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The Charter of the French language and its regulations govern the consultation of English-language content.
June 2, 2014News Release

American Sign Language and LSQ online videos launched

​​The Commission, as part of disability awareness week, launched today a series of videos in Québec Sign Language (LSQ) and American Sign Language (ASL) to help the deaf, deafened and hard of hearing community, as well as people with low literacy, to access information to defend their rights.

Montréal, June 2 2014 – The Commission des droits de la personne et des droits de la jeunesse, as part of disability awareness week, launched today a series of videos in Québec Sign Language (LSQ) and American Sign Language (ASL) to help the deaf, deafened and hard of hearing community, as well as people with low literacy, to access information to defend their rights.

The 25 videos cover the themes explored on the Commission’s web site: the grounds for discrimination, the areas where discrimination is prohibited, the prohibited practices, youth rights, the mission of the Commission and how to file a complaint. Information is also provided in voice-over.

“The Commission is pleased to present these videos with a view to provide better access to its services. A large segment of the population will benefit from this information made available in his or her own language,” said the president of the Commission, Jacques Frémont.

Available on the Commission’s website and on YouTube, these videos were produced in cooperation with Cinéall Production des Sourds (CPS), a business established in 1999 by Sylvain Gélinas, a Montréal-based deaf artist who communicates in LSQ and works with interpreters and volunteers of his community

ASL and LSQ, which have their own grammatical rules, are often the first language of deafened or hard of hearing people. In fact, the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, adopted by the United Nations in 2006 and ratified by Canada in 2010, recognizes that sign languages have the same status as spoken languages.

The videos are available on the Commission’s website at www.cdpdj.qc.ca and on its YouTube channel.

To find out more on the Semaine québécoise des personnes handicapées: www.ophq.gouv.qc.ca/SQPH/

Contact:
Patricia Poirier
514 873-5146 or 1 800 361-6477, extension 358
TTY: 514 873-2648
patricia.poirier@cdpdj.qc.ca

ASL videos are avalaible on the following pages: