A film has just been released about Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., and the 1965 civil rights marches from Selma to Montgomery,
Alabama to demand voting rights for African Americans. The film is called Selma.
I haven’t seen it yet, but I plan to. So what am I
doing writing about it?
What stirred me is the promo photo that ran with
the film’s review in my local newspaper. (Yes, I still read one of those.) It
shows the actor portraying Dr. King with actors portraying a Jewish rabbi and a
Greek Orthodox clergyman.
What struck me about the photo was the coalition it
depicted between people from other groups who –like African Americans -- have
also faced bigotry. A united coalition fighting for the rights of a
marginalized group of people.
Fifty years has passed since the march on Selma.
Like other minorities, people with disabilities are still fighting for
equality. For access to jobs. Housing. Attendant care at home rather than in
nursing homes. Medical care. Transportation. And on and on.
While the passage of the ADA in 1990 was a landmark
of progress, I fear that the disability rights movement is at a stand-still.
That we’ve reached a plateau we may be stuck on for quite some time.
Everywhere I look I see steps at the entrances of
businesses which have still not undertaken barrier removal. The demand for
accessible, affordable housing far exceeds the supply. In many cities, it’s
still nearly impossible to get a wheelchair-accessible cab. Even public transit
in many locations has barriers. Young people with significant disabilities and
few resources end up in nursing homes because community-based attendant care is
a pipe dream.
We still have so many barriers to get past. The way
to do this is for leaders in the disability community to come forward and form
coalitions with other minority groups who have made significant progress in
their struggles towards equality.
I look forward to the day a disabled person stands
at a podium with leaders from the African-American, Jewish and gay communities
and the speakers tell the world that discrimination against one is
discrimination against all. That refusing to put up a ramp at an entrance is
equivalent to posting a sign that African Americans or Jewish Americans people
or Gay Americans will not be allowed to enter. That transit inaccessible to
wheelchair users is the same thing as banning women or Asian Americans from
riding the trains, buses or taxis.
U.S. Rep. and Congressional Black Caucus Chairman Emanuel
Cleaver said, “There is more power in unity than division.”
A basic truth we can all learn from.
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