braille
Yes
Braille.
braille
Of course blind people can write stories! You don't have to see a computer screen or a piece of paper to write. They can dictate their stories to someone, or use voice recognition software, or even write in braille and have someone translate it into regular writing.
It's called BRAILLE.
Louis Braille, a French inventor born in 1809, created a system of raised dots arranged in cells to enable people who are blind or visually impaired to read and write. This system, known as braille, revolutionized communication and access to information for individuals with visual disabilities.
The braille alphabet
BRAILLE!!!
If you were blind, you could hire a scribe to read and write for you.
Louis Braille developed a system of raised dots that can be felt with the fingers to represent letters and symbols. Through touch, blind people can read and write using Braille by tracing their fingers over the dots on a page. He taught blind people to use Braille through his school in Paris, where he demonstrated the method and helped students learn how to read and write with it.
Yes, deaf people can learn to read and write. They learn much the same way you learned to read and write.
Louis Braille created the braille alphabet (there is no such thing as "braille language"). The objective of creating such a language was to enable the blind to read and write.