3,800 Deaf Passengers Enjoy a Royal Caribbean Cruise
On October 28, 2007, the Royal Caribbean Freedom of the Seas set sail as usual. For the first time in history, passengers with normal hearing were in the minority. Yet, for the first time in history, the ship was filled with 3,860 deaf and hard of
hearing passengers. One hundred and twenty four interpreters were on board, including interpreters for individual deaf blind passengers.
The Deaf Freedom Cruise took two years to plan. The brainchild behind this idea came from Mac and Tabitha Partlow, owners of Passages Deaf Travel. A previous cruise experience with 22 deaf friends turned into a disaster when they boarded and found out that there were no interpreters for the trip. The following year, the Partlows booked 350 deaf passengers on a cruise that was a success. Tabitha began to think about having a cruise entirely for deaf and hard of hearing passengers.
Both Royal Caribbean and Carnival cruise lines expressed interest in setting up a deaf cruise, but Royal Caribbean offered to provide interpreters and access at no extra charge. They also offered their largest ship, the Freedom of the Seas. With 15 floors, a Flowrider and a shopping mall, it was easy to make the choice to use that ship. The question was, could they fill up an entire ship with deaf and hard of hearing passengers?
They did.
And from the comments from the passengers, the historical trip was a wonderful one. " Wow, what an experience that was!" said Steve Murbach, a deaf passenger from the Chicago area. "It just doesn't compare to anything else I've seen before. If you ever wonder what it is like to live in a Deaf city, this is probably the closest you'll ever get to living in one."
"Most of the hearing crew members on the Freedom of the Seas ship had learned just enough sign language from their crash course training," Steve continued, "to make their communication and services very accessible."
The Deaf Freedom Cruise took two years to plan. The brainchild behind this idea came from Mac and Tabitha Partlow, owners of Passages Deaf Travel. A previous cruise experience with 22 deaf friends turned into a disaster when they boarded and found out that there were no interpreters for the trip. The following year, the Partlows booked 350 deaf passengers on a cruise that was a success. Tabitha began to think about having a cruise entirely for deaf and hard of hearing passengers.
Both Royal Caribbean and Carnival cruise lines expressed interest in setting up a deaf cruise, but Royal Caribbean offered to provide interpreters and access at no extra charge. They also offered their largest ship, the Freedom of the Seas. With 15 floors, a Flowrider and a shopping mall, it was easy to make the choice to use that ship. The question was, could they fill up an entire ship with deaf and hard of hearing passengers?
They did.
And from the comments from the passengers, the historical trip was a wonderful one. " Wow, what an experience that was!" said Steve Murbach, a deaf passenger from the Chicago area. "It just doesn't compare to anything else I've seen before. If you ever wonder what it is like to live in a Deaf city, this is probably the closest you'll ever get to living in one."
"Most of the hearing crew members on the Freedom of the Seas ship had learned just enough sign language from their crash course training," Steve continued, "to make their communication and services very accessible."
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