A lightness of spirit
 

Lawrence Liang 



Disability activist Rahul Cherian leaves a legacy of thinking about human 
rights as rights for the maximum enjoyment of life 

The word spirit travels to us via Latin where spiritus literally means breath 
but is more accurately a description of the vigour and vitality of a being. It 
is therefore appropriate that while breath marks the line between life and 
death, an infectious spirit vitalises everyone with their being regardless of 
the presence or absence of their breath. Rahul Cherian - intrepid spirit and 
tireless activist for disability rights - passed away on February 7 after a 
sudden illness.
 
While many of us feel cheated by the death of someone so young, let us not be 
mistaken: it was always Rahul who cheated death all along, and Robin Hood-like, 
generously distributed his infectious enthusiasm, laughing his way out of the 
bank of life. Diagnosed at a very early age with a spinal tumour, hospitals and 
surgeries were no strangers to him; they were mere playmates from whom he 
learnt the value of not taking illness too seriously.
 
Impact on Verma report 

After a surgery in his 30s in which he lost partial mobility of his legs, Rahul 
became involved with the rights of disabled people and started "Inclusive 
Planet," an organisation that works on all aspects of disability rights - from 
accessibility policies of the government, to reform in copyright law to enable 
persons with visual disabilities the right to read. He was instrumental in the 
drafting of the Treaty for the Visually Impaired, currently being debated at 
the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), as well as the amendment 
to the Indian Copyright Act to enable exceptions for persons with disabilities.
 
Most recently, "Inclusive Planet" made a set of submissions to the Justice J.S. 
Verma Committee on the reform of sexual assault laws from the perspective of 
disabled victims, many of which were incorporated into the final report.
 
In articulating an innovative jurisprudence of disability rights, it was clear 
that his sense of play and a belief that emancipation comes from a sense of 
joy, not of sorrow, always informed whatever he did. Thus even as he fought in 
all fora for equal citizenship of disabled people, he also included a dating 
service for them and a section on disability and humour on 
"inclusiveplanet.com". A telling sign of his joie de vivre was an "Inclusive 
Planet" T-shirt that had an alien with crutches pointing at you saying, "You 
are not alone."
 
I remember being in a meeting with him and various representatives of 
organisations fighting for the rights of the visually impaired to discuss with 
the government the Copyright Amendment Bill. As the negotiations seemed to head 
towards a frustrating bureaucratic wall, he turned to me in exasperation and 
said, "Things better start improving or I will be forced to hit someone with my 
crutches and that will be terrible for the image of the disability movement."
 
In an interview in Geneva, Rahul enthusiastically demonstrated his new foldable 
scooter with which he said he could "go on his own and buy his wife Anjana a 
present." He added: "I used to call myself a disability activist but now I 
consider myself a freedom fighter because I am actually fighting for freedom to 
access the city. Coming from the land of Mahatma Gandhi, I am proud to say I am 
a freedom fighter and let's see what kind of freedom we can win for disabled 
people."
 
Rahul leaves behind an important legacy in terms of his work, but a far more 
important one on how we understand the very idea of a free spirit. His 
singularity, while irreplaceable, provides us with a vocabulary of thinking of 
human rights struggles as really a right to the maximum enjoyment of life and 
doing it with a sense of lightness.
 
Enumerating lightness as one of the desirable attitudes to cultivate, Italian 
writer Italo Calvino urged us to recall Perseus's refusal of Medusa's 
stone-heavy stare. To slay Medusa without himself being turned to stone, 
Perseus supports himself on the lightest of things - the winds and the clouds - 
and "fixes his gaze upon what can be revealed only by indirect vision - an 
image caught in a mirror." Calvino reminds us that Perseus's strength lay in 
his refusal to look directly, but not in a refusal of the reality in which he 
is fated to live. Sleep well Rahul - you have taught us well that laughter and 
lightness are our greatest weapons against adversity.
 
(Lawrence Liang is a lawyer at the Bangalore-based Alternative Law Forum.)

http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/a-lightness-of-spirit/article4394284.ece

Vikas Kapoor,
Mobile: (+91) 9891098137
Skype Id: dl_vikas
Tribute to Rahul Cherian, our salutation to the ever shining soul



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