05/26/2026
https://www.facebook.com/share/1CfoF7TFHS/?mibextid=wwXIfr
Elizabeth Bonker stopped speaking when she was 15 months old.
Within hours, her words were gone. Her mother Virginia described watching it happen in real time — her daughter’s voice simply disappeared.
Doctors didn’t offer much hope. But her family refused to give up. At age five, Elizabeth was taught to type. And when she typed her first words, something extraordinary became clear.
She had never stopped having something to say. She just hadn’t been given a way to say it.
Elizabeth went on to graduate as valedictorian of Rollins College in Florida. She delivered her commencement address to thousands of people — not with her voice, but through text-to-speech software. The speech went viral.
“I am not special,” she said. “We need to change the way the world sees non-speaking autism. It is a neuromotor disorder, not a cognitive one.”
She founded Communication 4 ALL — a nonprofit built on one principle: that communication is a basic human right. 26 letters. A stencil. An internet connection. That’s all it takes to unlock a mind that the world wrote off.
An estimated 31 million people worldwide are non-speaking and autistic. Most have never been taught to type, point to a board, or use an AAC device. Not because it’s impossible. Because nobody gave them the chance.
Elizabeth is trying to change that — one letter at a time.
Source: Communication 4 ALL / Newsweek / Rollins College