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ABC News: Controversial New Movement: Autistic and Proud

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[image: ABC News] <http://abcnews.go.com/>

Controversial New Movement: Autistic and Proud Activists Say Stop Looking

for a Cure and Accept Autistic People as They Are By DEBORAH ROBERTS,

MICHELLE MAJOR and JONANN BRADY

*June 10, 2008 —*

Ari Ne'eman and a Chew say they are the faces and voices of autism's

future.

They're part of a controversial group hoping to radically change the way

others look at autism. Their message: Stop the search for a cure and begin

celebrating autistic people for their differences. It's a message that has

some parents of autistic children bewildered and angry.

Ne'eman, 20, is the founder of the Autistic Self Advocacy Network, a

non-profit group aimed at advancing autism culture and advocating for

" neurodiverse " individuals.

" We believe that the autism spectrum and those on it, are important and

necessary parts of the wide diversity present in human genetics, " Ne-eman

says on the ASAN Web site.

Ne'eman was diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, a less severe form of

autism, as a child.

" I think the others around me knew I was different from as early as I can

remember, " he told " Good Morning America. "

When Ne'eman says that looking for a cure for autism is the wrong approach

to take, he understands why some parents are upset -- especially those with

very low-functioning, non-communicative autistic children.

" I think that one of the key issues to remember is that anti-cure doesn't

mean anti-progress, " he said.

'Ransom' Ad Sparks Action

a Chew, a professor at St. 's College in New Jersey, is one of

the growing number of parents involved the movement.

When her son, Charlie, was diagnosed with severe autism, Chew said, " I was

completely in a gulf. I didn't believe it for months. "

Chew now believes that autism treatments and so-called cures are a waste of

time. She said she'd rather see Charlie, now 11, benefit from better support

services and education.

" My son is who he is. He's not going to change; he's always going to be

Charlie. And at the same time, I loved him just for what he was, " Chew said.

Parents like Chew and autistic adults like Ne'eman joined forces several

months ago, after seeing an edgy new campaign to fight autism from the New

York University Child Study Center that implied children with autism are

held hostage by the disorder.

The NYU Child Study Center says the ads were about creating awareness, but

Ne'eman says that instead, the ads reinforce prejudices about people with

autism.

" Where does disability come from? It comes, in many respects, from a society

that doesn't provide for an education system that meets our needs. From

people who often discriminate or bully or even injure us, and from a society

that is largely intolerant, " Ne'eman said.

Ne'eman and his supporters protested so loudly, that the ads were cancelled

three weeks after they were released.

Wouldn't Change Diagnosis

Many parents of autistic children say that Ne'eman and his group's views

don't reflect their reality and should essentially be ignored.

Lenny Shaffer, a writer with an autistic son, says of the movement, " You're

a handful of noisy people who get a lot of media attention, but you don't

represent a broad swath of the autism community. "

Ne'eman believes history is on his side.

" I can't think of the civil rights movement throughout history that hasn't

been faced with resistance and misunderstanding on the part of its

detractors, " he said.

And the young activist says if he could go back and change his Asperger's

diagnosis, he wouldn't.

" If there was a magic pill that would make me neurologically typical,

normal, I wouldn't take it, " Ne'eman said.

But a number of experts say his path might not be the answer for many others

dealing with autism.

" You have to remember that this is a spectrum and you've got people who are

quite high functioning and then you've got people who can't even begin to

function and for whom we would love to have a cure to at least get them to a

point where they would be able to function as well as the people in this

movement, " said Dr. Insel, from the National Institute of Mental

Health.

But a Chew also said she wouldn't change her severely autistic son

Charlie if she could.

" We really try and understand him on his own terms, " she said.

That is her advice for parents dealing with a child's autism diagnosis and

feeling hopeless.

" Acceptance, to me, is the beginning of hope, " Chew said. " I look at my son,

even on the days, the most terrible, terrible days. I still knew that I love

my son. That he was with us, and that he would be with us, and that the hope

was really in him. "

Copyright © 2008 ABC News Internet Ventures

--

Ari Ne'eman

President

The Autistic Self Advocacy Network

1101 15th Street, NW Suite 1212

Washington, DC 20005

http://www.autisticadvocacy.org

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