The Denver Post

Disabled Japanese often are invisible

Will Paralympic­s bring lasting light?

- By Motoko Rich and Hikari Hida

TOKYO» Before ushering in the Paralympic Games, Tokyo undertook a wave of projects to make itself more accessible to people with disabiliti­es. Nearly all train stations now have elevators, and some have safety barriers along platform edges to protect the visually impaired. About 3,200 newly built hotel rooms are wheelchair-accessible, as are stalls in many public bathrooms.

Yuto Hirano, a Paralympic volunteer, welcomes the changes. But as he rolled up one recent afternoon in his wheelchair to a building advertised as accessible, a nearly impercepti­ble barrier stopped him in his tracks. He bumped against a slight incline leading to the automated front doors and could not get over it without someone pushing his wheelchair from behind.

“There have been three or four occasions where they said, ‘Yes, we can accommodat­e you,’ but when I get to the location, I actually cannot physically get inside,” said Hirano, 31, an accountant for a technology company. “So I’ve had to turn around and go straight home.”

Paralympic organizers repeatedly have promoted the power of the Games to draw attention to the needs not only of elite athletes but all people with disabiliti­es, speaking loftily of the chance to build a society “free from discrimina­tion or barriers of any kind.”

Advocates, too, have embraced this grand internatio­nal moment, saying it demonstrat­es how people who live with physical and mental impairment­s can achieve at the highest levels. Beyond the inspiratio­nal uplift, they say, the infrastruc­ture changes will help improve the daily lives of people with disabiliti­es in Japan.

Yet these advocates also wonder how long the attention will last in a country with a long history of keeping people with disabiliti­es out of sight. In Japan, many children with disabiliti­es are still educated in separate schools or classes, large companies operate segregated subdivisio­ns for employees with disabiliti­es, and people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es often are warehoused in institutio­nal facilities.

The “successes are hardly coordinate­d,” said Mark Bookman, a historian of disability in Japan who has lived on and off in the country for 13 years. “If you make a school accessible

but there is no workplace waiting on the other end, it doesn’t really matter. If you make the train accessible but the school is not, it doesn’t really matter. If you make an accessible toilet in the building but the building itself is not accessible, it doesn’t really matter.”

“Access is not just a moment where you solve things,” Bookman said. “Will that process continue after the Olympics, when the internatio­nal pressure is gone?”

The questions raised by disability activists are not limited to the 9.6 million people in Japan whom the health ministry categorize­s as disabled — more than 7% of the population. With the world’s oldest population, Japan will need to accommodat­e an increasing number of residents with the kinds of measures that people with various disabiliti­es rely on to get around every day.

Advocates said the Paralympic­s offered an opportunit­y — some would say missed — to hear from a greater range of people on how to improve accessibil­ity. If the Games could have been held with internatio­nal spectators, they said, it could have provided an instant panel of everyday experts to test whether measures actually worked in practice.

“I wanted spectators, including people with disabiliti­es, to go into Paralympic venues, come stay in Tokyo and say, ‘Hey, this is missing, or this is not good enough,’ ” Hirano said, “and for a lot of people to feel that firsthand and put pressure on the government to reform for the better.”

As an example, he pointed to the large, boxy taxis that have been added to cab fleets in Tokyo to increase accessibil­ity. Wheelchair users have said that taxi drivers often do not stop when hailed or ask them to pay extra fees, arguing that rolling out ramps to help them board is cumbersome.

Keisuke Seto, a spokesman for Toyota Japan Taxi, acknowledg­ed some of the complaints but said that “we have reformed the process of taking out the ramp to make it easier for drivers,” reducing it from a 63step to a 24-step process.

Aside from infrastruc­ture, activists said the Paralympic­s could motivate people with disabiliti­es who may feel limited in what they can do.

“I know people who have become disabled at some point in their life and were cooped up in their rooms,” said Daisuke Uehara, who won a silver medal in para ice hockey at the 2010 Paralympic Winter Games in Vancouver.

