Friday, October 28, 2016

Dance & Disability Discourse & Panel-October 15th, 2016

So many issues and topics were brought up in this panel and this was the first one I’ve been involved in related to dance and disabilities although I must stress…Deafness is not a disability.  We view ourselves as a culture and often times in lingo between feeling foreign in our own home country.

One of the topics we heavily discussed is how in schools children with different disabilities are grouped together in special needs classes when many of them need different kinds of attention and generally don’t belong.  There’s a stigma of teachers and other adults not wanting to deal with them because they require more time and this is apparent ableism happening everyday in those classrooms.  We need to stop this segregation and implement full inclusion and full access for everyone.  The question most people have is how?  The answer…ask those with disabilities what you can do to make it for accessible for them and implement that along with educate others about this implementation.  Education and advocacy are the key here.  Not sure where to start?  Just ask or do your own research.

Honestly I did not speak much at the panel, I already am a “think before I speak” individual and then by the time I plan to contribute something someone else has already said it.  It was a “popcorn” style panel meaning people can jump in with their opinion anytime someone else has finished and this is difficult for Deaf individuals because by the time the interpreter is finished interpreting one person’s input another person has already started with theirs.  Mr Antoine Hunter shared some very good points one being that we need to revamp our books in education.  Currently they are written by “experts” who are not actual experts in that field.  Why are there hearing individuals writing about Deaf culture?  Why are there white researchers writing about African American history?  The other issue is that many qualified individuals from minority groups do not get the chance to have their articles or books published due to lack of opportunity or funds.

However while we were talking about inclusion, I threw in that while we must try to stop segregation in schools and education we also must attack segregation from the top.  There is too much idolism in our society, there is only space for ONE African American Ballerina, ONE Latino Artist, ONE strong Mexican leader, ONE Deaf dancer…No!!  There are several other individuals who are doing just as much or more that are not being recognized.  It’s as if the American culture treats us as a checklist…okay we have one black person, one Mexican, one with a disability so we’ve got our diversity handled and no one can say we are not diverse…This mindset needs to change and it can only start with us.  We have to step up as leaders and tear this mindset down to rebuild it the right way.  This means putting ourselves out there, writing articles about our work or the work of others we feel should be recognized, make films and documentaries, be active in social media.  What are some other ways we can tear this mindset down?

Then after the panel was finished someone asked me about Deaf institute and inclusion in education.  I wish they asked this during the panel as of course I jumped at the opportunity to educate about Deaf culture and needs in education and would love for the other panelist to hear about this.  This is a completely different ballgame.  Deaf institute education wants to preserve our own language and culture and its important we do so and should not apply to full inclusion principles with Hearing schools.  Not to mention there are generations of Deaf family who want to keep their traditions and roots alive through institute.  It will naturally evolve over time.  If we are talking about the mainstream, we definitely should implement full inclusion here in the presentation of having an instructor teach fully in ASL while the students are mixed Hearing and Deaf.  This has proven to be very successful and if you are wondering how the hearing children will learn if they don’t know ASL…they will learn.  Children are fast learners and highly adaptable to learning multiple languages at a young age.  This is the same concept of speaking Spanish at home and learning in English at school.  However if you try to force this on Deaf students, it is not as successful.  It makes more sense for hearing to learn ASL than for Deaf to learn how to hear and speak.  Europeans learn 4-5 languages in school easily, should Americans continue to be limited to only one language?  This serves as a barrier in disguise of a privilege.






