Archive for July, 2007

educational achievement

Jul 8th, 2007 by mamajuliana an Orthodox Christian woman and mother, concerning her daughter, in her blog ABIDE AND ENDEAVOR: Oops! Forgot to brag!)

girl1.jpg I almost forgot to brag about our daughter. Recently she was tested for entering into a vocational training program. (She wants to take the Food Service/Culinary Arts Program at our local vocational/technical school.)

Well, how about this: She tested far above their expectations!!! This is a big deal for us! We took our daughter out of the school system because they had her in a Life Skills Curriculum, and we knew that she could do so much more! We stressed phonics and reading as well as other academic skills in our homeschool. Our daughter learned along side of her ‘normal’ brother. Sure, there were some things that were difficult for her, but she still learned

…another homeschooled student success story!

She’ll be in a 4 year program and she’ll graduate when she is 21. That sounds far away to her, but to mama it is a twinkle of an eye!

http://stjuliana.wordpress.com/author/stjuliana/

education advocacy

Here are two websites that would be most helpful for parents of children with disabilities as they enter the U.S. educational system:  http://www.familyvoices.org/  Family Voices in Your StateClick on map to access your state http://www.uni.edu/coe/inclusion/

Metropolitan Anthony

Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh, †August 4, 2003 Metropolitan Anthony

A Homily preached on Sunday, August 14, 1983:

We that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak

Click on:  http://www.metropolit-anthony.orc.ru/eng/eng_126.htm

from the Orthodox Peace Fellowship email list: http://lists.earlham.edu/mailman/listinfo/opf-l

Orthodox Peace Fellowship website: http://www.incommunion.org/

prophets

Wolf Wolfensberger, in The Theological Voice of Wolf Wolfensberger, writes, “Mentally retarded people play a uniquely prophetic role in this age.” Wolfensberger pioneered normalization and social role valorization in the field of mental retardation. He feels this age has made an idol of technology, and that it is not only out of control, but now has the potential to destroy the human race in numerous ways. He writes, “The systems we are creating escape the human capacity of management.” He sees it as another version of the Tower of Babel, one “God is about to confront.” God will do this through the simplicity and gentleness of mentally retarded people, whose lives are the very antithesis of the idol of progress. He tells some astonishing stories which he sees as prophetic, such as the very severely retarded man, who, beyond his level of capability, said, “This is my body.” “God has chosen the foolish things of the world [. . .] to bring to nothing the things that are” (1 Cor. 1:27-28). (from St John Chrysostom and the Socialization of Persons with Developmental Disability: Patristic Inspiration for Contemporary Application” by William Gall)

MORE OF WOLFENSBERGER’S INSIGHTS ON THE PROPHETIC MESSAGE GIVEN BY PERSONS WITH COGNITIVE DISABILITIES , from “Disabled Christianity” a blog by Jeff McNair, Special Ed professor at Cal Baptist University (Aug. 23, 2005):

So I asked myself, what are the prophetic signs which appear to be unique or very special to our day, which are very different from what they have been at other times. . . Where and how is the Spirit active today in a way that is different from the way it may have been in other eras?
As I posed these questions to myself over the past few years, I began to read both the signs of dysfunctionality and of prophecy in a different and clearer fashion, and I read one very, very powerful prophetic message, coming from mentally retarded people. For instance, I considered that it should not be unexpected if divine messages about the present patterning of offenses should come from people who, in their roles and identities, are exactly the opposite of what our era idolotrates. Who and what is the opposite? The opposite is a person who is not intellectual, not scientific, not technological, and not academic; who does simple instead of complex things; who cannot cope with complexity, and technology which passes him by; and who, possibly, is despised for lack of modernity and intellectuality. Is that not the retarded persons of our age?
But if it is, is there any evidence that God has thrust retarded people into a prophetic role? I submit to you that there is indeed . . .

The article goes on to list 10 signs to substantiate the possibility that persons with cognitive disability are indeed carrying a prophetic message.

