Title | BLIND. FAITH. |
Brand | SINGAPORE ASSOCIATION OF THE VISUALLY HANDICAPPED |
Product / Service | PUBLIC SERVICE |
Category | A06. Best Use of Special Events And Stunt/Live Advertising |
Entrant | EURO RSCG SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE |
Entrant Company: | EURO RSCG SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE |
Advertising Agency: | EURO RSCG SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE |
Name | Company | Position |
---|---|---|
Victor Ng | Euro Rscg | Chief Creative Officer |
Kelvin Lim | Euro Rscg | Associate Creative Director |
Victor Ng/Adrian Sim | Euro Rscg | Copywriters |
Kelvin Lim/Candice Tang/Farizal Akramhan | Euro Rscg | Art Directors |
Farizal Akramhan/Darius Shah | Euro Rscg | Editors |
Eugene Chong | Euro Rscg | Technology Director |
Chris Loo/Audrey Yap/Grace Chung/Leollyne Teng | Shooting Gallery | Producers |
Abdul Hisham Bin Abdul Muin/Adrian Quek/Mohd Fazrin Bin Mohd Affendi | Shooting Gallery | Directors Of Photography |
Lam Yiren | Shooting Gallery | Director |
Eric Ng | Shooting Gallery | Photographer |
Joel Ng | Euro Rscg | Production Director |
The success of the campaign is best measured by the reactions of those who contemplated suicide and sought counselling. After face-to-face sessions, many were humbled and inspired by their disabled counsellors’ courage to live on. In just one month, our unique counselling service has helped over a hundred people find their way and will to live. But nothing beats having the visually impaired being seen in a completely different light.
We trained 12 visually impaired members of SAVH to become counsellors and set up a phone and home counselling service to the general public – who are oblivious that they were being counselled by someone with a devastating disability.
The Singapore Association of the Visually Handicapped (SAVH) was facing two interlinked problems: (1) The public subtly discriminates against the visually impaired as they are perceived to be incapable of integrating with the society. (2) Conversely, the visually impaired generally feel a lack of self-confidence to be useful members of the society. These perceptions cannot be further from the truth. Our insight is blindingly simple: if one cannot see, he hears much better – and that makes him a better listener than those who can see. For the visually impaired, this idea turned their handicap into an asset.