Haben Girma wears a lot of hats: she is a lawyer, a disability rights advocate, a 2013 White House Champions of Change honoree, a ballroom dancer and now the author of a new memoir. She does this as all as a Deafblind person. Girma is a child of Ethiopian and Eritrean immigrants. She grew up in Oakland California. She was born Deafblind and attended public school, where she learned sign language, spoken English and Braille. She uses a combination of accommodations to communicate with those around her, including a system she devised where a typist inputs spoken conversation into a keyboard that is linked via Bluetooth to a real-time Braille reader so that Girma can participate in the conversation as it happens. She can answer using spoken English.

This kind of accommodation combined with a service dog to help her with mobility allowed Girma to become the first Deafblind person to graduate from Harvard Law School in 2013. Since then she has worked as a disability rights lawyer and argued critical cases to increase access to online materials for the blind. Now she has written a memoir about her life experiences.

Who is Haben Girma? Read on to learn more.

1. Child of immigrants

According to an interview with NPR in 2015, Girma's mother left Eritrea in 1983, during the war of independence with Ethiopia. Saba Gebreyesus made a two-week trek to Sudan, "walking at night to try to avoid the different military groups fighting in that area." During the journey, she told her children she once she slept in a tree surrounded by hungry hyenas. She eventually resettled in California and met Haben's father, another immigrant from Ethiopia. Haben was born in 1988 and attended public schools in Oakland. She told the Harvard Law Bulletin: “My parents tried very hard to make sure I had access to everything, and consequently I grew up thinking I could have access to everything.”

2. Self-advocating at college

When GIrma began college at Lewis & Clark College in Oregon, she faced challenges in the cafeteria: because the food station menus were posted on the wall, she could not access them and, instead, walked to a station and took whatever she was served. Her classmates got to make informed choices about their meals but she never got those choices and felt like she deserved to know what was at all the food stations. She joked to NPR: "What if there was chocolate cake at Station Four?" She asked to have the cafeteria menu made accessible to her electronically so that she could have it translated to Braille but the cafeteria manager wasn't reliable about doing so and said he was too busy to honor the request. Girma says that at that point “I explained that Title III of the ADA requires businesses to make reasonable accommodations for persons with disabilities; if the cafeteria refused to do this, I would sue.” The menu started to arrive in her email inbox regularly after that. Moreover, the following year, a newly enrolled blind student was also able to take advantage of the system Girma had set up.

3. Harvard Law School

By the time she was accepted at Harvard, Girma knew she wanted to work as a legal advocate for people with disabilities. She set up a series of systems to make law school work well for her including getting all assigned readings in a digital form so she could either listen to them on her computer — she has some ability to hear high-pitched sounds — or read them on a Braille display. During class Girma had a voice transliterator in the back of the room who would narrate the discussion for her, transmitting from their microphones into her earphones. Sounds amplification worked for her in quiet environments but for noisier spaces, she developed a two-keyboard system to communicate in groups. People can type into a Bluetooth keyboard, and the words pop up on a Braille for Girma to read. “This system has let me communicate everywhere,” she told the Harvard Law Daily, “from the loudest dance club to HLS receptions.”

4. Champion of Change

Friends and colleagues aren't the only ones who have taken advantage of the two-keyboard set up to chat with Girma. In 2013, she was invited to the White House to introduce President Obama at an event celebrating the anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Acts. She told NBC that Obama entered his side of the conversation into the keyboard but that he was a very slow typist. However, she said the whole interaction was positive, telling NBC: “A lot of people are uncomfortable with something that’s different...they come up with all kinds of excuses that basically say ‘this is weird; I don’t want to get involved.'" But Obama wasn’t. “He graciously switched from speaking to typing so that I could access his words. And we had an awesome conversation.”

Girma with President Obama

5. Professional disability rights advocate

After law school, Girma went to work for Disability Rights Advocates, a non-profit in Berkeley, CA. According to her official bio on the organization's website, "Working to increase access to technology for people with disabilities, she helped achieve victory in National Federation of the Blind v. Scribd, one of only two decisions to hold that the ADA applies to virtual businesses." The case involved arguing that Scribd was required under the law to make materials in their online library accessible to the blind. After settling the case out of court, Scribd agreed to do so in 2017.

6. New memoir out this month

Girma is telling her life story in her new book Haben: The Deafblind Woman Who Conquered Harvard Law. She says she hopes her story gives readers a new perspective on disabled persons, telling People magazine, “I hope people can move away from seeing people with disabilities as incompetent. If we remove barriers, we can have great inclusion.” Girma's new book was released in August and is available at all major book sellers.

7. Her Airbnb scandal

Haben Girma keeps an active Instagram social media profile. She most recently posted about a situation she encountered with Airbnb, after they they allegedly cancelled a reservation after learning she had a guide dog. She posted:

"Airbnb coldly canceled my reservation after I revealed I have a guide dog. His reviews glowed with praise from past guests. His flat offered an excellent location in London. I booked, he accepted, and that’s when I disclosed that I’m blind and travel with a guide dog. “Apologies,” he wrote, “I usually don’t allow pets.” I swiftly explained that Mylo is a trained guide dog, not a pet. He spent almost two years with The Seeing Eye learning to give a blind person environmental information. Guide dogs like Mylo increase a blind person’s freedom. The host repeated that his building did not allow dogs. “Had I known when you first requested to book about you bringing your guide dog, I would’ve spoken to you about all we’ve discussed before proceeding with the booking.” Airbnb policy and the law do not require me to disclose ahead of time that I have a guide dog due to the very real risk of discrimination.

I don’t tell potential landlords about my guide dog, but I tell Airbnb hosts because I feel vulnerable while traveling and would rather not deal with a hostile host.

I sent the host a link to the Airbnb service dog policy prohibiting hosts from denying service to guests with assistance animals. I explained that the Americans with Disabilities Act and the UK Equality Act prohibit landlords from discriminating against people with disabilities who have service dogs. “I understand, I really do,” the host replied. Then he tried a different tact: “Just sending a quick note to let you know that I have found out this evening that unfortunately, there will be some work going on the property which falls under the dates of your stay so unfortunately I will have to cancel your reservation.” And with that, he canceled."

Read the entire post on her Instagram.

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Rebekah Kuschmider has been writing about celebrities, pop culture, entertainment, and politics since 2010. Her work has been seen at Ravishly, Babble, Scary Mommy, The Mid, Redbook online, and The Broad Side. She is the creator of the blog Stay at Home Pundit and she is a cohost of the weekly podcast The More Perfect Union.