The Today Show ran a
short piece recently on Jimmy Jenson, a 48 year old man with Down syndrome. He ran the New York City Marathon on Sunday
and became the first person with Down syndrome to complete this landmark
race. You can see the video by following
this link:
This is no doubt a great
achievement, but I wonder....Do we lift up these kinds of stories because we
don't expect people with disabilities to succeed in ways like this? Are we
celebrating Jimmy's greatness or our own willingness to admit that people are
people and that “disability” is an imaginary barrier?
It seems that whenever a
person with a disability accomplishes something or otherwise makes a difference
in the world, we consider them to be extraordinary. Not just because what they did was
extraordinary but because they did it WITH A DISABILITY. I came across a website recently that touted
the “Top 10 Extraordinary People with Disabilities.” They included people like Van Gogh,
Beethoven, Christy Brown, John Nash, Stephen Hawking, and Helen Keller. It wasn’t enough that these people created
breathtaking music or inspiring artwork or intellectual breakthroughs in
science and mathematics. It’s that they
did it WITH A DISABILITY, as if the achievement would be less significant if
they hadn’t had a disability.
So maybe, it is important
that we lift up stories like the one involving Jimmy Jenson…because no one had
ever heard of Jimmy Jenson before. It’s people
like Jimmy who live in anonymity while they fight for their rights; struggle to
be accepted in their communities; and persevere in the face of prejudice and
doubt. That is what makes them
extraordinary, not the accomplishments they achieve.
Lucy Daniel is the Policy
Officer at CBM Australia, an international development agency that works with
people with disabilities in the world's poorest countries. She once wrote, “I no longer focus solely on
the problems faced by people with disabilities over the people themselves,
because I can now see these problems in the context of everything that people
with disabilities have and can achieve…I see a chance to celebrate the truth
that each and every person living with disability has the potential to
contribute hugely to their family and community.”
So, way to go, Jimmy…and
keep on running.
With respect,
Mark Bernstein
Consultant, Central East Regional
Group and UUA Liaison to Equual Access
1 comment:
Thank you for this post and the link to the Today show. As a person who is deaf I am happy to see that NBC/Today are in compliance with the new regulations that require captioning of programming that originates on television when it appears and is accessed via the Internet!
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