Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI: OBSERVED every year on January 4, World Braille Day foregrounds Braille not merely as a reading system, but as a gateway to education, dignity and equal participation for persons with visual disabilities. This significance is mirrored in India’s efforts to adopt and standardise Braille for inclusive learning.
Braille in India is embedded in a rights-based ecosystem anchored in initiatives, acts and polices like the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016, and the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 and others. These efforts position Braille as both a literacy tool and a public accessibility norm. Braille plays a vital role in ensuring literacy, independence, and empowerment for persons with visual impairment. It is central to inclusive education and equal participation in social and economic life.
India, as a State Party to the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, is committed to ensuring access to information and education in accessible formats, including Braille.
Broad ecosystem
The Government has established a comprehensive ecosystem to promote development, dissemination, and use of Braille as a vital tool for inclusion and empowerment of persons with visual impairment. Rooted in constitutional commitments to equality, dignity, and social justice, these initiatives span education, social welfare, skill development, and digital accessibility. Legal foundation: India’s Braille ecosystem is anchored in a rights-based legal framework through the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016. The Act mandates inclusive education for persons with disabilities, making Braille access and literacy a core requirement.
Bharati Braille: The Government recognises Bharati Braille as the unified script for multiple Indian languages. A Standard Bharati Braille Code (with Unicode mapping) has been published with official adoption of a consistent Braille system across Indian languages for education and accessibility.
Consistent representation: The Standard Bharati Braille Codes provide rules to represent vowels, consonants, numerals and punctuation in different Indian scripts such as Hindi, Marathi, Bengali, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, etc., using a common tactile framework. Basis for teaching: Bharati Braille serves as the foundation for Braille education, transcription, publishing and accessible material production in the country.
Recent initiatives
The National Institute for the Empowerment of Persons with Visual Disabilities has conducted a project on validation of the revised Bharati Braille for technological integration and prepared the Draft Bharati Braille 2.1 after validating Liblouis tables. This draft has been developed through validation workshops and consultations through focal group discussions conducted across different regions of the country. The Accessible India Campaign is India’s national initiative to create a barrier-free, inclusive environment for persons with disabilities, including those with visual impairment.
The campaign adopts a holistic approach to accessibility by addressing the built environments (buildings, transport), the information & communication ecosystem (websites, media), and transportation systems universally accessible. It focuses on retrofitting buildings and public spaces with Braille signage (covering 2,000+ railway stations), improving infrastructure at railways, metro stations and airports, and implementing national website accessibility guidelines.
The NEP integration
The National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 explicitly recognises that inclusion needs practical learning supports – assistive devices and accessible teaching-learning materials, including Braille.
NEP prioritises participation of children with disabilities, and states that language-appropriate teaching and learning material – including textbooks in accessible formats such as large print and Braille – should be made available to support integration into classrooms. As students with visual disabilities move into higher education, Braille and other accessible formats need to be integrated into mainstream academic systems. Government-supported digital libraries and institutional mandates are enabling universities to shift from ad-hoc accommodations to structured, campus-wide accessibility practices.
Sugamya Pustakalaya
It is a comprehensive digital library for persons with visual and other print disabilities, with accessible books in multiple languages and links to global sources. The portal offers availability of books and learning materials in digital Braille format.
The Government has created dedicated funding mechanisms to translate Braille access into real, scalable learning materials. These programmes focus on mass production, free distribution and institutional capacity-building. Capacity-building: Government bodies and statutory regulators play a critical role in standardising training, accrediting institutions and maintaining professional quality across the country.































