RT Article T1 Confessing the Deaf: A Visual and Material Approach to Religion and Disability in Belgium, c. 1750-1850 JF Svensk teologisk kvartalskrift VO 101 IS 3 SP 252 OP 270 A1 Hofman, Elwin 1990- A1 Osselaer, Tine van A2 Osselaer, Tine van LA English YR 2025 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1938657136 AB In eighteenth-century Belgium, a peculiar technique was developed to allow deaf people to take the sacrament of Confession. Religious teachers drew or had them draw the different sins they could commit from a model. These drawings were put together in a book, which the deaf person had to take to their confessor. They could then point to the sins they had committed and receive penance and absolution. We have located twenty of these books, all created between the mid-eighteenth and the mid-nineteenth century, a period in which education of deaf people was in-creasingly professionalizing and institutionalizing. In the context of schools for the deaf, teaching through images was controversial. In practice, however, the methods using images continued to be used, as not everyone could afford the expensive schools that provided more advanced deaf education. The confessional aids complicate the "auricular" in auricular confession and show how the ritual could play to different senses when needed. Its essence lay in the acknowledgment of sins and in penitence, not in the verbal recitation of sins. DO 10.51619/stk.v101i3.28236