Date:06/02/2011 URL:
http://www.thehindu.com/thehindu/mag/2011/02/06/stories/2011020650070300.htm
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Barefoot

With different abilities

HARSH MANDER

Society mostly sees what ‘disabled' persons can't do, not what they
can nor what they will be able to, if only we help them realise their
potential and lead a fulfilled life…

Photo: K.K. Mustafah

An uphill task:How disabled-friendly are our public places?

For them, the world is beyond reach. The most ordinary of aspirations
— to enter school, work in the fields, go out to worship, get married,
the prosaic ingredients of even the most humble person's workaday life
cycle — are denied to them. Despite profound and consistent denial of
their human rights, an estimated 50 million men, women and children
with disabilities have remained on the outer periphery of both public
policy and social action in India. Hidden away behind the walls of
homes and institutions, they are most frequently victims of extreme
social prejudice and ostracism, even as they struggle to achieve their
potential of a fulfilled, dignified and useful life.

More than any other large dispossessed social groups, people with
disabilities are invisible: in political agendas, in human rights
struggles, in development strategies, in social science research. But
even more strikingly, rarely do we encounter disabled people in
schools, farms, factories, playgrounds, cinemas, streets, markets,
temples, mosques, churches, in family celebrations.

We know almost nothing about the existential experience of persons,
and even less about women and girls, who live with disabilities in the
countryside. What life is like for them really, how do they cope, what
do they suffer, what are their dreams? I recall some years ago being
associated with a group of mainly disabled researchers, who sought
answers to questions like these in a sample of villages in Rajasthan
and Andhra Pradesh.

Huge barriers

One striking finding of our investigations was of the nearly
insurmountable physical and social barriers that people with
disabilities confront in accessing public spaces and common
properties. Gaps in village infrastructure like roads, drinking water
sources and school buildings disproportionately constrain people with
disabilities. Temples are built on hill-tops, and degraded forests
require people with disabilities to walk longer than is physically
feasible for them to gather fuel and food. Graver are social
attitudes, of shame and ridicule, beginning often within the family,
which further immobilise people with disabilities.

The result is a sense of isolation, dependency and pervasive low
self-esteem, which we encountered widely amongst people with
disabilities. They felt humiliated by their sense of dependency for
sometimes even the simplest acts of daily living, like bathing,
eating, and attending nature's call. On many occasions, we found in
impoverished homes, all care-givers had to go out for wage work, and
severely disabled people forced to remain without food and care for
the entire working day.

There was profound denial of schooling to children with disabilities.
We could not locate a single teacher trained in working with children
with disabilities, or special teaching aids; there were no ramps in
any rural school. For disabled children of impoverished rural parents
— agricultural workers and small farmers — the chances of going to
school, and remaining within it, are especially low. Where mothers
have to do wage work to sustain the family, they cannot take the child
to school. Girls are more burdened than boys, because they have to
look after the household work, and take care of their younger
siblings. We consistently found, ironically, that disability was no
barrier only to the conventional domestic duties of house-work of
girls and women.

Aids and appliances as well as correctional surgery can do a lot to
assist a person with disability to overcome the constraints imposed by
her biological condition. But even low-cost appliances are beyond the
reach of most rural people with disabilities. We could not find
medical records of even a single person with disabilities who
underwent corrective surgery or modern medical interventions to
reverse or improve their condition.

We found that a third or more of people with disability who were in
the working age-group had absolutely no opportunity to work and they
were fully dependent on the members of their family. These included
persons with leprosy, visual impairment, and severe mental and
multiple handicaps. Although most of these persons were capable of
productive work, their families and the larger community regarded them
to be incapable. Those who could find work had low-end employment,
uncertain, barely averaging 7 to 10 days a month, with paltry wages.
But even this low-wage employment was available only when other
workers were not available, or in peak agricultural periods. Even such
employment was highest for persons with physical disabilities, whereas
other disabled peoples like those hearing impaired were considered
unsuitable because of difficulties in communicating work demands.

Low and uncertain incomes mean that many people with disabilities and
members of their family routinely live with hunger. Even the coping
mechanism of seasonal distress migration is usually barred to such
people. In the survey, we encountered very few people with
disabilities who received any kind of disability pension, or food aid,
to protect them through seasons of hunger. The situation is even more
tenuous for old persons with disabilities who lack younger
care-givers.

Most vulnerable

We found the highest, frequently tragic, levels of vulnerability and
social exclusion among rural women with disabilities. Most were forced
to marry in highly unequal situations, as second wives to older men,
widowers or divorced men. Many reported that they were treated mainly
as unpaid domestic labour and sexual objects, and suffered high levels
of physical and psychological domestic abuse, sometimes desertion.
Girls with disabilities, particularly those who are mentally
challenged, were found to suffer from routine sexual abuse and
unwanted pregnancies.

Traditionally, the most positive response that society has been able
to muster towards the disabled has been pity, reducing them to passive
objects of our charity. However, interventions based on a philosophy
of charity, however well-meaning, not only rob the disabled of their
dignity, self-esteem and self-confidence, but also perpetuate their
dependence and obstruct the possibilities of their achieving a life of
self-respect and relative self-reliance. They also reinforce further
prejudice in society about disability and the disabled.

In all work for the rights of disabled persons, it is important first
of all to remember that people with disabilities are full individual
human beings just like anyone else with independent personalities,
dreams, aspirations, interests, skills and potential. They have the
right, as well as the potential, to lead fulfilled, productive and
happy lives with dignity and relative self-reliance, just as much as
anyone else. The success of our interventions should be judged by the
yardstick by which these potentials are actually realised. Further,
whereas institutions are important as specialised resource centres,
they should not be instruments to confine or segregate the disabled;
instead the striving should be for the full social, economic,
educational and cultural integration of the disabled in the wider
society.

The reason why disabled persons are often denied this potential of
achieving a full life of dignity is not related so much to the
limitations of their disabilities, as to the way that society views
and treats the disabled. We see only what they cannot do, not what
they can do and even more importantly what they might be able to do.
We offer them only our ignorance, prejudice, revulsion and rejection,
and consciously or tacitly place insurmountable economic, social,
architectural, educational, legal, transport, cultural, health and
other barriers to their achieving a fulfilled life with their full
potential. This is why most disabled people experience humiliation,
segregation and indignity throughout their lives. Shrouded from our
collective view and conscience, they somehow live out their lives,
surviving, but only just, most often at the precipice of despair.

It is only when they organise into a social and political collective
of voice and assertion that an uncaring state and society will finally
be forced to act. There are many examples of hope from across the
country that this has begun to happen – that disabled people are
themselves ending their long exile from hope.

Get numbers right this time, help the census with correct disability info!

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