Meet world's first woman with down syndrome to teach kids
WEB DESK: Rejected from school and called a monster, Noeila Garella, is now a teacher of her own class at 31.Â
In the face of prejudice, she is the first person with Down syndrome to work as a preschool teacher in Argentina - and one of the few in the world, reports The Independent.
“I adore this. Ever since I was little, I have always wanted to be a teacher, because I like children so much,†she tells AFP. “I want them to read and listen, because in society people have to listen to one another.â€
A genetic condition, Down syndrome typically affects a person's physical and intellectual growth. In Garella's case, it has done nothing to diminish her optimism and self-belief.
Standing by her side, her mother, Mercedes Cabrera, looks tearful when her daughter tells the story of the day care center director who told Garella's parents: “No monsters here.â€
But Garella smiles. “That teacher is like a story that I read to the children,†she says.
“She is a sad monster, who knows nothing and gets things wrong. I am the happy monster.â€
This article originally appeared in The Independent.Â
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