"Justin Dart, An Obituary"
June 22, 2002
By Fred Fay and Fred Pelka, written at Justin Dart's request.
Justin Dart, Jr., a leader of the
international disability rights movement and a renowned human rights
activist, died last night at his home in Washington D.C. Widely recognized
as "the father of the Americans with Disabilities Act" and "the godfather of the disability
rights movement," Dart had for the past several years struggled with
the complications of post-polio syndrome and congestive heart failure.
He was seventy-one years old. He is survived by his wife Yoshiko, their
extended family of foster children, his many friends and colleagues,
and millions of disability and human rights activists all over the world.
Dart was a leader in the disability
rights movement for three decades, and an advocate for the rights
of women, people of color, and gays and lesbians. The recipient of
five presidential appointments and numerous honors, including the
Hubert Humphrey Award of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights,
Dart was on the podium on the White House lawn when President George
H. Bush signed the ADA into law in July 1990. Dart was also a highly
successful entrepreneur, using his personal wealth to further his
human rights agenda by generously contributing to organizations,
candidates, and individuals, becoming what he called "a
little PAC for empowerment."
In 1998 Dart received the Presidential
Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian award. "Justin Dart," said
President Clinton in 1996, "in his own way has the most Olympian
spirit I believe I have ever come across."
Until the end, Dart remained dedicated
to his vision of a "revolution of empowerment." This would be, he said, "a revolution
that confronts and eliminates obsolete thoughts and systems, that focuses
the full power of science and free-enterprise democracy on the systematic
empowerment of every person to live his or her God-given potential." Dart
never hesitated to emphasize the assistance he received from those
working with him, most especially his wife of more than thirty years,
Yoshiko Saji. "She is," he often said, "quite simply the most magnificent
human being I have ever met."
Time and again Dart stressed that
his achievements were only possible with the help of hundreds of
activists, colleagues, and friends. "There is nothing I have achieved, and no addiction I have
overcome, without the love and support of specific individuals who
reached out to empower me... There is nothing I have accomplished without
reaching out to empower others." Dart protested the fact that he and
only three other disability activists were on the podium when President
Bush signed the ADA, believing that "hundreds of others should have
been there as well." After receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom,
Dart sent out replicas of the award to hundreds of disability rights
activists across the country, writing that, "this award belongs to you."
Justin Dart, Jr., was born on August
29, 1930, into a wealthy and prominent family. His grandfather was
the founder of the Walgreen Drugstore chain, his father a successful
business executive, his mother a matron of the American avant garde.
Dart would later describe how he became "a super loser" as a way of establishing his own identity
in this family of "super winners." He attended seven high schools,
not graduating from any of them, and broke Humphrey Bogart's all-time
record for the number of demerits earned by a student at elite Andover
prep. "People didn't like me. I didn't like myself."
Dart contracted polio in 1948. With
doctors saying he had less than three days to live, he was admitted
into the Seventh Day Adventist Medical University in Los Angeles. "For the first time
in my life I was surrounded by people who were openly expressing love
for each other, and for me, even though I was hostile to them. And
so I started smiling at people, and saying nice things to them. And
they responded, treating me even better. It felt so good!" Three days
turned into forty years, but Dart never forgot this lesson. Polio left
Dart a wheelchair user, but he never grieved about this. "I count the
good days in my life from the time I got polio. These beautiful people
not only saved my life, they made it worth saving."
Another turning point was Dart's discovery
in 1949 of the philosophy of Mohandas K. Gandhi. Dart defined Gandhi's
message as, "Find your own truth, and then live it." This theme too
would stay with him for the rest of his life. Dart attended the University
of Houston from 1951 to 1954, earning his bachelor's and master's
degrees in political science and history. He wanted to be a teacher,
but the university withheld his teaching certificate because he was
a wheelchair user. During his time in college, Dart organized his
first human rights group -- a pro-integration student group at what
was then a whites-only institution.
Dart went into business in 1956, building several successful
companies in Mexico and Japan. He started Japan Tupperware with three
employees in 1963, and by 1965 it had expanded to some 25,000. Dart
used his businesses to provide work for women and people with disabilities.
In Japan, for example, he took severely disabled people out of institutions,
gave them paying jobs within his company, and organized some of them
into Japan's first wheelchair basketball team. It was during this time
he met his wife, Yoshiko.
The final turning point in Dart's
life came during a visit to Vietnam in 1966, to investigate the status
of rehabilitation in that war-torn country. Visiting a "rehabilitation center" for children
with polio, Dart instead found squalid conditions where disabled children
were left on concrete floors to starve. One child, a young girl dying
there before him, took his hand and looked into his eyes. "That scene," he
would later write, "is burned forever in my soul. For the first time
in my life I understood the reality of evil, and that I was a part of that reality."
The Darts returned to Japan, but terminated their business
interests. After a period of meditation in a dilapidated farmhouse,
the two decided to dedicate themselves entirely to the cause of human
and disability rights. They moved to Texas in 1974, and immersed themselves
in local disability activism. From 1980 to 1985, Dart was a member,
and then chair, of the Texas Governor's Committee for Persons with
Disabilities. His work in Texas became a pattern for what was to follow:
extensive meetings with the grassroots, followed by a call for the
radical empowerment of people with disabilities, followed by tireless
advocacy until victory was won.
