Resources for differently abled Friends

In the Octo­ber issue, fre­quent Friends Jour­nal con­trib­u­tor Carl Blu­men­thal inter­views Nic­hole Net­tle­ton, of New York Year­ly Meet­ing’s Dif­fer­ent Abled Friends and Allies (DAFA). Prob­a­bly my favorite part is when Nic­hole tells the sto­ry of look­ing for sup­port and con­tact­ing DAFA only to real­ize is was­n’t active any­more. Unde­terred, she took mat­ters into her own hands:

Since I saw it as a major need and I had a lot of expe­ri­ence with dis­abil­i­ties, I thought I could help by set­ting up week­ly Zoom meet­ings.… We start­ed about a year ago, and though I don’t know much about facil­i­tat­ing or the tech­nol­o­gy involved, I’m learn­ing as I go. Some­times you just have to start things when the need is there. You can’t be afraid that you don’t know enough or think you’re good enough to lead.

Carl has been work­ing on issues of phys­i­cal dis­abil­i­ties and men­tal health for decades and he’s been a friend­ly advo­cate to get us to pub­lish more on the sub­ject. Last year he wrote the land­mark Quak­ers and Men­tal Health­care for us. I cer­tain­ly learned a lot about Quak­er involve­ment in the field. This after­noon I inter­viewed Carl for our author chat YouTube series.

Posted October 25th, 2022 , in Quaker.

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