Receive all the latest news, webinars, updates, events and more right to your inbox.
Organisation:Vision Spring
Location: Bangladesh
Photographer: Amirul Islam Bappy
After a workplace accident caused by declining vision cost him a finger, retired agricultural officer Ziaul Haque discovered that eyeglasses aren't just tools, they're lifelines. Now 67, his glasses enable him to read, teach his grandson, and live independently in retirement.
Ziaul Haque, a retired 67-year old government officer, doesn't call his eyeglasses an accessory. He calls them a lifeline.
For 34 years, Ziaul worked with Bangladesh's Department of Agricultural Extension, helping farmers adopt better techniques and fight crop loss. "I saw the land change, and I saw people change," he says. "But I didn't see my own vision fading - until it changed my life forever."
Twenty-eight years ago, while preparing tools at a project site, Ziaul's blurry vision betrayed him.
He misjudged the distance and lost a finger on his right hand. "It was a stupid mistake," he says softly. "But it was also my wake-up call." Since then, Ziaul has worn glasses every day. "They became my closest companion. Not just to read or write, but to live."
Now retired in a quiet village near Jamalpur, Ziaul begins each day with tea and a newspaper. In the afternoons, he helps his youngest grandson with school lessons.
"He reads slowly; I read with him. That time together, it's everything." "I've lost a finger, I've left my job, I've aged," he says, "but with these glasses, I haven't lost myself."

