Community & Outreach
Bookmark Special Hari Disabilitas Internasional
A simple yet meaningful campaign created for International Disability Day, using bookmarks to share reading awareness, sign language, and creativity.
A Small Object With Meaning
To celebrate International Disability Day on 3rd December 2025, we created a simple yet meaningful campaign.
Through something small, memorable, and easy to carry—a bookmark— we aimed to invite people to take part in this initiative.
Reading and Sign Language Awareness
Through this bookmark, we hoped to raise awareness about the importance of reading while also introducing sign language to the wider community.
Each bookmark features a sign language alphabet that can be customized based on the user’s initials, making the experience simple, personal, and memorable.
Special Edition by Nanda
In addition, a special edition was available, featuring an exclusive illustration on the reverse side.
The illustration was created by one of our Deaf team members, Nanda, who has a strong passion and talent in art and drawing.
A Bookmark That Can Be Carried
The bookmark was designed to be useful, memorable, and easy to carry. It could stay with the reader inside a book, becoming a small reminder of literacy, access, and inclusion.
Through this simple item, we wanted awareness to continue beyond the moment it was received.
Creativity With Purpose
Through this initiative, Nanda was able to express her creativity while also contributing to raising awareness among the wider community.
The campaign showed that creativity can become a bridge—connecting art, accessibility, literacy, and inclusion.
More Than a Printed Item
What made the bookmark meaningful was not only its design, but the message it carried. It became a way to introduce sign language, celebrate creativity, and invite people to think more deeply about access.
Small objects can still carry important stories.
Small, Memorable, and Meaningful
This campaign reminded us that awareness does not always need to be big to be meaningful.
Sometimes, it can begin with something as simple as a bookmark— something people can carry, use, and remember.