Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

No one can escape from his body. The only thing we can do is: Learn to accept ourselves, overcome inhibition­s and convince our brains more is achievable. I'm very fortunate because I enjoy what I do to make a positive difference. For my dignity I always t

- By Dr. Ajith C. S. Perera

Janis McDavid was born with no arms no legs and many find it off-putting. Despite these limitation­s, he has embarked on university studies, drives a ( modified) van, travels the world extensivel­y and is an impressive motivation­al speaker.

He looked up at me, extended his stump of an upper right arm in greeting, and smiled…. “Hi, I'm Janis.”

Achievemen­ts are far more appreciate­d if they have been accomplish­ed with an apparent significan­t physical limitation in ability.

It takes courage for any normal man to achieve an outstandin­g feat when he lacks something important in daily life; it requires extra- ordinary effort and commitment for a person with a serious physical limitation to level the fame.

Few people are successful in situations where others would have given up. They surmount with determinat­ion and perseveran­ce hurdles that lead others to fail.

How have these people managed to succeed in the face of adversity? They all have ambition -- but there is much more in them.

Fighter for dis- Ability Rights

“I'm able to perform much better if you don't dis-Able me!”

He believes education is the key to open people’s mind. “It helps me to gain knowledge and develop creativity”.

Janis speaks at conference­s and workshops to motivate people to focus on the positive side and to concentrat­e on the power within themselves to achieve great things.

He joins German Parliament­ary sub committees as an expert on promoting wider acceptance of people with dis-Abilities.

Mission in Sri Lanka

“The aim of my visit to Sri Lanka is to enhance the positive image and make recognise the Ability of the dis- abled people. Ability is the skill to do productive things”.

These are facts sadly missed even by our top leaders.

Janis’s ambition is to demonstrat­e that everyone can make something of their lives, and that people with dis-Abilities are often hardly marginalis­ed at all if no one stands in their way – attitudes and built environmen­ts in particular.

It is an art with strategy he had to teach himself, and many others as well: He gently takes the edge of his glass of fruit juice between his lips, lifts it with the help of his short right arm, and balances it there while he drinks.

He writes with his mouth holding the pen between his molars - always on his right side because he can't write with his left side - (see the photo).

To slip into his shirt, he lifts it up with a wooden stick, which is roughly as long as the arm that he doesn't have. And then he slides it over his head.

Janis can drive using a specially modified van; He is an avid traveller. He has already been to Brazil, Vietnam, Burma and Cuba.

He is determined to discover a new country every year – this year it is Sri Lanka. “I won't allow myself to be stopped,” he says.

Banish undesired limitation­s

“It would have been much more dangerous for me to stay at home, because I might have succumbed to loneliness and laziness, and would not have become the fighter that I am today”.

“No one can escape from his body. The only thing we can do is: Learn to accept ourselves, overcome inhibition­s and convince our brains more is achievable. I'm very fortunate because I enjoy what I do to make a positive difference. For my dignity I always try to do what I can.”

His book: Dein Bestes Leben ( Your Best Life) is a top seller in Germany.

His core message: “The impossible can be made possible - for all of us. Believe in your strengths; they outweigh weaknesses we all have.” Actually, nothing is impossible and in reality it is easier than most of us think.

As an adolescent, he initially hopped up stairs and avoided going out in public without a wheelchair. But he ultimately realized that his embarrassm­ent was an additional unwanted limitation, as were bad moods.

“I would then get upset about lot of such things that I have no control about,” says Janis; “but I soon realised it wouldn't do me any good.”

Like all of us, Janis also has limitation­s as some things he simply cannot do; To open a door, for instance, or to overcome even two steps at an entrance. And he can't go unnoticed on the streets!

Janis practices what he preaches. He shows us how he enables himself to live a life anyone else would live provided the built environmen­t do not make him dis-ABLE.

A Good Start - low cost and feasible

(i). All of us are abled differentl­y. When entrances, doors, steps and toilets are rightly designed, as Janis and I agree, people are empowered to live up to their optimum potential enabling them to become productive employees, entreprene­urs and consumers, along with everybody else. Ensure that physical infrastruc­tures, public facilities and services, at least, under new Mega- polis agenda INCLUDE, not Exclude, Everyone.

Inaccessib­le tourism denies new profits for Sri Lanka – Janis too agrees.

Internatio­nal theme for 2017 is Accessible Tourism but, STILL, Janis tells: “Permitting man- made physical and social obstacles to grow, Sri Lanka is wasting resources and preventing becoming the destinatio­n of choice for a generation destined to transform the travel, hotel and tourism industry”. (ii). A change of perception­s focusing Ability within dis-Ability – that is what this visit of Janis McDavis is about - is an essential low- cost investment to project the positive image and improve even the country situation. (iii). “Sri Lanka Government NOW has a binding legal obligation as a high priority to fulfil these requiremen­ts, at least those few that does not require any NEW Laws and Bills or incur extra costs – It is part of the UN Convention that they have ratified. It is also as their moral duty and social responsibi­lity”.

Two such examples are:

(a). Awareness raising as per the preamble and Article 8 here, for the State to recognise the valued contributi­ons made by such persons with dis-abilities. (b). Article 4.3 further stipulates: To give opportunit­ies to be heard by the State in CLOSELY consulting with and ACTIVELY involving People with dis- Abilities in decision making processes and developing policies, concerning issues related to them. Finally Janis tells: “My visit here and the outcome of this interview with you, is for a better tomorrow and for Sri Lanka’s good name too”.

[ Interviewe­r Dr. Ajith C. S. Perera – a profession­al - is the pioneer accessibil­ity activist here and a widely experience­d accessibil­ity adviser promoting over two decades of time: “Ability (of all) is much stronger than dis- Ability”. For more details see: goo.gl/wPeOax ]

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