If Christy Smith, the first disabled competitor on Survivor,
thinks she's facing adversity in the Brazilian jungle, wait till
she gets back home and faces some of her deaf fans.
As the newest and most visible deaf celebrity on TV, Smith,
24, has become a magnet not only for praise, but also scathing
criticism.
On one hand, the deaf community is proud of the Colorado
native who is a graduate of Gallaudet University in Washington,
D.C., the world's only liberal-arts college for the deaf.
But on the other, many deaf people are angry that she is not
openly displaying more pride in deaf culture. They want her to
use sign language when she speaks, and to teach other members of
her all-female tribe how to sign.
They are particularly critical of her choosing to read lips
and speak instead of insisting on a sign-language interpreter
during the Darwinian game show. Those choices are particularly
insulting to strong proponents of deaf culture.
"I was so excited when I learned she was going to be on
the show," said Kristy Griffin, a youth specialist at the
Pennsylvania School for the Deaf in Germantown. Speaking through
a sign-language interpreter, the classroom aide said she had
looked forward to the first episode.
"Then, whoa! She's not signing, she's speaking. I told
my husband that I was sure she'd have a sign interpreter at
Tribal Council, so I waited and waited and she didn't. It's so
not deaf-friendly."
The show does not allow journalists to interview contestants
until they've been voted off. Smith is still in the competition.
The tug-of-war between signing and speaking has long been a
sensitive issue in the deaf community. Many deaf-culture
advocates believe that hearing-impaired people who read lips and
speak are acquiescing to the expectations of the hearing world.
The deaf community is often split between those who embrace a
deaf lifestyle - using sign language and considering themselves
similar to an ethnic minority - and those who emphasize
assimilation into the mainstream.
"Deaf people should be proud of signing," said Fred
Turner, 16, a ninth grader at the Pennsylvania school, where
both students and teachers have been watching the show closely.
"Be proud of being deaf."
"It's almost like she doesn't want people to know she's
deaf," said Billy Hartman, also in ninth grade. "I
guess I'm kind of hurt."
Some in the deaf community have questioned whether Smith, who
signed on her audition tape and during preproduction interviews,
was pressured into reading lips by CBS.
"It was completely her decision," said Colleen
Sullivan, director of prime-time series at CBS. "We left it
up to her on how she wanted to handle it."
But, Sullivan said, the network did not offer to provide a
sign-language interpreter for Smith during the competition,
which now has six women against six men.
"We had the discussion with her in advance,"
Sullivan said. "We said, 'Do you think it's fair that you
participate without an interpreter?' And she said, 'No, but life
isn't fair and I want to do it.' "
On the first episode, Feb. 13, Smith did not tell the others
on her team of her deafness until they were encamped. The men
are still not aware of her disability.
"She knew she was going to spark controversy,"
Smith's mother said in a phone interview. "When she's in
the deaf world, she doesn't voice at all. I guess on the show
she didn't want to stand out because it's about survival,
right?"
Raised by hearing parents, Glenda and Bob Smith, in Basalt,
Colo., Smith was diagnosed as severely hearing-impaired when she
was about 6 months old.
"She was a preemie and so we knew she was in danger of
having physical problems," Glenda Smith said. "She's
had hearing aids since she was 2 years old. She can hear some
sounds, but not much."
As a child, Smith was not exposed to deaf culture and did not
use sign language.
"We live in a rural community," her mother said.
"We chose at the time to integrate her with lip-reading and
speech therapy." But, she said, her daughter grew to feel
isolated and unhappy.
"She came home from school one day her sophomore year
and said, 'I'm never going back to that school again. You have
to decide where to send me.' "
She finished her high school years at the private academy in
Washington that is associated with Gallaudet, and went on to
college there.
That is where Christy Smith embraced deaf culture.
"I know all this controversy about signing or not
signing going on in the deaf community seems stupid to hearing
people," Glenda Smith said. "But it's very real."
Judging from the charged messages being exchanged in Internet
chat rooms and on Survivor: The Amazon fan Web sites,
Smith's participation in the show has fanned flames in both the
hearing and deaf worlds.
"Yes, deaf people do have their role in society and can
be extraordinary people, but the bottom line, as cruel as it may
sound, is that Survivor is about dealing primarily with
communication," wrote someone called JaiPeur on a chat site
called Survivor Sucks (which is actually for fans of the
program). "... It seems to me deaf people might struggle on
Survivor."
"You need to show them that you can do it, Deaf!" a
chatter called Survivor Tikis replied. "Deaf, you can
establish pride for the disabled!"
Some deaf chatters have argued that it would make no sense
for Smith to sign on the program because none of the other
contestants knows sign language.
Jennifer Peterson, Smith's best friend from college, agrees.
"I tell people, 'What if you were placed in the middle
of nowhere, in the woods, with a bunch of hearing people? Would
you sign with them? No,' " she said. "But that aside,
we're all so proud. Christy being on the show is an amazing
milestone for the deaf community... . She's educating the world
about an invisible disability."