Los Angeles Times

Finding new life at summer camp

Summer campers become crusaders for disability rights in the vital documentar­y ‘Crip Camp.’

- JUSTIN CHANG FILM CRITIC

The provocativ­e title “Crip Camp” is just one draw of Netf lix’s doc about the fight for disability rights.

title of “Crip Camp,” a rousing documentar­y about the birth of the disability rights movement, means to grab your attention and rightly so. It refers to Camp Jened, a summer retreat in the Catskills where, from 1951 to 1977, many young people with disabiliti­es first experience­d the joys of community, the pleasures of sex and the stirrings of political consciousn­ess. No one here actually calls the place “Crip Camp,” but the title — deploying an insult that has been defiantly reclaimed by some of its intended targets — delivers an appreciabl­y blunt message nonetheles­s: This is not a movie overly concerned with making anyone, disabled or abled, feel comfortabl­e.

Comfort, the movie persuasive­ly argues, is too often the enemy of justice — and the elusivenes­s of justice turns out to be one of its stealth subjects. More than most real-life stories about marginaliz­ed individual­s overcoming daunting odds and deep-seated prejudices, “Crip Camp” manages to be at once sweetly affirming and breezily irreverent. (The film, which won an audience award at Sundance, begins streaming Wednesday on Netflix.) The wit and charisma of its many interviewe­es, who toss off their reminiscen­ces and insights with wry matter-of-factness, doesn’t entirely prepare you for the monumental significan­ce of what they accomplish­ed.

On the one hand, there could be nothing more ordinary, even banal, than the reams of faded summer camp footage that fill the documentar­y’s opening scenes. But in the hands of the directors Nicole Newnham and Jim LeBrecht, who intercut their archival material with present-day interviews, the ordinary is transmuted into something extraordin­ary. The grainy, mostly black-and-white images of young men and women splashing in a pool, basking in the sun and dancing in the night — sometimes with the help of crutches, wheelchair­s and camp counselors — feel both humdrum and momentous.

The simplest scenes are charged with a sense of history in the making, even if the full weight of that history became apparent only in retrospect. It certainly wasn’t apparent to anyone there at the time. If Camp Jened was a kind of Woodstock-adjacent utopia, it was one that came together more or less by accident, born of that free-flowing spirit of the ’60s and ’70s where political activism, social experiment­ation and sexual awakening collided. (A soundtrack featuring Bob Dylan, Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane vibrantly sets the mood.)

LeBrecht, a sound mixer in Berkeley, draws on personal experience: He was born with spina bifida and found himself at Camp Jened in the summer of 1971. But while we see a younger version of him beaming in much of the footage (which was shot by the People’s Video Theater collective), he pointedly never overwhelms any of his onscreen comrades in this resolutely egalitaria­n movie. He and other Camp Jened alumni outline some of the challenges of life in a community overseen by inexperien­ced counselors and marked by its own curious hierarchie­s: As more than one subject wryly attests, it was deemed far betThe ter to have polio than cerebral palsy.

But any internal fractiousn­ess was ultimately subsumed by an unshakable solidarity, and also by the simple agonies and ecstasies of being an American teenager. We hear from more than a few who had formative romantic experience­s at Camp Jened, some of which led, in a bring-down-thehouse moment, to a campwide outbreak of crabs. For many, the assertion and reclamatio­n of an erotic identity — a subject warmly expounded upon by a camp alumna, Denise Sherer Jacobson, who went on to earn a master’s degree in human sexuality — was part of a collective realizatio­n that life could be so much more than they had thus far known or experience­d.

The most powerful moments emerge in the extended group discussion­s, where the campers speak — with varying levels of ease and emotion — about their common hardships: a lack of privacy, the overprotec­tiveness of parents, the callous indifferen­ce of strangers. Camp Jened allows them to envision a world in which their rights are fully acknowledg­ed and respected. Or, as the camp’s visionary late director Larry Allison puts it: “We realized the problem did not exist with people with disabiliti­es. The problem existed with people that didn’t have disabiliti­es.”

That realizatio­n would bear astonishin­g fruit in the years to come, as “Crip Camp” shifts from a portrait of New York hippiedom to a celebratio­n of Bay Area radicalism. Many Camp Jened veterans went on to become powerful disability-rights activists, putting the skills they had learned at camp — chiefly the ability to listen to and encourage one another — into practice. The documentar­y’s most forcefully heroic figure is Judy Heumann, whose lifelong history of activism — from her days as a leader at Camp Jened to her pioneering work at the Berkeley-based Center for Independen­t Living — is inscribed in scene after eloquent scene.

It was Heumann who led a remarkable, grueling 25day sit-in in San Francisco in 1977, joining more than 100 activists in occupying federal offices and demanding that Joseph A. Califano Jr., the U.S. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, sign regulation­s for Section 504 of the Rehabilita­tion Act. Califano’s intransige­nce, as well as his underestim­ation of his opponents’ physical and political stamina, is infuriatin­g; it was also typical of the era’s ableist norms. A lot of those norms were challenged by Section 504, which predated the Americans With Disabiliti­es Act of 1990 in prohibitin­g discrimina­tion and requiring that all federally funded programs be accessible to the disabled.

“Crip Camp” is thus a moving and passionate tribute to the herculean efforts it took — aptly visualized in scenes of disabled demonstrat­ors dragging themselves up the steps of the U.S. Capitol building — to bring about ramps, curb cuts and other essential accessibil­ity provisions. It is also an instructiv­e reminder that effective political strategy requires a community that is not just determined but organized (a message worthy of two of its executive producers, Barack and Michelle Obama).

The documentar­y could have used another voice or two on the specific difficulti­es that people with disabiliti­es face in the present, especially when their needs and concerns are often convenient­ly omitted from the ongoing conversati­on on inclusion and representa­tion. “Crip Camp” is a vital continuati­on of that conversati­on, even if the history it documents is still very much being written.

 ?? Steve Honigsbaum Netf lix ?? ON THE HEELS of Woodstock, a group of teen campers are inspired to join the fight for disability civil rights in the lively “Crip Camp.”
Steve Honigsbaum Netf lix ON THE HEELS of Woodstock, a group of teen campers are inspired to join the fight for disability civil rights in the lively “Crip Camp.”
 ?? HolLynn D'Lil Netf lix ?? JUDY HEUMANN, a heroic figure, led a remarkable, grueling 25-day sit-in in San Francisco in 1977.
HolLynn D'Lil Netf lix JUDY HEUMANN, a heroic figure, led a remarkable, grueling 25-day sit-in in San Francisco in 1977.

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