[blindLaw] An empowering encounter
Maura Kutnyak
maurakutnyak at gmail.com
Mon Oct 23 10:02:22 UTC 2023
Hi Rahul:
Thank you for sharing your empowering encounter. One of my few regrets from law school was not having seized every opportunity to connect with attorney-mentors, and shying away from mainstreem legal work. These aversions likely were a product of internalized low expectations, and fear. Thus, it is always a pleasure to hear about your highflying legal experiences.
Now, I do feel the need to push back a bit against one idea you shared. You referenced the need to personally modulate fighting for access, and the need to not place and “undue burden” on the system. I should be directly quoting, but typing on my phone, before prepping my kids for school, has me choosing haste. In my very green position as a public defender, there are bountiful opportunities to pause, and worry whether I am a resource to the agency, or whether I am a “burden”, . There is little external feedback to prompt my concern. The many managers through whom accommodations are vetted, are all open to creative solutions, and quite affirmative about their perception of my worth. Still, that internal admonition to, “ not ask for too much”, reverberates. But to myself, and to all of us I say, we must expect, and we are entitled to, FULL ACCESS!
The long and short is, I want to think less about avoiding, placing an undue burden on the system. Because, I know that we are all resources, and our clients will benefit from our advocacy. I think it is dangerous to the blind lawyer’s drive and purpose to affirm those internal admonitions.
Thanks for inspiring me to wax theoretical. Have a great week.
Warmly,
Maura Kutnyak
716-563-9882
> On Oct 23, 2023, at 2:26 AM, Rahul Bajaj via BlindLaw <blindlaw at nfbnet.org> wrote:
>
> an empowering encounter
>
> Last Wednesday, I had the honour of being invited for an event organised in honour of Justice Ravindra Bhat, judge, Supreme Court of India, to celebrate his judicial career. At the event, I ran into former Chief Justice of India UU Lalit, for whom I had interned in January 2017. On seeing me, he recalled how he had first gotten introduced to me when I had asked an incisive question in a lecture he had come to deliver in my college, how I had then gone to intern for him. Until that time, the Supreme Court had not had a blind intern and all files were only available in hard copy form, as a general rule. Justice Lalit recounted how he had then spoken with then Chief Justice of India JS Khehar about my situation and the format I needed to access files in. Justice Khehar had stated that, while it won’t be possible to make all files accessible at that time, the court registry could be directed to make five new files available in accessible formats each day which the court registry had then done.
>
> I took away three things from this chance encounter with Chief Justice Lalit. First, the importance of grabbing every opportunity that comes your way, howsoever small. Second, how one needs to negotiate access arrangements that help you get the job done without imposing an undue burden on the system. While, of course, trying to gradually change the system itself, so such needs can be normalized. And, third, the importance of having leaders who understand the importance of going the extra mile to provide additional support to those who need it.
>
> Rahul
>
>
> Sent from Outlook for iOS<https://aka.ms/o0ukef>
> _______________________________________________
> BlindLaw mailing list
> BlindLaw at nfbnet.org
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/blindlaw_nfbnet.org
> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for BlindLaw:
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/blindlaw_nfbnet.org/maurakutnyak%40gmail.com
More information about the BlindLaw
mailing list