Wednesday, December 14, 2022

Institutions grab headlines again

Beit Bar Dror in the Israeli news (December 9, 2022)
Naama Lerner, our local unsung hero ("A woman of valor" December 11, 2022) followed up her one-person protest with the update below. 

It's so shocking it sounds scripted. But trust me, Naama doesn't do that. (The translation from the Hebrew source on Facebook is mine.)
On Friday morning a news report was published about food poisoning at the Bar Dror institution in Kfar Saba. Thirty-six out of the one hundred residents came down with diarrhea, and some of them even had high fevers.

Does this news sound painfully familiar to you? If so, it's because a few months ago a very similar article was published about the Beit Dafna Institute. There it ended with the death of three residents. This time, miraculously, no one paid with his life.

But is this incident any less serious because of that?

A side anecdote. As you remember, last week private institutions held a demonstration in front of the Ministry of Welfare, demanding additional money and standards. Facing them the Movement for Independence placed signs intended to remind the institution managers of the incidents of neglect, abuse and death that occurred in the last year in these institutions, and of their audacity in demanding money and services.

At some point, some of the protesters began to cross the road and attempt to have a dialogue about what was written on the signs. One of the protesters introduced herself as an employee of the Bar Dror Mossad. She was angry that the signs lumped together all the institutions, and claimed that Bar Dror should not be included with the institutions where residents died due to neglect or abuse, since no untoward events had occurred there and it is exemplary..

"Our facility is different," she claimed. "It operates in an exemplary manner".

Less than a week has passed, and the news about food poisoning at the Bar Dror institution has been published. Need another explanation about the inclusion of all institutions under the same umbrella? Who is next in line?"
And now "hot off the press", an update on that update:
Sanitary deficiencies were discovered at the Bar Dror institution, a hostel for people with special needs, in Kfar Saba. The Ministry of Health today (Wednesday) issued an instruction to close the kitchen at the institution after tests of food samples revealed low levels of Clostridium bacteria and E.coli bacteria. Although these levels do not cause illness, they do indicate poor sanitary conduct of the institution." [Source: Walla (Hebrew)]
It doesn't seem like this institution will be excluded from the inclusive list of "bad entities" anytime soon.

And while we are agreeing on that generalization, note that Doron Almog's "babies" (ADI Negev and ADI Jerusalem) are two more such private, large, institutions enclosing people with disabilities from infancy to middle age. 

But that fact is carefully swept under the carpet. Instead, Almog, now head of the Jewish Agency is touted as a champion of the rights of people with disabilities. 

Here is but one example of many such distortions. Since he became chairman of the Jewish Agency, Almog has been promoting a policy of opening up the world of aliyah to all types of Jews in the Diaspora, including those will special needs. As the Jerusalem Post recently wrote: 
This topic is especially close to his heart, as the founder and chairman of the rehabilitation village "ADI Negev-Nachalat Eran" which has become a model for integrating people with disabilities. 

Which brings to mind Abraham Lincoln's words: “You can fool some of the people all the time; you can fool all the people some of the time; but, you can't fool all the people all the time.” 

Some of us are not fooled about Doron Almog.

Sunday, December 11, 2022

A woman of valor

There are surely many unsung heroes among disabilities activists all over the world.
 
We are blessed with one in Israel, Adv Naama Lerner of Hatnuah L'atzmaut (The Movement for Independence): tireless, brave, determined, idealistic, compassionate, intelligent and religious - obviously a rare mix of traits. 

While she's often interviewed by journalists, and has been an activist for decades, she never toots her own horn. Which probably explains her relative anonymity.

Last week Naama exhibited unusual pluck which earned her a few kudos among activists. One person who acknowledged this was former Knesset member, Stav Shaffir. I've mentioned her here before because she organized the surprise visits paid by activists to closed institutions for people with disabilities in December 2018 in which I took part ["Making history: After the raid"].

She paired-up activists with Knesset members to enable us to gain entry to these normally locked institutions. (Note: the institutions are obligated to open their doors only to Knesset members.)

