BECOMING A DISABLED-FRIENDLY CHURCH
KUDOS TO ALL of you who wrote in recently to PET+BLOGSPOT to express your views about how several disabled Members of PETPOSITIVE and I were treated when we went to watch a choir performance in St Andrew's Church in Jalan Raja Chulan in Kuala Lumpur recently.
Were they preoccupied, shy or just didn't know how to talk to disabled persons like some people we've encountered?
Here now is PET+BLOGSPOT'S review of the disabled friendliness at St Andrew's.
VERDICT: NOT GOOD AT ALL.
- The two disabled-friendly car parks are at the wrong place. It should be next to the entrance and not on slopes where the handicapped can fall and seriously injure themselves.
- Able-bodied parishioners should NEVER park in them even when it is unused. The elders will obviously have to give stronger sermons to inculcate a more considerate attitude among the members. But who educates the elders? For those in doubt, just ask the question: What would Jesus do in such a situation?
- The ramp at the church's entrance is really a joke as well as an insult to disabled people. It is for "goods" instead of people. A check with the Internet will produce the right specifications. PETPOSITIVE will be more than delighted to help St Andrew's with advice on how to build proper ramps.
- The entrance into the church proper needs to be leveled for wheelchairs.
- St Andrew's should build disabled friendly restrooms asap. It should have enough room for a wheelchair to turn around.
PET+BLOGSPOT
2 comments:
I think some of the comments are uncalled for. Although St Andrew's is not as disabled friendly as you wish it to be, some of the people there have gone out of their way to provide whatever assistance required during the concert. Instead of giving constructive criticism, this issue has become so ugly and smacks of someone just out trying to find fault and waiting for others to fail. I'll leave that to Him to be the judge.
Let's be clear of one thing: St Andrew's is NOT disabled-friendly at all.
All one needs to do is to confirm this against the stipulated requirements by our Building By-Laws and our Government-operated SIRIM. Or compare this with Presbyterian churches in America and other countries around the world.
How overseas churches have catered for the needs of the disabled and elderly puts many of our local churches to shame!
Making churches disabled-friendly is not an option. It's a baptismal and human right.
It's funny how you think the church members have done their best.
Shouldn't it be the receivers who are the right persons to comment on how they were treated?
The only UGLY issue about the whole affair is that we are dealing with a church here in which by all counts appears to be frankly not bothered about the needs of disabled people in their parish.
And that is something for us all to feel embarrassed about - not defensive.
Let's hope that on Judgement Day, none of us will need ask Him: "Lord, when did we see you in a wheelchair in our church?"
From someone who's been using a wheelchair for 37 years.
Pray that YOU won't end up using one too for disability respects no one.
And we still don't know what He has planned for us all.
Merry Xmas!
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