[Blindtlk] A Must-read for All Federationists!
Ray Foret jr
rforetjr at comcast.net
Tue Sep 22 16:54:23 UTC 2009
No wonder they are still what they are. My goodness. but, then again, I
ask sincerely, what can you expect of an outfit where they believe there is
no day or night for the blind? And yes, before anyone jumps up and wants to
through something at me, I can sight my sources.
Sincerely,
The Constantly BAREFOOTED Ray
"Old friend, what are you looking for? After those many years abroad you
come With images you tended Under foreign skies Far away from your own land"
George Seferis
Phone or Fax::
+1 (985) 360-3614
Cell:
+1 (985) 791-2938
e-mail:
rforetjratcomcastdotnet
Skype Name:
barefootedray
----- Original Message -----
From: "Peter Donahue" <pdonahue1 at sbcglobal.net>
To: "Marion & Martin" <swampfox1833 at verizon.net>; "Blind Talk Mailing List"
<blindtlk at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Tuesday, September 22, 2009 11:09 AM
Subject: Re: [Blindtlk] A Must-read for All Federationists!
Good morning Marion and listers,
I'm not sure if this happened when the document was copied in to an
email message or converted to text, but there are lots of broken sentences,
paragraphs divided in the wrong places and many other problems. Ouch!
Peter Donahue
----- Original Message -----
From: "Marion & Martin" <swampfox1833 at verizon.net>
To: "NAGDU List" <nagdu at nfbnet.org>; "FLAGDU List" <flagdu at nfbnet.org>;
"NFBF List" <nfbf-l at nfbnet.org>; <blindtlk at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Tuesday, September 22, 2009 8:17 AM
Subject: [Blindtlk] A Must-read for All Federationists!
Dear All,
While attending a recent Leadership Seminar, Dr. Maurer read an article
from the Braille Forum, the publication of the ACB, written by their former
President, Paul Edwards. This article appeared in the january 1998 edition
of the magazine. I was very tempted to edit the piece slightly to remove any
reference to Mr. Edwards just to see what sort of response I would get from
Council sympathizers on our lists who thought it was an anti Council
propoganda piece! We really don't need to look far to find the differences
between the NFB and the ACB. All we need to do is read the words of their
leaders!I hope you enjoy it as much as I did! You really need to read to the
end because the last sentence is the best!
Fraternally yours,
Marion Gwizdala
The following article can be found at
http://acb.org/magazine/1998/bf0198.html#bf01
THE QUESTION
by Paul Edwards
At the beginning of a new year, it's perhaps appropriate to pause for a
little reflection. It's customary to do what I have done before with this
column
and look back at the preceding year and ahead to the next one. I am not
going to do that! Instead, I want to offer some of my answers to the
question I
get asked more often than any other as president of the American Council of
the Blind. Can you guess what the question is? What does the ACB stand for?
What is ACB's philosophy? What makes the ACB different from the NFB? Though
this question has been posed in three different ways, it's really the same
question.
I have often thought of dealing with this issue here and have avoided it
because many will disagree with whatever I say. Disagreement is good! One of
ACB's
hallmarks is its tolerance for people with divergent notions of who they are
and what ACB is! That, in fact, is one of the organization's
characteristics!
It is a fluid set of beliefs and assumptions that changes from state to
state and from time to time. But, for me anyway, there are some core values
that
are at the heart of what the ACB is! Here are some of them!
It is OK to be blind! That's a big one! It carries with it a whole set of
other ancillary values. First and foremost, people who have meaningful
vision
loss are blind. Blindness is much more than just a nuisance. Blind people
can and should expect society to make changes that facilitate the inclusion
of
people who are blind. These last two values may be areas where members of
the National Federation of the Blind would not agree with us!
Another core value of the ACB relates to expectations! We are absolutely
convinced that there is not a one-size-fits-all "blind person" or that there
should
be! I believe that ACB values diversity and is tolerant of people who are at
various levels of independence. Does that mean that we don't champion good
training or expect a lot of our members? I don't think so! It does mean that
we embrace people at various levels of competence and try very hard not to
be judgmental about where people are! In a very real sense, I think that ACB
has almost instinctively adopted the "People First" model by placing
individuality
far above other values in seeing each other.
And then there is democracy! ACB, as most of you well know, was formed, in
part, because those who created our organization believed that states and
individual
members alike had to have substantial autonomy to express divergent opinions
without being penalized. So, another core value of ACB is the notion that
there must be room for a broad range of beliefs within our organization. If
this is a core value, and I think it is, it goes a long way toward
explaining
why we have never been able to produce the kind of coherent, easily portable
creed that all of our members must accept.
All of the divergence I have talked about so far has some real drawbacks. It
truly has impeded coherent, centralized decision-taking and probably always
will. That divergence has also made it difficult for us to arrive at
positions sometimes. Where there is disagreement, we debate. This debate can
often
take many years and can cause us to take positions that may seem somewhat
ambivalent to those who do not know us well. I choose to use a different
word!
Our positions validate divergence by creating a place where the majority of
our members are comfortable.
What I have written about here does not constitute a complete list of our
core values. It may well not be your core list of our fundamental beliefs.
But
there is one more core value I think we can agree upon! That is that the ACB
is much more than just a group of blind people meeting and working together
for common goals! It's much larger than the sum of its members! It's a hug
when you're feeling sad! It's a belly-laugh at those in society who just
don't
understand! It's arms around each other when we lose someone! It's a place
where you can feel safe! It's anger distilled into action as people die
falling
off subway platforms! It's people arguing and hugging afterwards! It's 1,500
people singing the national anthem! It's help and hope and hands and holding
and happiness and hilarity. It's us, alone and together, divided and united,
men and women, young and old! And it's the American Council of the Blind!
So when someone asks you what the American Council of the Blind is or any of
those other questions, you can show him or her this column! Will it tell him
or her who we are and what we believe? Not really. It might help, but ACB is
not a philosophy. It's a dynamic never-ending experience, and the only way
you can truly understand us is to plunge right in among us and become us!
And then, if you fully understand who we are, tell me because I would like
to
know too!
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