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REVEL IN THE LIGHT - VIDEO


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REVEL IN THE LIGHT:
The Story of Rebecca Beayni

Rebecca’s gentle spirit bursts in
and through the seams of her
physical disability. She is a woman whose openness to life touches and stirs those in the world around her; a testament to love and family and the amazing mystery of hope.


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SIMILAR CASE, VASTLY DIFFERENT APPOACHES

Jan 20, 2007

Helen Henderson, Life Section, Toronto Star

At age 24, Rebecca Beayni has three formal jobs and a lifetime commission to expand hearts and minds.
One day a week, she listens to Grade 1 students at her old elementary school practise reading aloud. Another day she works as a facilitator at the Royal Ontario Museum, helping visitors to a hands-on bio-diversity exhibit discover things they might otherwise not notice.
Then there's the Mustard Seed drop-in centre, where she helps bring hope to those feeling vulnerable and dispossessed.
I wrote about Beayni two years ago when she and her mother Susan went to United Nations headquarters in New York to present a submission to the group working on an international human rights treaty for people with disabilities.
Beayni does not communicate verbally. She is physically and intellectually disabled and as a baby was given a lifetime prognosis very similar to the American 9-year-old known to the world only as Ashley.
As discussed in this column last week, Ashley, who was born with a severe type of brain damage, has made headlines around the world. When she was 6, her parents decided their daughter would "be a lot more physically comfortable free of menstrual cramps, free of the discomfort associated with large and fully developed breasts, and with a smaller, lighter body that is better suited to constant lying down and is easier to be moved around."
After getting approval from the ethics committee of the Seattle Children's hospital, they went ahead with what they call "the Ashley treatment" for their little "pillow angel." It's all described on their website: http://ashleytreatment.spaces.live.com/blog/.
Over the next 2 1/2 years, doctors in Seattle removed Ashley's womb, extracted the tiny knots of tissue that would otherwise grow into breasts, took out her appendix and started giving her large doses of estrogen to curtail her growth.
The parents of children with disabilities walk a very special path in life. It is one too often made more difficult by a society that shuns both their children and their needs.
Ashley's parents chose a medical intervention to do what they felt will be best for their daughter. Rebecca Beayni's parents chose a different route.
Beayni has a community of people who care for and about her. They form a circle of care that will be constant throughout her life. The members of the circle may change and shift roles, but the circle will always be there, whether or not her parents are capable of playing a lead role.
Her mother feels keenly what her daughter is up against.
"Rebecca has lived her whole life knowing her limitations," Susan Beayni told members of the family's church last year.
"She has encountered frustration and pain. She knows what it means to be gripped by fear. She knows what it feels like to be the source of fear for people who look at her and see someone less than human."
But as mother and daughter wrote in their presentation to he United Nations: "Her success in overcoming obstacles is mainly due to the deep and committed relationships she has developed with family, friends and her support circle, as well as collaboration with community groups that she comes in contact with regularly such as the church, schools and other venues.
"Her support circle, who have been meeting regularly for the past 13 years, help interpret her goals and dreams. Rebecca does not speak, so those around her ensure that she has many other ways to express her feelings and desires. It is imperative that she have long-term relationships, both paid and unpaid, who can help build the capacity of the community to welcome her gifts."
And what are Beayni's gifts?
"Rebecca forces people to slow down to communicate with her and this is a gift to the world: slowing people down to the point where they have to listen to those, otherwise ignored, voices," her mother pointed out to the UN.
"This guides us in the direction of a good society; which is measured by how people treat, listen deeply to, empathize and interact with its most vulnerable members.
"...Rebecca's school and later work experience is a testament to how one person can change the entire culture that exists around them. Teachers, administrators, fellow students, and co-workers always say that Rebecca's mere presence changes the very fabric of their relationships, making them more collaborative, more compassionate, and more intuitive to strategies that advantage all persons."
The Beayni family is part of the Ubuntu Initiative (ubuntu.org), a group of people with developmental disabilities along with their families and friends. Ubuntu is a Zulu word meaning: "My humanity is inextricably bound up in your humanity." The group hopes to create "a different more hopeful future, rooted in gentleness, interdependence and deep friendship."

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Write: Helen Henderson, Life Section, Toronto Star, One Yonge St., Toronto, Ont. M5E 1E6. Email: hhenderson@thestar.ca

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