It is Labor Day weekend, and many people will watch and take part in the MDA telethon. I am a client of MDA, and it does indeed help families deal with neuromuscular disease. The research efforts toward prevention, cure and treatment of these diseases are indeed important.
Some people with disabilities (PWD) believe Jerry Lewis hurts the cause for the rights of PWD. I’d like to try to put this in perspective, and discuss an important subject; the notion of victimization.
First, we need to remember that Jerry Lewis comes from an era when PWD were pitied, ignored and treated differently. Those notions are prevalent among people of that generation; I saw it in my parents who had difficulty facing reality when I decided to begin using a wheelchair. Also remember that Jerry Lewis is a performer, and the very nature of that business promotes using emotional means as a way to raise money. So Jerry Lewis uses pity and guilt as tools to accomplish the mission of the telethon. He treats people with neuromuscular disease as victims of a terrible disease, and implores us to feel badly and send money. Mr. Lewis does that well!
While I agree that Jerry Lewis’s methods portray PWD as victims, I believe the telethon supports an important cause. The methodology used is “media hype”, and that is something we are confronted with constantly. The media portrays people with disabilities as innocent victims of diseases over which they have no control; we are portrayed as people to be pitied. That doesn’t help our cause. However, the worst thing we can do is act like victims.
Most PWD I know who are out in the community refuse to be treated like victims. Because we know that doing so hinders our ability to fully accept reality. And that acceptance is what drives us through our daily lives. Media hype is just that; hype!
The best advice I can think of for anyone, including PWD is this; don’t let yourself think like a victim! Control what you can and accept the rest. Remember, what binds us together is our common humanity.
Mr. Fresh Perspective,
As someone with MD, I think that instead of focusing on being the victim, concentration should be given toward the abilities they have.
While Jerry Lewis may have grown up with that generation, he is a world known figure that needs to realize that what he says is offensive and casts negative light on him and MDA.
The pattern of his inappropriate behavior is a yearly thing. He does not discriminate about who he discriminates against regarding race, religion, sex, or disability.
I have also had negative experiences with the local & national MDA offices, as had my advocate.
Thanks for listening.
Posted by: Another Perspective | September 11, 2009 at 02:08 PM
I’m not happy with his portrayal either. Maybe I’m too tolerant of this media society we live in. My point is that we shouldn’t let ourselves feel like victims simply because the media portrays us like that. Thank you for the comment!
From: typepad@sixapart.com [mailto:typepad@sixapart.com]
Sent: Friday, September 11, 2009 2:09 PM
To: mdsporer@comcast.net
Subject: [Fresh Perspectives] Another Perspective submitted a comment to 'The MDA Telethon'.
TypePad
NEW! More options for replying to comments via email:
* To reply privately to the commenter, click on the commenter's email address below.
* To reply publically on your blog, reply to this email.
Posted by: Michael Sporer | September 12, 2009 at 07:29 AM