
Imagine living in a world where your potential is constantly underestimated, not because you lack ability, but because others assume you cannot learn. Now imagine one group standing up and saying, “Watch us.”
That is the heartbeat of United Voice, Malaysia’s first organisation led by Persons with Learning Disabilities (PWLDs). Celebrating its 20th anniversary this year, coinciding with the International Day of Persons with Disabilities (IDPD) on 3 December, United Voice is not simply marking time. It is celebrating transformation, dignity, and the relentless pursuit of opportunity.
Changing Minds, Changing Lives
Learning disabilities represent the largest group within the disabled community, yet they remain among the least understood. As United Voice Vice President James Kong Yau Kin notes, learning disabilities do not equate to an inability to learn, but rather learning differently.
Malaysia has 751,421 registered persons with disabilities (PWD), though the real number is assumed to be significantly higher due to stigma, low awareness, and underreporting. Many live in silence and isolation, not by choice, but because opportunity rarely knocks. United Voice exists to change that narrative, championing education, acceptance, employment, and independence, so individuals can live fulfilling lives without barriers.
Through campaigns and programmes, the NGO challenges society to see ability in every individual. Its work aligns with the MADANI government’s efforts to foster equal opportunities for the PWD community, shifting public perception away from charity and toward inclusion.
Project I’mPossible

Every movement needs a platform, and United Voice has one with a perfectly named initiative: Project I’mPossible. More than a programme, it’s a training ground, a community, and a launchpad for sustainable employment.
Its key initiatives include:
- A Café and Pop-Up Coffee Cart, where members learn customer service, take orders, and develop barista skills.
- Capacity building, self-advocacy, and job-readiness training, helping members communicate needs and build independence.
- Workshops for corporates and organizations such as Disability Equality Training (DET), Disability Awareness Training (DAT), Disability Related Services Training (DRST), and Audit Access: programmes that teach how to include, engage, and empower individuals with learning disabilities.
These efforts aren’t theoretical, they’re transformative.
Lee May Yoong, who experienced memory and learning challenges after a brain tumour, grew from administrative roles to treasurer and training facilitator.
Cynthia Thomas, once uncertain of her ability, now confidently works as a clinic receptionist.
Siti Farhah Azyan not only found purpose through her work but represented Malaysia at the Special Olympic World Games in 2015, winning medals in bowling.
Meanwhile, Clement Ooi Kit Meng, who speaks sparingly due to autism, communicates through bold, distinctive artwork now recognized locally and internationally.
These stories are proof of what happens when society says, “We see you.”
Inclusion Is Not A Charity, It’s A Right
United Voice has touched countless individuals, families, and companies over two decades. But as Kong reminds us, much more remains to be done. True inclusion is a collective effort, “many hands make light work.”
The organisation invites Malaysians to support its mission in real, meaningful ways:
- Visit its café and bakery
- Explore PWLD-created artwork and crafts
- Collaborate at bazaars or pop-up events
- Place corporate gifting orders
- Participate in workshops that teach how to build inclusive workplaces
In a world that often overlooks the quiet, United Voice amplifies them. It reminds us that every individual, regardless of learning ability—has the right to education, employment, independence, and dignity. And most importantly, it tells us that these rights are not earned. They are inherent.
Twenty years ago, United Voice began by empowering one person to speak. Today, it empowers a community to be heard. And tomorrow? It hopes every voice will become impossible to ignore.