-Mentally Retarded Persons are Becoming Much More Public and Visible
-Retarded People are Becoming Internationally Known
-Non-Handicapped and Handicapped Persons are Sharing Their Lives, Often Living Together
-Retarded Persons are Gentling Others
-The Prophetic Manifestation of the Presence of God via Retarded People
-Retarded People Speaking in Tongues
-Retarded People may Withstand Their Culture
-Retarded People May Be Parodying Intellectualism
-The Dance of Spiritual Joy
-Retarded People Are Beginning to Be Persecuted and Martyred

(The “speaking in tongues” refers to instances when persons with cognitive disability who usually speak very little and even then very unclearly say something very clearly that is profound, such as “This is my Body.” The martyrdom referred to is the high percentage of unborn children found to have disabilities that are aborted. Some of these prophetic signs remain unclear to me. A more thorough re-reading Wolf Wolfensberger would probably help clear some of them up.)
From my prior reading of the book I do remember that many of these impressions Wolf received that people with developmental disability are prophetic to our age came from experiences with L’Arche community gatherings. L’Arche is a worldwide community, Roman Catholic in origin but now encompassing many other kinds of Christians (including a few Orthodox Christians) in which people without developmental disabilities share their lives with those with developmental disabilities- living together.
This is not an Orthodox mission, and there are no Orthodox missions like it that I know of , though in the monastic vision of St. Basil the Great, which included service to needy people, there would be a place for something like it. Until it happens, in the meantime, the challenge remains to incorporate the gifts of people with disabilites- prophetic or otherwise- into our parish families.
The Theological Voice of Wolf Wolfensberger, by William C. Gaventa & David L. Coulter: http://books.google.com/books?id=nOBfIDfVZHMC&dq=%22wolf+wolfensberger%22&printsec=frontcover&source=web&ots=fL4OIok_-K&sig=aW2BBPdGGiI5JC4cJooe9JvERuM#PPP1,M1

Steve and Tony

A remarkable father-son team came to St. John Chrysostom Antiochian Orthodox Church on July 15, 2007. The father helped the son, profoundly disabled,  stand for Orthros. Father Peter communed them with the body and blood of Christ first, walking to the back where Tony sat in his wheelchair. During coffee hour, the father, Steve, shared some of their remarkable story. Here is their website: http://www.steveandtony.net/index.html

steve and tony Let us hear from the Lord concerning the many ways we can help them.

still more from Rus

ST. ANASTASIA’S CONVENT OF THE EPIPHANY”S ORPHANAGE FOR GIRLS IN KOSTROMA

Founded in 1426, our ancient monastery has recently marked its 570th anniversary. From 1864 to 1917 it carried out enormous educational and social work in its orphanage for girls, alms-house, chemistry, hospital and other institutions. The convent was closed for 65 years after the 1917 Revolution. It was in March 1991, on the eve of the Day of the Fyodorovsky Icon of the Mother of God, that the convent was opened. It was like a miracle. . . . for the rest, click: http://www.rondtb.msk.ru/info/en/children_en.htm#3

by Sister Gracheva, Teacher at the orphanage

from http://www.rondtb.msk.ru/info/en/monast_en.htm

More from Moscow

the center

THE CENTER FOR THERAPEUTIC PEDAGOGY

by Ms. I. Larikova, Deputy Director

to access: http://www.rondtb.msk.ru/info/en/children_en.htm#3

from http://www.rondtb.msk.ru/info/en/children_en.htm

A Ministry in Moscow

The Life-Giving Source Orthodox Center at Tsaritsyno in Moscow takes charge of orphans with serious mental and somatic disabilities who have been abandoned by their parents and put at Boarding School No. 8 run by the Moscow Social Protection Committee. The center, together with the boarding-school, the Down’s Syndrome Association and parishioners of the Church of Our Lady the Life-Giving Source and other parishes in Moscow, has established a special nursing ward for these children at the boarding school and opened a special bank account for their support.

for more, click on: http://www.rondtb.msk.ru/info/en/children_en.htm#2

This comes from the Moscow Patriarchate Roundtable (Diaconia: Assisting disabled children) http://www.rondtb.msk.ru/info/en/info_en.htm (in the RESOURCES: Orthodox Writings)

early intervention

Developmental Delays - Who We Are These are websites for parents with very young children whom they suspect may have disabilities. Their focus is diagnosis and care for the child and providing the parents tools to cope.

1. First Signs http://www.firstsigns.org/ From the website: CONCERNS ABOUT A CHILD: MAKING OBSERVATIONS (to access, click: http://www.firstsigns.org/concerns/index.htm

2. Zero to Three http://www.zerotothree.org/site/PageServer?pagename=homepage

So if you know of someone in your parish or neighborhood who have expressed concerns about their child, or if you have your own concerns, these websites are a resource. They are also listed in this website, Arms Open Wide, in the Resources page under “Other Websites.”


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