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Charleston Disability Advocates Take to the Streets In Opposition to MDA Telethon For the 16th Year.

Calling for an end to pity based fundraising tactics, an ad hoc group will be picketing and distributing handbills to protest the "Jerry Lewis" telethon for the
Muscular Dystrophy Association on Labor Day morning. The group will gather at approximately 10 AM at King and Market Streets.
noLewisPity.gif
noLewisPity.gif




Charleston Disability Advocates Take to the Streets In Opposition

to MDA Telethon For the 16th Year.


Calling for an end to pity based fundraising tactics, an ad hoc group will be
picketing and distributing handbills to protest the "Jerry Lewis" telethon for the
Muscular Dystrophy Association on Labor Day morning. The group will be in the area
of King, Meeting, and Market Streets downtown. They will gather at approximately 10
AM and be available for interviews at 11:00 AM on September 4.

"We don't want pity," says Harriet McBryde Johnson, protest organizer who has one
of the neuromuscular disabilities covered by MDA. "Pity sets people apart, divides
the world between those labeled as helpless and their purported superiors. We see
disability as a natural part of the human continuum and believe that people with
and without disabilities can and should work together to solve problems that affect
us all. We want solidarity, not pity."

Among those who will attend in solidarity is Dorothy Scott, president of the
Charleston Branch, NAACP. "I believe, as Martin Luther King told us, an injustice
anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. When a nationally televised telethon
promotes false stereotypes, that affects everyone, because it makes our world less
fair."

Street protests were galvanized by a 1990 article by telethon host Jerry Lewis that
said, among other things, that if Lewis had muscular dystrophy he would have to
learn how to be "half a person." Lewis stood by his remarks and dished out more of
the same in the years that followed. MDA stood by him until 2001, when Lewis told a
CBS reporter, "You're a cripple in the wheelchair and you don't want pity? Stay in
your house!" MDA finally apologized for that one, but activists said it was too
little, too late. They say MDA should replace Lewis as telethon host, stop using
children on the air, and provide a full and independent accounting of the telethon
as a first step toward weaning itself from the fundraising vehicle.

For more information about the controversy, go to:
www.cripcommentary.com.

"On a personal level," Johnson says, "I am concerned that another generation of
children should not hear the telethon message unchallenged. MDA still describes
conditions like mine as 'killers of children.' I am now 49 years old, enjoying an
active life I never imagined possible." Johnson practices law in Charleston. She
has organized a local telethon protest for 16 consecutive years. "They are still
doing what they do," she says, "so I'll keep doing this."



Contact: Harriet McBryde Johnson, 843 722-0178
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