
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — An Oregon cafe that takes orders in sign language has become a cherished space for the Deaf community, providing a unique gathering place as well as employment for those who are deaf or hard of hearing.
American Sign Language, or ASL, is the primary language at Woodstock Cafe in Portland, The Oregonian/OregonLive reported. Non-ASL speakers can use a microphone that transcribes their order onto a screen.
People have moved from across the country to work at the cafe because it can be hard for people who are deaf or hard of hearing to find jobs, Andre Gray, who helped open the cafe, told the news outlet in sign language.
“So the cafe becomes their stable place. It’s their rock,” he said.
The cafe — owned by CymaSpace, a nonprofit that makes art accessible to the Deaf community — also hosts weekly ASL meetups and game nights. Sign Squad on Tuesdays is a popular event, drawing people like Zach Salisbury, who was born with a rare genetic disorder that causes gradual loss of hearing and sight and uses a cochlear implant, and Amy Wachspress, who started learning sign language nine years ago as she lost her hearing.
The hearing spectrum among attendees is diverse, with deaf people signing with students taking introductory sign language classes and hard of hearing people reading lips and communicating with spoken word and hand signals.
“What I just love about it is that there’s so many different people that come," said Wachspress, who classifies herself as hard of hearing and primarily reads lips to communicate. "It’s so eclectic ... just many different kinds of people from all different backgrounds. And the one thing we have in common is that we sign.”
Wachspress loves to tell the story about a deaf toddler born to hearing parents who wanted him to be immersed in Deaf culture. When they brought him to the cafe, he was thrilled to see other people sign.
“He was just so beside himself excited when he realized that you could communicate with people using sign," she said. “We were all so touched. ... That’s the kind of thing that happens here at the cafe.”
Gray, who helped open the cafe, said there were plans to acquire adjacent vacant buildings for a Deaf Equity Center but that much of the funding was cut following the change of presidential administration. However, CymaSpace hopes to find funding from private organizations and a future crowdsourcing campaign.
“It gives power to the community as opposed to a fear of signing. We, as a community, are so proud of who we are,” he said.
NEUESTE BEITRÄGE
- 1
Figure out how to Use Your Brain research Degree in the Gig Market17.10.2023 - 2
The 25 Most Notable Style Crossroads in History05.07.2023 - 3
Consume Fat Quick: 10 Demonstrated Activities for Ideal Outcomes05.06.2024 - 4
Two IDF officers, civilian face indictment in alleged Gaza aid-truck smuggling scheme07.04.2026 - 5
'Always put others first': IDF reservist who died while on leave saves four with organ transplants02.04.2026
Ähnliche Artikel
Artemis II astronauts make long-distance call to the space station as they head home from the moon07.04.2026
Defeating An inability to embrace success in Scholarly world: Individual Victories25.09.2023
December's overlooked meteor shower peaks next week — will the Ursids surprise us?14.12.2025
What to know about the hepatitis B shot — and why Trump officials are targeting it03.12.2025
Chinese fossils reveal a primordial burst of animal evolution02.04.2026
Florida has quietly become America's execution capital21.11.2025
Go on A Careful spending plan: Modest Objections for Your List of must-dos06.06.2024
St George Mining hits record 178m high-grade intercept at Araxá, reinforcing global scale06.04.2026
New hybrid mpox strain discovered in UK after US reports local spread10.12.2025
CDC changes kids' vaccine schedule, removing universal recommendation for some shots05.01.2026














