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| Girtley |
The life story of journalist Kalari
Girtley ’06 COM really
begins in a first-grade classroom
in Chicago. That’s where she
went blind.
Girtley was watching her teacher
when it happened. Excessive cerebral
spinal fluid on her brain –
a condition called hydrocephalus
– spilled onto her optic nerve
when a medical tube failed. Within
seconds, the 6-year-old lost 90
percent of her vision.
Girtley thought God was punishing
her for impolitely commenting on
a blind man she had seen recently
with a cane. “I said [to my
brother], ‘Jason, why does
he have a stick?’ He said,
‘Because he can’t see.’
And I said, ‘I’m glad
I can see.’ And I said it
kind of loud,” Girtley said.
A week later, she lost her eyesight.
“I was running into things,”
Girtley recalled of the confusing
days that followed. “I got
angry. I hated being called blind.
I still hate that word. I hated
people who could see. I hated God.
I thought, ‘Of all the 6-year-olds
in the world, why does [God] pick
me?’”
Today that little girl has become
an earnest 23-year-old newspaper
reporter with an infectious, hand-clap
laugh. Girtley’s eyes have
not recovered, but she’s adapted
so well that people often are surprised
to learn of her impairment.
Girtley interns at the Hyde Park
Herald and the Lakefront Outlook,
joint weeklies in Chicago. With
her help, the Outlook news staff
recently won a prestigious George
Polk Award for exposing cronyism
at Chicago’s publicly funded
Harold Washington Cultural Center.
Other Polk recipients this year
include The New York Times, the
Los Angeles Times and documentary
filmmaker Spike Lee.
As part of an investigative team,
Girtley collected information indicating
that the local alderman’s
daughter benefited from business
deals at the center. Girtley’s
editor, Brian Wellner, called her
work vital and fearless. And lead
reporter Daniel Yovich told the
Chicago Reader that while he had
worked with “kids” educated
at top-ranked prestigious journalism
schools such as Northwestern and
Columbia universities, Girtley nonetheless
“runs circles around them.”
Her transformation from angry girl
to journalist started with America’s
pastime. At age 9, she joined Beep
Baseball, a league for the visually
impaired that uses beeping balls
and tall foam bases.
“When I hit the ball, I felt
so good because I wanted to hit
people anyway,” Girtley recalled.
“Then I ran to the base and
tackled it. I could run, tackle
and hit. It was fun.”
That outlet, along with unflagging
family support, dispelled her anger.
Girtley got involved in church.
Only when she reached college, however,
did she begin to accept her blindness.
During her first week on the University
of Illinois campus, Girtley was
alone and lost all of the time.
She was knocked over. She broke
two walking canes. She was forced
to come to terms with herself.
“I said,
‘Look, Kalari, this is how
it’s going to be. Let’s
make the most of it,’”
Girtley recalled. “I always
looked at my cane as a crutch. But
I started looking at it as a companion.”
She learned to navigate campus
and the bus routes, made friends
and tackled school. Pulitzer Prize-winner
and journalism professor Leon Dash,
her mentor at the University, believes
Girtley has everything she needs
to succeed.
“She has a realistic recognition
of how the world reacts to her,”
Dash said. “[She understands
the] societal barriers that she
faces, and she’s not going
to let them stop her.”
Shortly after graduation, Girtley
started working at the joint weeklies
as an unpaid intern. Now living
at home – and still playing
Beep Baseball – she hopes
to earn a paid position soon.
In her work, Girtley uses portable
recorders and voice-synthesizing
computer software. For stories requiring
physical description, she will pull
bystanders aside and ask them to
describe the scene. The reporter
also relies heavily on her ears,
which are astoundingly acute, to
the dismay of evasive interviewees.
“Obviously, I can’t
see faces. But I can hear them.
I can hear when they’re not
looking at me,” Girtley said
with a sly grin. “When their
voice drops low, I can tell I’m
on to something.”
Occasionally her old frustration
with her eyes resurfaces. Recently
a man knocked her down as she covered
a gospel concert featuring Jennifer
Hudson, who later won an Academy
Award for her role in the movie
“Dreamgirls.”
“I wanted to trip him with
my cane,” Girtley said. “I
thought, ‘I hate being blind!’”
But she can laugh now at the memory.
The anger has been put to rest.
– Dave
Evensen
Evensen is a freelance writer in
Champaign.
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