[Mt-blind] MAB Affiliation with NFB
James Aldrich
jkaldrich at qwest.net
Tue Nov 13 15:06:19 CST 2007
Hi Joy,
I agree! This was an excellent post!
You don't have to go to the web to read the history of the National
Organizations. Just call the State Library in Helena and get Walking Alone
and Marching Together which is a history of the NFB. It is a very thick
book in print. Others may find it in their public libraries or a college
library. I might have a print copy of it here. Maybe one day if it isn't
already, it could be read as an electronic book.
I believe the ACB history is called People of Vision. Maybe People With
Vision. One can do a google search on each site and find the books. I of
course would say Walking Alone and Marching Together is a good read since it
is a history of the organization we are affiliated with. You can also order
it from the Freedom Center by calling the main NFB number.
I was trying to write a post the other day and I wrote it twice and it
crashed my Outlook Express. I think I may have fixed the problem so started
it again. I hope to finish it and contribute to the discussion shortly.
Coincidentally, there has been some discussion on our history on the
NFB-Talk list. I saved a few of the post from that which I could send here
or to you privately if you aren't on the list.
HTH
Jim Aldrich
----- Original Message -----
From: "BRUCE&JOY BRESLAUER" <bjb5757 at bresnan.net>
To: "mab" <mt-blind at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2007 2:57 AM
Subject: [Mt-blind] MAB Affiliation with NFB
Hi, list.
I wasn't going to chime in on this, but I have a couple of suggestions that
might be helpful for those of us who are newer to the organization and that
includes me, having been a member for only ten years.
On some of our MAB letterhead there is a statement that we are an affiliate
of the National Federation of the Blind. Perhaps it would be helpful to
have someone knowledgeable about such things post to the list or write for
The Observer an article detailing the history of this affiliation -- how it
came to be, when, and why. It might help to clarify some things for those
of us who came into the organization later, after the decision was made.
The discussion of why we are affiliated or whether we should remain so seems
to come up every few years. I hope we can continue to examine or re-examine
this affiliation in a respectful and nonhostile manner.
It wouldn't hurt some of us who have time or are interested to look at the
web sites of the two major consumer organizations of the blind, to research
their histories and study their philosophies and how they are the same and
how they are different.
There is strength in numbers, and there are times when affiliating with a
national organization is helpful in making a needed change in a law or a
practice, or an attitude. It's like belonging to a union, which some think
is a good idea and others do not. With the changing times and changing
demographics of people who are blind or visually impaired, the organizations
representing them have had to change as well. However, there are certain
things that do not change. Those who are blind or visually impaired still
need good educations. They need to be literate in order to get and keep
jobs. They need to be economically self-sufficient in order to build
productive lives for themselves and their families. They need to have
access to adequate, safe, reliable, and affordable transportation. They
need to have hope that life is worth living no matter what stage of life
they are currently in, and that things can be better for them than they were
for those in generations past. we are not that far removed from being
institutionalized, from working in sheltered workshops or living on welfare,
from not being allowed to get married or own property or have bank accounts,
from living in group homes or being wards of the state or having
state-appointed guardians, from having our children taken away from us only
because we are blind. Historically, society's expectations of us have been
extremely low, and we have often been taught to have these same low
expectations of and for ourselves. Those in generations before us fought
long and hard to change some of these limiting attitudes, and to develop
successful -- albeit alternative -- methods of coping with the challenges of
everyday life --mobility, home or money management, transportation,
vocational or recreational pursuits, just to name a few. Today they
continue to explore and challenge such things as the deplorable
underemployment and unemployment rate among the blind, their elementary,
high school, and college success rate, their ability to obtain and retain
employment, their ability to remain self-sufficient and in their homes as
long as possible. These things are important to all of us.
I grew up in what I now choose to call the fortunate fifties, when I
received a good education and grounding in the skills of blindness from the
Montana School for the Deaf and the Blind, and went on to graduate from
public high school near the top of my class and go to college. My parents
thought that growing up with my own family in my own neighborhood was
important enough that they moved to the same town where the school is so
that I could come home every night, rather than stay there as a residential
student nine months of the year. I think that has made a huge difference in
my adult life in knowing what a family is and appreciating its benefits, and
knowing how to nurture and sustain one as an adult. Growing up, I was
treated as normally as possible by my parents and friends. I had chores and
expectations that were no different than those of my siblings. I was
encouraged to do well. The only things I could not do were to read print
and drive. Not being able to drive was painfully obvious to me during the
teenage years, when if I got mad at my parents for some reason and wanted to
leave to cool off, there was no place for me to go and no way for me to get
there except to walk. It didn't occur to me that I couldn't or shouldn't
go to college, get married, own a home, have children, just like everyone
else. I never questioned it until later, when others questioned it. By
then of course it was too late because I was already doing these things, and
I had had the lifetime momentum of a can-do attitude to back it up.
Now I feel a responsibility to the next generation of people who are blind
or visually impaired, to see that they have the same opportunities to build
that same can-do attitude that I was fortunate to have grown up with. Is
literacy still a priority for them? Do they have early access to the skills
and tools of blindness that will serve them well throughout their lives in
school, college, work, retirement, and whatever other vocational or
recreational endeavor they choose? Can they climb the socioeconomic ladder
or Mount Everest or whatever other obstacle is in their path? Who are their
role models? How realistic are their expectations for their lives?
In the Bible, after having been in Babylonian captivity for seventy years,
the Israelites came back to Israel and were warned about becoming complacent
living in houses they did not build, tending vineyards they did not plant,
reaping the benefits from the toil of others without being mindful of the
cost. I hope we don't do the same thing, forgetting the struggles of the
past and why they were fought and the price that was paid to win them, and
realizing that there are still struggles to be fought and battles to be won.
Sometimes they are the same for each generation, sometimes they are
different, but whatever they are, it is a good idea for each generation to
learn about their history -- the victories and the mistakes that were
made -- so that the victories can be capitalized on and the mistakes need
not be made again. There is that saying that says the best way to know
where you're going is to know where you've been. I think the discussion
about where we are going as the Montana Association for the Blind should
necessarily include a factual discussion of where we have been, not just an
emotional one. Many of the ones who lived that history and know it
firsthand have passed on, and I think it would be wise for us to record that
history now before too many more of us who lived it pass on, and it is lost
forever.
So are there any archivists among us, or those who wish to share memories of
the way it was back in the day when dinosaurs roamed the earth, and what it
meant to be blind was different than it is now?
I wish my parents were still alive so that I could ask them how they coped
with raising a daughter who is blind without the benefit of a Parents'
Division. They mostly flew by the seat of their pants I suppose, as I did
in school and still do at work, advocating for myself when necessary and
knowing that if I didn't, no one else would. I didn't know at the time that
there was an organization I could have belonged to that might have saved me
in some cases from reinventing the wheel.
Joy
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