“But by participat­ing in sports, they could realize that they could reenter society again despite their disability. It gives them a sense of possibilit­y.”

Perhaps just as important is the prospect of opening the minds of able-bodied people.

“Some people think that disabled people cannot do anything,” said Kazuhiro Uno, an English teacher at the University of Tsukuba School for the Visually Impaired, who said some of the school’s alumni were competing at the Games. “I think the Paralympic Games will be a kind of proof or hint for them.”

Even after banning domestic spectators, the Tokyo organizing committee has admitted schoolchil­dren to some of the Paralympic events. Seeing the sports live, said Seiko Hashimoto, president of the Tokyo organizing committee, would help the children to “realize a more inclusive society.”

Japan is the only nation to host the Paralympic­s twice. When the Games were held in Tokyo in 1964, thencrown Prince Akihito and Princess Michiko adopted the Paralympic­s as one of their primary causes, helping to slowly transform attitudes in Japan.

Hideo Kondo, 86, who competed in six events in 1964 because organizers had trouble recruiting Paralympic athletes for Japan, remembers that the Games were the first time he had seen people moving around freely and publicly in wheelchair­s.

After living and training in a facility that he described as “hidden away from the rest of society,” he marveled at the confidence of competitor­s from abroad and the buses in the Olympic Village that welcomed wheelchair users.

“I was being kept in a cage,” Kondo recalled.

“The Paralympic­s was my moment of enlightenm­ent.”

Despite changes over the decades, many advocates say Japan is still behind other major countries. As recently as 1996, Japan’s government sponsored a program under which thousands of people were forcibly sterilized because of intellectu­al disabiliti­es, mental illness or genetic disorders.

And it was only in 2016 that Japan passed an antidiscri­mination law, two years after signing the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons With Disabiliti­es.

Some of the lagging attitudes in Japan can be traced to schools, in which children with disabiliti­es are largely excluded from mainstream classrooms. And with government quotas mandating that people with disabiliti­es make up 2.5% of the workforce of public agencies and 2.3% of private firms, some large companies have establishe­d separate subsidiari­es exclusivel­y for workers with disabiliti­es.

“I think it had been really ingrained in our mindset that we are different and it’s OK to be segregated,” said Emi Aizawa, who leads global partnershi­ps at Miraino, a consulting firm that helps companies develop better environmen­ts for people with disabiliti­es.

The Paralympic­s offer the promise of turning stigma into celebratio­n and present a story of triumph over adversity. But for the athletes, the best outcome might be that they are viewed as just that — athletes, not people with disabiliti­es.

Takayuki Suzuki, a swimmer who has won five medals for Japan since the Tokyo Paralympic­s opened Aug. 24, said he wanted equal treatment.

“My hope,” he said after he finished swimming a heat of a 200-meter freestyle event last week, “is that sports played by those with disabiliti­es will be received with as much excitement as sports played by those who are able-bodied.”

 ?? Photos by Chang W. Lee, © The New York Times Co. ?? Yuto Hirano, a volunteer for the Paralympic­s, rides the subway in Tokyo. He said he wished the Paralympic­s could have had internatio­nal spectators, who could have assessed Tokyo’s accessibil­ity measures.
Photos by Chang W. Lee, © The New York Times Co. Yuto Hirano, a volunteer for the Paralympic­s, rides the subway in Tokyo. He said he wished the Paralympic­s could have had internatio­nal spectators, who could have assessed Tokyo’s accessibil­ity measures.
 ??  ?? Daisuke Uehara, a Paralympic silver medalist in ice hockey, said that by playing sports, people with disabiliti­es can “realize that they could re-enter society again despite their disability.”
Daisuke Uehara, a Paralympic silver medalist in ice hockey, said that by playing sports, people with disabiliti­es can “realize that they could re-enter society again despite their disability.”

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