Accessibility

300,000 Deaf Kenyans.
Zero apps that understand them.

Kenyan Sign Language isn't a dialect of ASL. It's its own language, with its own grammar, its own culture, and its own 300,000 speakers. Not a single mainstream app recognises it. Ishara changes that — using nothing but the camera on the phone you already own.

300K+
Deaf and hard-of-hearing Kenyans
0
Apps that recognise Kenyan Sign Language
1
Camera is all Ishara needs
The Reality Today
If you sign KSL, the digital world doesn't hear you.

Google built sign language recognition for ASL. Apple built it for ASL. Every research lab focuses on ASL. Kenyan Sign Language — spoken by hundreds of thousands of people — isn't on any roadmap. It's not profitable enough. It's not large enough. It doesn't matter enough to them.

Hospitals

A Deaf patient walks into a county hospital. There's no interpreter. They can't explain their symptoms. The doctor can't take a history. Treatment becomes guesswork. This happens every day across Kenya.

Schools

A Deaf child in a mainstream school has a teacher who doesn't sign. The learning gap starts on day one and compounds every year. By Form 4, most have been left behind by a system that never heard them.

Government services

Try getting a Huduma number, filing a police report, or navigating a county office when you sign and nobody else does. Access to public services depends on having a hearing person with you.

What if any phone with a camera could understand KSL?

That's Ishara. Point your phone's camera at someone signing. Ishara recognises the signs and translates them to text in real time. No app to install — it runs in the browser. No internet required — the AI model runs entirely on your device. No subscription — it's free.

The technology to do this has existed for years. It just hasn't been built for KSL because nobody with the resources thought it was worth doing. We disagree.

Where Ishara Changes Things
Every place a Deaf person needs to be understood.
At the Hospital

A patient who can finally explain

A Deaf woman signs her symptoms to her phone's camera. The doctor reads the translation on screen. For the first time, she gets an accurate diagnosis without needing someone else to speak for her.

In the Classroom

A teacher who can finally hear the answer

A Deaf student signs their response. The teacher's phone translates it. The student participates in class for the first time — not through a written note passed forward, but in real time, in front of everyone.

At Home

A family that can finally talk

Most hearing parents of Deaf children never learn to sign fluently. Ishara on a phone sitting on the dinner table means the child's signs become words the family can read. Conversation, not silence.

At Work

A colleague who can finally contribute

In a meeting, a Deaf employee signs their idea. The laptop camera picks it up. The room reads the translation on the shared screen. Their contribution enters the conversation at the same speed as everyone else's.

How Ishara Works
Camera. Browser. That's it.
01 — Open
Visit ishara.thexi.dev

No app store. No download. No account. Open the page in any modern browser — phone, tablet, or laptop.

02 — Point
Allow camera access

Ishara uses your device's camera to watch for signs. The AI model downloads once and runs locally — nothing is sent to a server. Ever.

03 — Sign
See the translation

Signs are recognised in real time and translated to text on screen. Works offline once the model is loaded. Works on any device with a camera.

Built This Way on Purpose
Every design choice serves the people who need it most.

No app install

Because the people who need this most can't afford to fill their phone's storage. A browser tab is free. A 200MB app is not.

No internet required

Because Deaf Kenyans live in the same places everyone else does — including places where Safaricom doesn't reach. The model runs on-device after first load.

No account needed

Because requiring an email address to access a communication tool is a barrier for people who were excluded from the tools that require email addresses.

Free forever

Because charging for accessibility is charging people for the right to be understood. The model is open. The hosting is free. The cost is our time, and that cost is already paid.

A language shouldn't be invisible
because no one built a bridge to it.

Ishara is in active development. If you work with the Deaf community in Kenya — as a teacher, healthcare worker, interpreter, or advocate — we want to build this with you, not for you.

Join the waitlist Back to CIF AI