The sight of a grown woman lying on the floor, her wrist pinned down by the foot of someone who was supposed to be caring for her was one of the more shocking images that emerged from Winterbourne View, the private hospital which was home to 44 people with learning disabilities until its closure in May 2011. While it seems that attitudes are changing for the better with regards to people with physical disabilities, we are just about to celebrate the sporting achievements of elite Paralympians for example. It's arguable that despite one or two pioneering characters in television dramas, people with learning disabilities are largely, as was commented in the case of Winterbourne View, out of sight, out of mind. With the exception of some innovative individuals, in general, it would require a revolution in social attitudes to stop thinking of adults with learning disabilities as people simply to be looked after or rescued in some way, to stop thinking like this, and start talking about listening to, learning from, taking a lead from adults with learning disabilities. For a short while some years ago I lived in a L'Arche community, www.larche.org.uk, a movement started by the French Canadian Jean Vanier.
一个成年女子躺在地板上,她的手腕被一个本应该照顾她的人的脚压住了,这是出现在Winterbourne View的令人震惊的场景,Winterbourne View是一间私人医院,知道2011年5月关闭时,它是44个认识自己残疾问题的人的家。当人们对残疾人的态度似乎有所好转时,举个例子说,我们正准备庆祝残疾人远动员精英的运动成绩。尽管电视剧上常有青少年的一两个性格特点,但大部分的残疾人能意识到残障,这还是有待商榷,就像关于Winterbourne View的案子的评论里所说,眼不见,心不烦。与一些创新的个人外,在一般情况下,它需要在社会观念的革命,停止与学习障碍的人根本要照顾或以某种方式获救的成年人的思维 - 停止喜欢思考,并开始谈论倾听,学习,率先从成人学习障碍。很短,而若干年前,我住在L'ARCHE社区(www.larche.org.uk)的;运动开始由法国加拿大吉恩凡尼尔。
L'Arche, meaning Arc, seeks to be a place where assistants like me and core members who have a learning disability live together, go to work, cook for each other, care for one another, build a home. The ethos of L'Arche communities which are now all over the world, is based on a Christian gospel which insists that each soul inhabiting each body, is a mysterious, precious and creative spirit that deserves a chance not just to be looked after but to flourish, contribute, defy, blaze a trail if they want to. Of course it was not an easy place to be at times. In relationships with people with learning disabilities, all the usual human moments of connection, argument or celebration take place without the assumptions that sustain human interaction otherwise. But the depth of this gift together with the challenge it brings is simultaneously thoroughly practical and almost too profound for words. Some of the jargon used in this area is telling. A ubiquitous term that of a carer, clearly a misnomer in the private hospital that has been in the news, but the word care comes from the Christian concept of caritas. Love that has a strong sense of justice, an attitude of honour and reciprocal respect. My experience in the L'Arche community taught me that the behaviour exhibited at Winterbourne View was not only cruel, it was blasphemous too. It is a core Christian principle that everyone without exception, has within them the intrinsic human dignity of one made in the image of God, what we saw in those pictures shames all of us, hopefully makes us angry, and gives us courage to state afresh that we will not let this happen again.