This submit was initially revealed on Afro
By Tashi McQueen
Black historical past and disabled historical past are extra aligned than individuals understand, with many Black icons experiencing some type of incapacity. Abolitionist and girls’s rights activist Sojourner Fact had a disabled proper hand, Fannie Lou Hamer had bodily disabilities stemming from polio, pioneering lawyer and lawmaker Barbara Jordan had a number of sclerosis and used a wheelchair and actor and civil rights activist Harry Belafonte has dyslexia.
However within the annals of disabled Black historical past, Brad Lomax and Lois Curtis stand out as figures who spoke up for each incapacity rights and Black rights in areas the place Black voices had been typically sidelined. As advocates, they fought not only for accessibility however for justice on the intersection of race and incapacity—an ongoing problem at the moment, although formed and lessened in some ways by their work.
“Their contributions to the incapacity rights motion as Black disabled leaders was each paramount and monumental,” mentioned Monica Wiley, voter engagement specialist with the Nationwide Incapacity Rights Community.
Wiley shared that the dialog round incapacity started to take form within the 1800s, although at the moment, perceptions of disabled individuals had been deeply skewed and discriminatory. This led to their widespread exclusion from collaborating in society and their general social invisibility.
“It wasn’t till the passage of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the People with Disabilities Act {that a} paradigm shift commenced within the incapacity motion,” mentioned Wiley.
Brad Lomax
Wiley shared that in the course of the passage of the 1973 Rehabilitation Act, Brad Lomax, a Black Panther who developed a number of sclerosis at Howard College, witnessed extreme inaccessibility and discrimination as a disabled individual.
“He did his due diligence by serving to to prepare and help the 504 sit-in by having the Black Panther Get together (BPP) present meals and different assets to Judith Heumann–the queen of the incapacity motion–and different members,” mentioned Wiley. “Lomax additionally related the Black Panther Get together to the East Oakland Heart for Unbiased Dwelling (CIL), which–in my view–is the epitome of true coalition constructing and intersecting civil rights and incapacity activism. This started the delivery of inclusive democracy.”
Lomax joined the BPP within the late Sixties, in accordance with the Arizona Developmental Disabilities Planning Council. He went on to discovered the Washington, D.C., chapter of the BPP and coordinated the primary African Liberation Day demonstration in 1972.

In 1975, Lomax labored with Ed Roberts, the founding father of the Heart for Unbiased Dwelling (CIL), in Berkeley, Calif., to launch one other web site in East Oakland with the assistance of the BPP. In 1977, incapacity rights activists held a sit-in at San Francisco’s federal constructing to demand enforcement of Part 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, which forbids discrimination towards individuals with disabilities. Lomax joined the protest.
He camped out within the facility alongside different protestors for 3 weeks regardless of the federal government slicing off the constructing’s cellphone traces and water provide.
Although Lomax died on the age of 33 in 1984, his legacy has lived on, paving the way in which for many years of activism that has profoundly enhanced disabled particular person’s entry and alternatives.
Lois Curtis
One other notable determine from the Incapacity Rights Motion is Lois Curtis who grew up with a cognitive and developmental incapacity. On the age of 11, she was despatched to Georgia Regional Hospital, the place she remained confined till she was 29.
She finally grew to become the lead plaintiff in Olmstead v. L.C., by which the U.S. Supreme Court docket dominated that confining individuals with developmental disabilities in insufficient establishments—like she skilled—when they’re able to reside locally is unconstitutional.
“Lois believed in her coronary heart that she deserved to reside locally like different members of society,” mentioned Wiley. “Due to her tireless advocacy, individuals with disabilities can reside locally with the correct home-based help providers they want.”

For the reason that Olmstead case, tons of of 1000’s of individuals with mental or developmental disabilities have moved from establishments to community-based houses, in accordance with the Arizona Developmental Disabilities Planning Council.
In line with the Council, in 2014 Curtis was requested what she would say to individuals nonetheless institutionalized, and he or she responded: “I hope they reside lengthy lives and have their very own place. I hope they make cash. I hope they be taught day by day. I hope they meet new individuals, have fun their birthdays, write letters, clear up, go to pals’ homes, and drink espresso.”
Curtis finally was in a position to transfer into her personal condominium, get a job as an artist and exhibit her work in Georgia galleries. Her abilities and fervour motivated her to make artwork and advocacy her prime ambitions. Her paintings is a heartfelt, daring expression of how deeply she values private relationships.
Curtis died at age 55 on Nov. 3, 2022, at her house in Clarkston, Ga.
“Due to their fierce, daring and unapologetic management, individuals with disabilities have the flexibility and freedom to reside independently, command respect as a member of the human race and are policymakers who’ve superior our rights to entry socially, economically and academically,” mentioned Wiley. “Their tenacity has emboldened my neighborhood to proceed to hold the mantle for parity, fairness and justice. As Lois Curtis as soon as acknowledged, ‘I increase my voice excessive’ and that’s what we’re doing at the moment, elevating our voices and moving into good hassle.”
Present Day Incapacity Advocates
Incapacity advocates of at the moment resembling Heather Watkins and Ola Ojewumi proceed to construct on the legacies of Lomax and Curtis. Watkins works to spotlight the experiences of girls of coloration with disabilities through her writing and activism. Ojewumi, being a most cancers survivor and organ transplant recipient, champions healthcare rights and uplifts disabled voices within the media.
Haben Girma, one other main incapacity advocate of at the moment, was born with a progressive situation that left her deaf and with only one p.c of her eyesight. As a first-generation immigrant, she grew to become the primary deaf and blind graduate of Harvard Legislation Faculty. At the moment, she is an award-winning writer, advocate and keynote speaker.
“What we will be taught from Brad Lomax and Lois Curtis is the flexibility to embrace those that aren’t disabled,” mentioned Wiley. “Whereas there are some members of society which have a one-dimensional or discriminatory notion of individuals with disabilities—it’s not everybody. We as individuals with disabilities have gotten to step out of our consolation zone and embrace others totally different from [us].”
Wiley additionally encourages individuals with disabilities to shift the narrative.
“Enable your genuine, audacious, unapologetic self to exude and shine,” mentioned Wiley. “Be snug with who you’re and present up and present out.”
The submit Black incapacity advocates who helped form civil rights appeared first on AFRO American Newspapers.