How society receive people with disability by Qusay Hussein

Qusay Hussein
QusayHussein.org
QusayHussein8@gmail.com

Humanity. Tenacity. Peace. How society receive people with disability by Qusay Hussein
In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful {O you who have believed, let no people mock another, perhaps they will be better than them}…because we live in a society that loses compassion and humanity, because we We live in a society that holds people accountable for mistakes they never committed, because we live in a ruthless society. Their smile was taken away.

They are angels in human form who decide to prevent them from living like other humans just because they have special needs.
As if all their suffering is not enough for them, but the society’s looks take them to another planet, as if they are not from the earth’s inhabitants, as if the earth is the monopoly of a type of human being. Society does not view disability as a syndrome that has nothing to do with it, but rather as a contagious disease, perhaps a deficiency. Between merciless looks, and between lack of awareness, the rights of these angels are lost, between looks of pity and fear for them, their lives are turned upside down.

In societies where some of its members still live in an old mentality that is not based on any logic or even a religious background, it remains difficult to accept people with special needs. They deal with any of them as a person of a lower degree, or as a person who has no future or ambition, a person who is incapable of life.

Between the love of parents and their shyness
Some people with special needs collide with the mentality of their families before society at first. Despite the development that has taken place globally at all levels, some families’ interactions with their children remain limited to the thinking of society. Despite the great love that any family has for its “disabled” son, the great fear of people’s words still dominates their thinking and how they deal with people of determination and determination. Instead of trying to integrate them into society, they resort to keeping them away from people out of fear for them, as they think it is the best way to protect them from human bullying. They are victims of society and their families, victims of families whose social, material and even psychological conditions prevented them from accepting this reality and adapting to the state of disability.

On the other side of the conversation, it is necessary to shed light on the families that deal with their members “with special needs” consciously and rationally, as they work hard to integrate them into society and provide them with appropriate special care.
The society’s reactions towards these angels are reflected in their lives, as it greatly affects the building of their personality and their acceptance of the society that has to accept them in return. Understanding people and treating them as normal as other human beings helps them to continue their lives in a better way.

They are not like other people, but much more beautiful than them. They are mercy and love. They are smile and honesty. They are far from a hypocritical society, most of which cannot accept them due to a lack of “society minds.” They are not nothing, or a folded page in a forgotten book. They are the hope for a better tomorrow, they are the angels of mercy and guardians of this land. Let them live in peace, they only deserve love and life. Their handicap is much purer and greater than the handicap of the minds and consciences of these ruthless societies