Friday, September 15, 2023

Project Begun to Increase Accessibility of Baltimore-Area Houses of Worship

To help religious leaders make their houses of worship more welcoming to people with disabilities and their families, the Kennedy Krieger Institute’s Maryland Center for Developmental Disabilities just started its Faith Community Learning Collaborative. The object is to provide training to faith leaders and foster conversation between them and people with disabilities and their advocates about how to lower the barriers to participation in religious spaces.

Accessibility and inclusion is about more than installing a ramp for wheelchair users, said Mirian Ofonedu, director of training for the Kennedy Krieger center and creator of the project, adding that negative attitudes about disabilities and biases around disability that may exist in a congregation and ensuring that people with disabilities and their families know they can come to worship. “We are all called to know God, but more importantly, to experience God,” Ofonedu said. “How people with disabilities go about experiencing God is often socially stigmatized. An inclusive community, where people with disabilities fully participate, is a sign of God’s presence and love in that community.”

In summer 2022, two years after the Maryland Center for Developmental Disabilities launched the project, a survey of over 255 faith leaders and people with disabilities and their families - in collaboration with the Maryland Department of Health’s Office of Faith Based and Community Partnerships and the Faith Community Commission of the Governor’s Commission on Suicide Prevention - found that few people with disabilities or their family members held leadership positions in their faith communities and there was a need for training for faith leaders on how to connect with people who have disabilities in their congregations. People with disabilities and their families had experienced feeling isolated, rejected, and excluded by faith communities. When a child is diagnosed with a disability, their parents often turn to their faith leaders and communities for support and guidance, Ofonedu said. 

The Initiative's panel discussion covered several topics, including how to include people with developmental disabilities in services and the importance of asking whether accommodations are needed. It featured Rabbi Craig Axler of Temple Isaiah in Fulton and Matthew Plantz, a self-advocate and member of the Howard County Autism Society board of directors. To make the event more accessible to people who are hard of hearing, Baron hired an American Sign Language interpreter — something he hopes to do at future Chabad events, as well. The religious center has been offering shorter services that may be better for people who have challenges sitting through a three-hour service, such as those with ADHD or children with disabilities.

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Source: Read the September 11, 2023 Baltimore Sun article.