Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism

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Movements Collaborate to Raise Disability Awareness

JDAM logo_small.jpgShelly Christensen is the Chair of the Disability Task Force and Program Manager of the Jewish Community Inclusion Program for People with Disabilities, a program of the Jewish Family and Children's Service of Minneapolis. February is Jewish Disability Awareness Month, and all month, we'll be featuring blog posts about disability inclusion. Read our posts here and visit our Jewish Disability Awareness Month page.

Almost nine years ago, when I began my career in the field of Jewish disability advocacy, I called a local synagogue to tell them about my program, the Minneapolis Jewish Community Program for People with Disabilities. I wanted to schedule an appointment with the rabbi to talk about my program and to discuss the kinds of challenges his congregation had. When I explained my purpose, the administrator on the other end chuckled, and said, "Well, that's wonderful, but you see, we have no people with disabilities."

Would it surprise you to learn that I am speaking next Shabbat to that congregation for Jewish Disability Awareness Month?

At some point, everyone comes to the realization that there are Jews with disabilities. It takes some longer than others, but the conditions are almost always the same: A congregant has disclosed a disability, and the congregation isn't sure how to deal with it.

But the truth is that we don't have to have all the answers, and we don't have to "fix" a situation. Somehow, we have acquired the notion that it's rude or impolite to ask the person what we could do to provide access - as if asking the person with a disability how to do that would offend them. There is the small matter of asking someone what they need; most likely, they will tell you.

Until that happens, many of us remain so uncertain about what to do that, to the person asking for accommodations, it can often seem as though the synagogue just isn't going to do it. The most important idea here is collaboration, a brain trust composed of people from the organization and the person who has a disability, or, if that person is a child, his or her parent(s). Building a trusting relationship and working together to create appropriate accommodations and modifications are two very important reasons to collaborate.

We have applied the principals of collaboration and partnership to Jewish Disability Awareness Month in its second year. All four major Jewish movements - Union for Reform Judaism, the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism, the Orthodox Union through Yachad: The National Jewish Council for Disabilities and the Jewish Reconstructionist Federation - have committed to support raising awareness during the month of February and beyond. The result is a well-rounded effort to promote inclusion of people with disabilities using the many resources that are available on the websites and through the organizational professional staff and lay leaders.

The Jewish community would be remiss if we did not collaborate and partner through information and resource sharing, and even through joint programming on a number of local levels. Our individual efforts toward Jewish Disability Awareness Month would be considerably diminished if the movements did not simultaneously support this month-long event. We are much more effective when we are all speaking together and generating programming and shared resources. We are able to combine the strengths of each organization, the materials they publish and the programs they support to provide better access to Judaism for people with disabilities and their families, and to the synagogues, camps and organizations that serve them.

For more information, visit:

For more information on Jewish Disability Awareness Month contact me at schristensen@jfcsmpls.org or RAC Legislative Assistant Samuel Lehman at slehman@rac.org. We'd love to hear how you're honoring Jewish Disability Awareness Month!

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