Judy Heumann (1947–2023) Disability rights champion… and my special bond with her

Miriam Kurtzig Freedman, JD, MA
4 min readMar 7, 2023

Judy Heumann died this week at the age of 75. Due to polio, she was wheelchair bound and she became a powerful advocate and champion in the fight for rights for people with disabilities — for more than 50 years! Have you heard of her? Her name is all over media right now. Check it out! https://www.nytimes.com/2023/0...

If you work in education, especially special education, you may remember that during the Clinton administration, she served as head of OSEP — Office of Special Education Programs in the US Department of Education. After that, she had many other accomplishments — focused on improving the lives of people with disabilities.

If you’re a movie buff, you may have seen the documentary, Crip Camp on Netflix — an inspiring and fun Oscar-nominated movie about a camp for children with disabilities. She’s a star in it. I recommend it.

If you’re a reader, you may have enjoyed her memoir, Being Heumann.

And if you’re me, you feel a special bond with her — even though I never met her in person. Back in the mid 60’s and early 70’s, she and I started our professional lives — to become teachers in New York City — in similar, yet extremely different ways.

A huge difference in our parallel stories was timing. Hers happened in 1970 while the civil rights era was in full bloom, and mine happened in 1964, alas, right before it.

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Miriam Kurtzig Freedman, JD, MA

Miriam Kurtzig Freedman, JD, MA, is a reformer, thought leader, lawyer, and author. Check out her book, Special Education 2.0 and her medicine bottle art!