of a unique intersectionality of rights, belonging to both linguistic
and cultural groups, and the disability movement. Deaf people have their own identity, mainly
tied to national sign languages and social connections built on the shared experience of the use
of these languages. Sign language and deaf culture strengthens multilingualism and are means
of promoting, protecting and preserving the diversity of languages and cultures globally. Deaf
people are found among all cultural, linguistic, and ethnic minorities and the deaf community is
a diverse and intersectional community.
The WFD calls for an intersectional approach to securing the human rights of deaf people. Such
an approach includes attention to the rights of deaf people, deaf children, deaf youth, deaf
women, deaf elders, deaf LGBTQIA+, deaf migrants, deafblind people, families of deaf children,
children of deaf adults (CODA), and all other people using sign language to benefit from full and
effective access to the community, including the Deaf Community and mainstream services
through the use of sign language.