[nabs-l] blindness Vs other minority groups

Chris Nusbaum dotkid.nusbaum at gmail.com
Fri Nov 11 01:43:32 UTC 2011


Great post, Alex! Very well written, and I totally agree!

 ----- Original Message -----
From: Alexander Castillo <alexandera.castillo at gmail.com
To: nabs-l <nabs-l at nfbnet.org
Date sent: Wed, 2 Nov 2011 01:51:26 -0400
Subject: [nabs-l] blindness Vs other minority groups

Hello all, first, I would like to identify myself as someone who 
is
coming from the perspective of two minority

groups.  I am blind, and I am also from the Dominican Republic.

Let's start off with the statement that Joshua made about 
Christianity
being an acceptible religion to poke fun at.

This example misses the point, as christians in this country  are 
a
majority, not a minority.  I'm not saying that

one should be able to make fun of Christianity because of this, I 
am
saying that it does not fit into the topic.

However, if we lived in a mostly non-christian nation, and 
christians
were a minority, then the comparison would be

right on the money.

The issue is whether or not blindness differs from other minority
groups.  And, I do not think that it does.  If you

take a look at people who have been historicly oppressed, look at 
the
symptoms which have come from  that

oppression, the stereotypes and discrimination, we could probably 
draw
the conclusion that indeed, blindness is and

should be considered a disadvantaged minority group.

Once while walking home from a night of bowling I was told by a 
woman
that "I was walking very well for someone

blind." she then continued to say that I was almost walking 
faster
than she was.  She meant this as a compliment.

While chopping vegetables,I heard a man say "Wow, he's chopping 
up
that pepper like he's not even blind.."


One of my brother's friends once told him that he did not 
understand
how I always "stayed fresh" meaning that I was

always well dressed and looking sharp.

I understand what this means.  Blind people are understood to 
lack the
skills which sighted people inherently

possess, and therefore, as a blind person, I   was doing so well 
that
the sighted person was impressed.

Now, I will say that even though hispanics/latinos in this 
country
have a high school drop out rate, that in the

workforce we still hold mostly blue collar jobs, that  many of us  
pay
taxes at a lower income braquet, and yes, we

as a whole in this country are considered for a very good part
disadvantaged," No one would dare tell me that I was

doing so well for myself even though I was Hispanic.

Disability, is very slowly beginning to be looked at as a 
minority
group in the same way as ethnicity, gender,

religion...  The change is taking place because for once, the
disability community, and in our particular case the

blind community, is being led by our own people.  But this is a 
very
slow process, and I would say that most of the

general population does not understand the change, or why even 
why
they  have such a rigid view on disability.

Disability, and blindness in particular, are considered 
weaknesses,
flaws, things which make the typical human being

incomplete.  It is rarely seen among the "able-bodied" as a 
simple
characteristic.  If we consider this perspective,

the "able-bodied" or sighted person    is indeed giving a 
compliment.
They are saying: I recognize your flaw, and I

recognize how you have overcome it.

Indeed, we do deserve the same considerations as other 
minorities,we
have had a history of  opression, a history of

activism against such oppression, but what we lack is  that point 
in
history in which we had not been oppressed.

We cannot point to a map and say, once upon a time, our people 
were
free in this place, or once upon a time,

societyconsidered us equal.  The blind, for the most part have 
remained
mysterious, and strange to the able-bodied,to

the sighted, to the typical human.


 We are even mysterious and srange to ourselves, often wondering 
why
some blind people do this, or why some blind

people do that.

Every day however, I come across more and more blind people who  
are
ready for employment, who are confident, who do

not have and will not suffer the same stereotyping and 
discrimination
that many of us have and will face.  These

people willl be the new representation of the blind.  They will 
be seen
as active and intergrated members of society.

and the more that we strive to pull ourselves and others out of
conditions of being a  minority group, the more

force our new perspective on disability and in our case blindness 
will
  be absorbed into the fabric of society.

This was a long post, so thanks for reading,
Alex

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