In 1981, President Ronald Reagan appointed Dart to be
the vice-chair of the National Council on Disability. The Darts embarked
on a nationwide tour, at their own expense, meeting with activists
in every state. Dart and others on the Council drafted a national policy
that called for national civil rights legislation to end the centuries
old discrimination of people with disabilities -- what would eventually
become the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990.
In 1986, Dart was appointed to head
the Rehabilitation Services Administration, a $3 billion federal
agency that oversees a vast array of programs for disabled people.
Dart called for radical changes, and for including people with disabilities
in every aspect of designing, implementing, and monitoring rehabilitation
programs. Resisted by the bureaucracy, Dart dropped a bombshell when
he testified at a public hearing before Congress that the RSA was "a vast, inflexible
federal system which, like the society it represents, still contains
a significant portion of individuals who have not yet overcome obsolete,
paternalistic attitudes about disability." Dart was asked to resign
his position, but remained a supporter of both Presidents Reagan and
Bush. In 1989, Dart was appointed chair of the President's Committee
on the Employment of People with Disabilities, shifting its focus from
its traditional stance of urging business to "hire the handicapped" to
advocating for full civil rights for people with disabilities.
Dart is best known for his work in
passing the Americans with Disabilities Act. In 1988, he was appointed,
along with parents' advocate Elizabeth Boggs, to chair the Congressional
Task Force on the Rights and Empowerment of Americans with Disabilities.
The Darts again toured the country at their own expense, visiting
every state, Puerto Rico, Guam, and the District of Columbia, holding
public forums attended by more than 30,000 people. Everywhere he
went, Dart touted the ADA as "the civil rights act of the future." Dart also met extensively
with members of Congress and staff, as well as President Bush, Vice
President Quayle, and members of the Cabinet. At one point, seeing
Dart at a White House reception, President Bush introduced him as "the
ADA man." The ADA was signed into law on July 26, 1990, an anniversary
that is celebrated each year by "disability pride" events all across the country.
While taking pride in passage of the
ADA, Dart was always quick to list all the others who shared in the
struggle: Robert Silverstein and Robert Burgdorf, Patrisha Wright
and Tony Coelho, Fred Fay and Judith Heumann, among many others.
And Dart never wavered in his commitment to disability solidarity,
insisting that all people with disabilities be protected by the law
and included in the coalition to pass it -- including mentally ill "psychiatric survivors" and people with HIV/AIDS.
Dart called this his "politics of inclusion," a companion to his "politics
of principle, solidarity, and love."
After passage of the ADA, Dart threw
his energy into the fight for universal health care, again campaigning
across the country, and often speaking from the same podium as President
and Mrs. Clinton. With the defeat of universal health care, Dart
was among the first to identify the coming backlash against disability
rights. He resigned all his positions to become "a full-time citizen soldier in the trenches
of justice." With the conservative Republican victory in Congress in
1994, followed by calls to amend or even repeal the ADA and the Individuals
with Disabilities Education Act (or IDEA), Dart, and disability rights
advocates Becky Ogle and Frederick Fay, founded Justice for All, what
Dart called "a SWAT team" to beat back these attacks. Again, Dart was
tireless -- traveling, speaking, testifying, holding conference calls,
presiding over meetings, calling the media on its distortions of the
ADA, and flooding the country with American flag stickers that said, "ADA,
IDEA, America Wins." Both laws were saved. Dart again placed the credit
with "the thousands of grassroots patriots" who wrote and e-mailed
and lobbied. But there can be no doubt that without Dart's leadership,
the outcome might have been entirely different.
In 1996, confronted by a Republican
Party calling for "a retreat from Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln democracy," Dart campaigned
for the re-election of President Clinton. This was a personally difficult "decision
of conscience." Dart had been a Republican for most of his life, and
had organized the disability constituency campaigns of both Ronald
Reagan and George Bush, campaigning against Clinton in 1992. But in
a turnabout that was reported in the New York Times and the Washington
Post, Dart went all out for Clinton, even speaking at the Democratic
National Convention in Chicago. The Darts yet again undertook a whirlwind
tour of the country, telling people to "get into politics as if your
life depended on it. It does." At his speech the day after the election,
President Clinton publicly thanked Dart for personally campaigning
in all fifty states, and cited his efforts as "one reason we won some of those states."
Dart suffered a series of heart attacks
in late 1997, which curtailed his ability to travel. He continued,
however, to lobby for the rights of people with disabilities, and
attended numerous events, rallies, demonstrations and public hearings.
Toward the end of his life, Dart was hard at work on a political
manifesto that would outline his vision of "the revolution of empowerment." In
its conclusion, he urged his "Beloved colleagues in struggle, listen
to the heart of this old soldier. Our lives, our children's lives,
the quality of the lives of billions in future generations hangs
in the balance. I cry out to you from the depths of my being. Humanity
needs you! Lead! Lead! Lead the revolution of empowerment!"
Today, disabled people across the
country and around the world will grieve at the passing of Justin
Dart, Jr. But we will celebrate his love and his commitment to justice.
Please join us at in expressing our condolences to Yoshiko and her
family during this difficult time. Keep in mind, however, that it
was Justin's wish that any service or commemoration be used by activists
to celebrate our movement, and as an opportunity to recommit themselves
to "the revolution
of empowerment."
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