Naama Lerner protests outside Israel's
Ministry of Welfare, December 5, 2022 [Source]
Here - in my translation from the source Hebrew - is what Stav wrote about Naama on her Facebook page this past week:
I want you to meet a very brave woman: Naama Lerner. Yesterday she stood alone opposite the Ministry of Welfare in protest against the private companies that make millions at the expense of people with special needs. 
These companies receive a budget from the state in order to take care of them - but instead of paying a fair wage to the caregivers, they put the money in the management's pocket, and then come asking for more. 
The therapists get discouraged and are replaced, are usually untrained, and the treatment of a person with special needs - is accordingly. 
This year, residents in such institutions died due to food poisoning and in other unknown circumstances.
Naama stood there in front of the office alone, but she is really not alone: she stands on behalf of tens of thousands with special needs. On behalf of families who lost their children (physically or mentally) to institutions that did not treat them properly. 
I learned about her activities in depth when, as a Knesset member, I began conducting surprise visits to these institutions as a member of the Knesset - and I became a fan of her way, of her depth and endless devotion.
This year she founded the Movement for Independence which aims to promote people with special needs to independence in the community, instead of closed institutions. This is a movement in the right direction, operating with almost no resources against huge companies that make billions from the state and maintaining a strong lobby in the government. 
Let's cheer and strengthen her. She deserves it and we all deserve it.

Sunday, December 4, 2022

It happened at the pool

That's us in the big pool
I am writing this post on International Day of Persons with Disabilities (IDPD). 

December 3 was first proclaimed as such in 1992 via United Nations General Assembly resolution 47/3. Its aim is to promote an understanding of disability issues and mobilize support for the dignity, rights and well-being of persons with disabilities.

Here in my own world, this past week provided a small reminder of the long journey that faces our society before it achieves those goals.

First, a bit of background.

The local, private, small and generously-heated pool we have enjoyed using weekly during these past two years has been officially shuttered. A child was injured on a broken pool tile, the parents threatened to sue the owners, and the latter's lawyer advised them to cease renting out the pool because of liability risks. Needless to say, they have heeded the advice.

Last week, we hadn't yet been notified of the permanent closure. So we were still hopeful that the small pool would reopen soon. We took Haya to the nearest public pool, a much larger facility where the water temperature is set at 29 degrees Celsius (84 in Fahrenheit terms) as compared with the 32 degree (90 F) of the private one. 

That may sound like a negligible difference. But trust me, it isn't. When I swim laps in that same water, it's fine. 

But as her hydro-therapist and standing mostly-still in the pool for Haya's session, I freeze.

As soon as we were notified about the small pool's demise I ordered a wetsuit online. Here's hoping it arrives in time for next week's session.

But I digress.

A few days ago, on arriving at the public pool, we were greeted with a shock. I mentioned to the guard at the entrance that since my daughter is wheelchair-bound I will swipe my chip (a digital entry ticket with stored value - not uncommon here) for her upstairs and then wheel her in via the street-level entrance. 

"Your daughter is in a wheelchair?" the guard asked. When I concurred, she told me that Haya couldn't enter and that I must go speak to the secretary.
 
The secretary explained that the office had "received complaints" about Haya's presence in the pool because she is so severely disabled.

"You need to bring her to a therapy pool, not here".

While my blood reached boiling point and I was contemplating a response, she made a phone call. After hanging up, she did a complete 180.

"It's fine. There's no problem. You can bring your daughter in."

What had really happened is anyone's guess. But regarding the "complainants", the mystery was soon solved.

As the three of us - Haya's carer, my husband and I - brought Haya in to the pool area, a woman in the water addressed the lifeguard with the sort of anti-disabled venom I'd presumed had exited long ago.

"You can't allow her in!" the woman told him, carefully ignoring us. "She doesn't have authorization to use the pool! It's your responsibility to keep her out!"

When the kind lifeguard defended Haya, the woman and her buddy left the pool in a fury.

The need for an International Day of Person's with Disabilities is clearly an ongoing one so long as people with disabilities remain unwelcome and unwanted by vocal segments of society.