#Hearingprivilege

#hearingprivilege is when ASL interpreters fees are higher than the Deaf dancer fees in a performance
-Zahna Simon #zahnasimon

#hearingprivilege is when you expect the Deaf client to voice for themselves
-Zahna Simon #zahnasimon

#hearingprivilege is when you don't cringe or get disappointed when restaurants and bars dim the lights as it becomes evening/nighttime
-Zahna Simon #zahnasimon

#Hearingprivilege is when you are not mistaken for being hearing or hard of hearing when you naturally understand hearing people better than most and feel compelled and happy to provide access to other Deaf individuals by interpreting including making sure their voices are being interpreted in the way they want by other ASL interpreters or taking over for regular ASL interpreters because they are overbooked by hearing organizations who don't understand and being completely exhausted and wiped out during the process and at the end of it needing lots of recovery time and/or caffeine
-Zahna Simon #zahnasimon #deafinterpreter

#Hearingprivilege is when you can hear the difference between "Z" and "D" so you know when someone is verbally pronouncing your unusual unique name correctly and them misunderstanding your name because it's hard to pronounce "Z" sound as a Deaf person even after several years of speech therapy
-Zahna Simon #zahnasimon

#Hearingprivilege When you don't have a vicious vibrator alarm right under your head or one that "earthquakes" the entire bed just to wake up
-Zahna Simon #zahnasimon

#hearingprivilege When it's no problem or disrespect when they say follow the music, move here or do that move when you hear this sound or they say this word during the dance rehearsal/performance
-Zahna Simon #zahnasimon

#hearingprivilege is when you are in the bathroom and don't have to worry about someone coming in the bathroom after they knocked or waiting forever to use the bathroom thinking someone is in it because the door is closed and/or the light is on and then turns out no one is in there
-Zahna Simon #zahnasimon

Monday, October 10, 2016

Ableism

The biggest adversity in living with a disability or a difference from the majority is not in overcoming the disability itself but rather in overcoming the ableism and any "ism"--others derogatory and ignorant perspective of you and your culture.

I left part of my heart in San Diego


https://www.facebook.com/zahna.simon/videos/10157916887690179/

Image description: Caucasian woman with long blonde hair down and light blue/white faded T-shirt smiling and signing


Hello hello hello, Good morning. Wow Urban Jazz Dance Company just flew to San Diego Saturday Oct 8th for San Diego Deaf Festival. Three of us Deaf dancers flew to perform there. Really wow we were thrilled and had a wonderful beautiful time. All the people…wonderful to see. everyone again and they’re so welcoming for us. Thank you, really appreciate it. I always explain to Antoine Hunter my director and to dancer Leah Mendelson, always tell them I used to live San Diego 7 and a half years. I miss all you wonderful amazing people, I miss all of you and you’re beautiful. They saw for themselves. Really heart touched but one thing is wish we had more time with you all. I saw many of you…familiar faces and know that I want to chat, catch up, hug and say hi. Catch up on whats going on in your life and time ran out. I caught up with some people thank you, it was really good to see you. Yes Hi Victor, yea I miss you all too. Thank you San Diego Deaf Festival, thank you San Diego community for having us. Urban Jazz Dance Company really enjoyed ourselves and we want to come back! So thank you. Post your videos, post your pictures on FB. If you enjoyed having us there post reviews on my group page, on Antoine hunter fan page…post post post. Tag and let the world know three of us Deaf dancers came and gave an awesome show. That! Interesting we already booked another show October 8th, here in Oakland that why the three of us had dash to fly back to Oakland. So really we were really lucky…Me I just knew and followed my instincts that we need to go to San Diego…we had to! So I worked it all out perfectly for for to go. That’s why we have to leave fast. I understand not enough time but we will come back. So we flew back and Antoine Hunter performed for Raks Africa Bellydance. Beautiful wonderful show then yesterday Sunday, class we always have class every Sunday morning. Company class and also open to public for anyone to come always. My favorite on Sunday Mornings that. Also yesterday Antoine Hunter taught a master class at Lines studio an advanced professional high prestigious studio in SF. High honor and high respect wow. That’s a typical weekend for us. We are always going to several different places and keeping busy with different performances, groups and organizations. We truly heartfully enjoyed our recent weekend so thank you. Feel free to text and contact me and us. We love to keep in touch. Now Monday back to work at my day job here in SF. Not sure if you all know but I have 4 jobs…really I LOVE it. I’m happy and I love it…busy wow yes but always inspired with following my passion, my goals and vision. So have a wonderful Monday beautiful morning! Looking forward to seeing all of you again…I don’t when and I don’t know how but I know it will happen. Okay love you all. Bye