www3.blueoceanbrain.com
Open in
urlscan Pro
3.227.165.189
Public Scan
Submitted URL: https://click.prod.bob.blueoceanbrain.com/ss/c/pCqhdsLg7GlTjcyONexOT2j3_oOEbr-GfitzJqE9TRtZ0yCTz-x0PaaBQQyGlP-SR4bQlPZ7RCgzHd0LwIUOXZjscoJ...
Effective URL: https://www3.blueoceanbrain.com/g/ross/53f37d30/oa/library/1b2b4177ac1e00ba3844a839b5999571/1b38431cac1e00ba3844a8394ba14e7d
Submission: On October 11 via api from US — Scanned from DE
Effective URL: https://www3.blueoceanbrain.com/g/ross/53f37d30/oa/library/1b2b4177ac1e00ba3844a839b5999571/1b38431cac1e00ba3844a8394ba14e7d
Submission: On October 11 via api from US — Scanned from DE
Form analysis
0 forms found in the DOMText Content
Skip to main content Home Library Language VIDEO: BEING HEUMANN VIDEO: BEING HEUMANN Print The first day of school is typically a happy day, full of wonder and excitement for both parents and their children. Every year, kids explore their new classrooms and make new friends, and their parents proudly share first-day photos on social media. Yet in 1950s Brooklyn, New York, when Judith Heumann’s parents took her to school for the first time, it was anything but a joyous occasion. The five-year-old, rendered unable to walk after she contracted polio when she was two, had no way into the building. There wasn’t a ramp for her wheelchair. Once they finally made their way inside, they were told she couldn’t attend the school because she was a “fire hazard.” But her parents, German-Jewish immigrants who immigrated to the U.S. in the 1930s and lost family during the Holocaust, weren’t going to take “no” for an answer. Their daughter would be going to school. As Heumann’s father worked long hours at a butcher shop, her mother fought for her child, becoming her champion. This eventually saw Heumann enrolled in a school for disabled children and then a public high school. Heumann inherited her mother’s tenacity, becoming an inspiration due to her lifelong, nonstop fight for the rights of the disabled community. Igniting Her Passion After high school, Heumann attended Long Island University. It proved a challenge due to the lack of accessibility. She needed to ask for help anytime she went into the bathroom or exited the building. In her first display of activism, she organized students to demand ramps for access to classrooms. Heumann also attended Camp Jened, a summer camp for disabled people in the Catskills region of New York, and later worked there as a counselor. It was at the camp where she met many of those who would become leaders in the disability rights movement. Following college, she applied to become a teacher. But the New York Board of Education refused to give her a license, worried she wouldn’t be able to evacuate herself in a fire. She sued and got the job, becoming the first teacher in the state to use a wheelchair. Changing the Laws When President Richard Nixon vetoed Section 504 of the 1973 Rehabilitation Act, which would force organizations, such as hospitals, universities, and museums, to remove barriers to accessibility for all Americans, Heumann took part in a protest in which eighty disability activists stopped traffic on New York City’s busy Madison Avenue. She also organized and took part in the “504 sit-in,” the longest nonviolent occupation of a federal building in U.S. history, at the San Francisco office of the U.S. government’s Health, Education, and Welfare department during President Jimmy Carter’s administration. When the protesters were denied anything to eat, the Black Panthers helped by providing them with food. The protests worked, and regulations were signed into U.S. law in 1977. Heumann also cofounded the World Institute on Disability and the Berkeley Center for Independent Living, and she worked in the Clinton and Obama presidential administrations and for the World Bank, championing the rights of those with disabilities worldwide. Her work over the years helped the landmark 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act come to fruition. Heumann continued to travel and champion those with disabilities into her seventies. In 2020, her memoir Being Heumann was published and became a bestseller. She passed away in March 2023, at the age of seventy-five. With the incredible life she lived, it’s no wonder she is considered the mother of the disability movement. Watch: As Heumann told PBS News Hour, “People look at us as the label of our disability. It is a part of who we are but it isn’t who we are.” Learn even more about her in this profile from People magazine. Need help with this video? Click Here Heumann told The Daily Show host Trevor Noah she doesn’t like the term “able-bodied” people. She prefers to use “non-disabled” because the likelihood of acquiring a disability, temporarily or permanently, is statistically very high. Next Steps: Crip Camp is a documentary about Camp Jened, the summer camp for teens with disabilities and how those who attended, including Heumann, started a disability rights revolution. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2020, winning the Audience Award, and was nominated for an Academy Award. Consider checking it out on Netflix, where it's currently streaming. FEATURE TOPIC VIDEO: BEING HEUMANN The first day of school ... read more Current VIDEO: DISABILITY RIGHTS ARE HUMAN RIGHTS Imagine what it would be ... read more VIDEO: LESSONS FROM HER LIFE “I never wished I didn’t ... read more 1 2 3 × ×