What the Rest of the World Knows: Culture Shift
- Rights and Justice: Disability Advocates Blazing Trails
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Rights and Justice: Disability Advocates Blazing Trails
We need to build on past achievements, expand our ideas of the possible, and move toward a shared vision of the future—with disabled people at the forefront of the push toward justice.
Celebrated disability rights activist Judy Heumann appeared on our Zoom call wearing large black glasses, in her power chair. “I like to get to know people that I’m talking to,” she said, after briskly asking about my disability, my education, what I like. We’re both plant people.
What was surprising was that Heumann and I had so many similar experiences, despite differences of race, age, and religious background. The public education system was not interested in providing either of us with a quality education. After years of schooling where she was undervalued and even pushed out of sight because she was a quadriplegic child in a wheelchair, Heumann fought for a college degree.
She emerged in her 20s as a trailblazing rights advocate, a trajectory she describes in her memoir, Being Heumann: An Unrepentant Memoir of a Disability Rights Activist (Beacon, 2020). Heumann and others fought for the IDEA, Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, in the 1970s. Yet in the 1980s, the California school system was still intent on institutionalizing me.
My mother, unaware of the federal law that guaranteed my right to education, fought for me to be included in school. The school board had told her I should be institutionalized, but that was out of the question. Like Judy’s parents, mine understood how people in positions of authority abuse their power. My mother was born and raised in Jim Crow New Orleans, where racial difference was often a matter of life or death.
At around age 4 or 5, I had to take a competency exam, solely because I used a wheelchair. One of the tests was two boxes: one empty, one with an Ernie doll inside of it. The examiner asked, “Luticha, which box is empty?” According to my mother, I sat pensively looking at the boxes, reached for the Ernie doll and pulled it close to me, pointed to its box and said very matter-of-factly, “That one.” I refused to give back the doll.
Hearing this story brought Heumann to tears. Her passion is for the education of children. “I do not believe you can litigate changes in attitude. It is not a requirement that we disabled be liked, but that laws like IDEA allow us to be included and give us access to the same opportunities as anyone else.” According to Heumann, the fact is that this country does not value access to quality education, especially for disabled children. This gives rise to disabled Black children, like me, being particularly disadvantaged and further marginalized. Heumann referenced the school to prison pipeline in which Black and Brown children have higher rates of incarceration, disciplinary measures, and detention rates than their White peers, rates that are even greater for disabled Black and Brown children.
These barriers persist decades after IDEA. Heumann said she sees lack of enforcement on top of ableist attitudes as the root of the problem. I added that structural racism—redlining as well as racist attitudes—are additional compounding factors. Heumann described visiting an urban school where children were in a dilapidated building with little to no access to books. “How can any child thrive in such an environment? Your parents understood this.”
Indeed, fighting for my right to education was a constant battle as I became an adult.
Just as there are still barriers to education, access to the built environment is still an issue, especially in urban areas. I was only a child in 1990 when the Americans with Disabilities Act, the statute outlawing discrimination based on disability, was passed as the result of advocacy by Heumann and her generation of activists. Like any child, I was curious and ignorant of such things, so I asked my mother what “ADA” meant. Her response was brusque, her usual tone when I asked what seemed like impossible questions. “Forget about that. That’s not for you, that’s for white people.”
Heumann seemed to be a bit taken aback by this. For clarity, from my mother’s perspective, litigation was not applicable. The so-called justice system is not just and was not built for or intended to work for those who are Black and Brown. Heumann nodded at this clarification and said that she understood, as her parents were Jewish immigrants and the thought of litigation or lawyers was foreign to them, too. But the movement for disabled rights was born out of looking at other movements, like the civil rights movement. “Rosa Parks sat on a bus, but nobody questioned whether you as a Black woman who is disabled could get on that bus. Those were the things that we were fighting for.”
Fundamentally, Heumann believes that laws like ADA and IDEA are sound and is wary of amendments that could undermine them. When asked what was missing, she said the movement is young and needs an intersectional lens. That the lives and experiences of disabled people are more than just the ADA, IDEA, or even Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, that Heumann fought for through direct action.
She says she admires Black Lives Matter because they seem so rooted in who they are, and says the disability movement still needs to find its collective voice, move toward a collective future, and understand itself on a level that goes deeper than changing any law or creating new pieces of legislation.
Disability justice advocates like myself are the “second wave” of the movement: one that emphasizes that a rights-based/litigation strategy is not appropriate for all people or situations and that it is imperative that all aspects of a disabled bodymind are included. We are more than our disabilities.
Heumann nodded emphatically as I shared these core principles of disability justice described by Sins Invalid, a cultural project that challenges paradigms of what is “beautiful” or “normal.” We need to build on past achievements, expand our ideas of the possible, and move toward a shared vision of the future—with disabled people at the forefront of the push toward justice.