MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2008
Hero or Victim: Not the Only Choices
For about 15 years I lived next door to Jack Leonard, one of the
greatest men I've ever known. His essential greatness had nothing
to do with the fact that he was a quadriplegic. His disabling
injury -- sustained during a water skiing accident when he was 21 years
old -- came to magnify his greatness, and over the years he became the
object of extensive news media coverage, all of it positive.
Near the end of his life he was coaching baseball at Eckerd College,
teaching future major leaguers how to hit a curve ball from the vantage point of a nifty
motorized cart. My children and wife loved him, my dog Lance
loved him, and I loved him, even after he got me to try chewing
tobacco. He laughed when I turned green.
All this is a prologue to Jack Leonard's opinions about disability and
the news media. He had no complaints about the glowing profiles
of him that appeared in the newspaper year after year. But he
recognized a basic and vicious pattern: that you rarely see a
person in a wheelchair in the news who is not framed either as a hero
or a victim.
Jack once told me that he knew a lot of people in wheelchairs, and
many of them, he said, succumbed to lives of useless self-pity. "How come I never see any of them in the newspaper?" he asked.
If Jack was the "hero," then Brian Sterner is now our most celebrated
"victim." You probably know by now that
he was dumped from his
wheelchair onto a jail house floor by a deputy sheriff.
The video
of this event has made its way around the world, provoking the most passionate expressions of outrage from many quarters.
The deputy, a much admired co-worker by most accounts, is an
African-American woman named Charlette Marshall-Jones. Though her
race and gender are irrelevant to the specific events of the case, they
create an inversion of the normal pattern of police abuse, where the
abuser is usually white and male. In this case, the white male
Sterner, at times an advocate for people with disabilities, is the
victim.
Sterner wound up in jail after his specially equipped van was
stopped
for what appeared to be erratic driving. This aspect of the case
-- whether or not the driver was a danger to others -- has received
little
attention. I've seen no detailed analysis, for example, of the
circumstances in which it is considered safe for a quadriplegic driver
to be behind the wheel.
I'm sure that abuse of the disabled is a common and terrible
transgression, which should be punished in proportion to the crime. But the emotional response in this case -- even though the victim
proved able enough to fly to New York and appear on the Today Show --
suggests a kind of public sentimentality that cannot be good in the
long term for persons with disabilities.
I grew up in a Long Island village, called Albertson, home to a famous
place called Abilities, the groundbreaking school for the disabled
created by legendary advocate
Henry Viscardi. He devoted
his life to creating productive lives for the disabled, a place in the
world that did not require a choice between heroism and victimhood.
We in the news media, as always, are part of the problem. Until
we portray disabled citizens in ways that have nothing to do with their
disabilities, we will stand guilty of a great distorting cliche of
vision: that the disabled are too vulnerable to be criticized.
I remember a high school journalism student, a young woman, who
reported a story about a wheelchair bowling league in her
neighborhood. Her story celebrated their spirit, camaraderie and
courage. What she left out were the examples of their cranky
dismissal of the student journalists along with their crude sexual
remarks, including invitations for her to sit on their laps.
"Why didn't you put some of that in the story?" I asked her. I
don't remember her exact words, but she confessed a deeply felt
responsibility to portray these jerks in a positive light. Why? Because they sat in wheelchairs. And because embedded
in her psyche was the master narrative that the disabled are defined by
their courage to overcome obstacles.
I tried to teach her the lesson that Jack Leonard once taught me --
probably at a moment when I was emptying his urine from a bag he
carried: that people in wheelchairs are people first. That means that -- just like the rest of us -- they are blessed and damned by the contradictory burdens of the human condition. There is so much more to all of us than the
simple dichotomy of hero and victim.
[
Why do you think the news media portray persons with disabilities in the
narrow terms of victim or hero? Feel free to share stories you have seen, or reported on, that you think break out of this mold.]
Posted at 6:15:32 PM
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