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Thousands of Illinoisans Sign on to End the "R" Word

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Friday, March 5, 2010   

NORMAL, Ill. - Illinois learning disabilities groups and Special Olympics are spending this week trying to heighten awareness of the words "retard" and "retarded," as well as the damaging impact they have on families of those with physical and cognitive impairments. This week, they convinced thousands to sign a pledge to end what they see as the derogatory use of the "R" word. The Spread the Word to Stop the Word campaign even made an impact on at least one official at the White House.

Doug Snyder, president and CEO of Special Olympics Illinois, says this wasn't a campaign cooked up by a marketing company. It was the people with intellectual disabilities themselves who asked for a change.

"Many of them have grown up being taunted and being called names, being laughed at, and the 'R' word has become very personal, and very hurtful to them."

Snyder says a few years back, the athletes convinced Special Olympics to take the "R" word out of its mission statement.

"It was the athletes who said, 'Can we change that?' They're the ones who drove the desire to have themselves reflected as individuals, first, with 'intellectual disabilities.'"

Special Olympics is urging Illinois residents to go to the organization's Web site and click on the Spread the Word End the Word link and pledge to eliminate the derogatory use of the "R" word. So far, he says more than 100,000 people have taken the pledge.

Snyder says he understands that people sometimes say things that they don't mean.

"We're just asking people to think about the impact of this word on a population that deserves better."

White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, who recently used the term to describe opposition to health care reform proposals, has joined the campaign to drop the word. Thousands of people have signed the online pledge form at www.R-Word.org, and at www.soill.org.







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