All Thinkers

Judith Heumann

Judith Heumann was an American disability rights activist. She is often called 'the mother of the disability rights movement'. She was born on 18 December 1947 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Her parents, Werner and Ilse Heumann, were German Jewish immigrants. Many of their relatives had been killed in the Holocaust. The family later moved to Brooklyn, New York. When Judy was 18 months old, she got polio. This was during a large outbreak of the disease in the United States. A machine helped her breathe for three months. When she recovered, she could not walk. She used a wheelchair for the rest of her life. At age five, the principal of her local school refused to let her attend. He called her a 'fire hazard'. Her mother fought this. Eventually Judy got an education, partly in special classes and partly in a public high school. She went to Long Island University, where she began organising other disabled students. In her twenties, she applied to become a teacher in New York City. The Board of Education passed her written and oral exams but failed her medical exam because she used a wheelchair. In 1970, she sued them. The judge, Constance Baker Motley (the first Black woman federal judge), made it clear the Board would lose. They settled. Heumann became the first wheelchair user to teach in the state of New York. She taught for three years. She became one of the main leaders of the American disability rights movement. In April 1977, she led a 26-day sit-in at a federal building in San Francisco. The sit-in forced the US government to implement Section 504, the first major US disability civil rights law. She later worked for both the Clinton and Obama administrations. She wrote her memoir Being Heumann in 2020. She died on 4 March 2023 in Washington D.C., aged 75. The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (2006) both owe much to her work.

Origin
United States
Lifespan
1947-2023
Era
20th-21st Century
Subjects
Disability Rights Civil Rights Activism Public Policy Education
Why They Matter

Heumann matters for three reasons. First, she helped build a movement from nothing. When she was a child, disabled people in the United States had almost no legal rights. Many were locked away in institutions.

Schools could refuse them

Employers could refuse them. Public buses and buildings were not accessible. Over her lifetime, all of this changed. Heumann was central to that change. She did not do it alone. Thousands of disabled activists worked beside her. But she was often at the front, speaking, organising, and making trouble. Without her and her generation, disabled people today would live in a very different and much harder world.

Second, she changed what disability means in public thinking. For most of history, disability was treated as a medical problem. A person had something wrong with them. The job of society was to feel sorry for them or to cure them.

Heumann rejected this view

She argued that the real problem was not her body. The problem was a society built only for non-disabled people.

Buses with no ramps

Schools with stairs. Laws that treated disabled people as incapable. This view is now called the 'social model of disability'. Heumann did not invent it, but she fought for it publicly for 60 years. It has changed laws, buildings, and attitudes worldwide.

Third, she showed that disability rights are civil rights. The sit-in she led in 1977 was modelled on the civil rights sit-ins of the 1960s. The Black Panther Party brought her group food every day for 26 days. She worked closely with activists across other movements. She insisted that disability rights were not a special-interest cause. They were part of the wider struggle for human dignity. This framing, which seems obvious now, was new. It is one of her lasting gifts.

Key Ideas
1
The Problem Is Not the Body, It Is the Building
2
Called a 'Fire Hazard'
3
The 1977 Sit-In
Key Quotations
"Some people say that what I did changed the world. But really, I simply refused to accept what I was told about who I could be. And I was willing to make a fuss about it."
— Quoted widely from her talks and interviews, including the US National Park Service biography
Heumann is explaining what made her life's work possible. Two simple things. First, she refused to believe what others said she could not do. Second, she was willing to make a fuss when people would not listen. Many people have the first without the second. They know they deserve better but do not speak up. Some have the second without the first. They complain but do not actually believe change is possible. Heumann had both. For students, the combination is worth thinking about. Private belief in your own worth is not enough. Public action is not enough either. The two together are what move the world.
"Disability only becomes a tragedy when society fails to provide the things we need to lead our lives."
— Speeches and interviews, widely attributed to Heumann
Heumann is pushing back against a deep assumption. Many non-disabled people see disability as automatically sad. A wheelchair, a hearing aid, a guide dog, are treated as signs of a diminished life. Heumann says this is wrong. A disability becomes tragic only when society refuses to provide ramps, sign language interpreters, accessible websites, or basic respect. Change those conditions and the tragedy disappears, though the disability remains. For students, the quote is a reframing. Next time you notice pity for a disabled person, ask: is this because of their body, or because of what society has not done? The answer is usually the second.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Ethical Thinking When introducing students to disability rights
How to introduce
Ask students: have they ever been told they could not do something because of who they were? Perhaps because of age, size, gender, or language. How did it feel? Then share Heumann's 'fire hazard' story: told she could not go to school at age five because she used a wheelchair. Her mother refused to accept this. The story is concrete and clear. It shows how discrimination works. It also shows that the answer is often simply refusing to accept the rules.
Critical Thinking When teaching students to see the difference between a body and its environment
How to introduce
Ask students to look around the classroom. How is it designed? For who? What if someone used a wheelchair? What if someone was deaf? What if someone had trouble with bright lights? Heumann argued that disability is mostly about environments, not bodies. Get students to notice how much of what seems 'normal' is actually built for specific kinds of bodies. The school, the bus, the phone they hold: all have been designed for a default user. This is a simple but powerful shift in thinking.
Further Reading

For a first introduction, the 2020 documentary Crip Camp: A Disability Revolution (produced by the Obama family's Higher Ground Productions) is excellent. It traces the roots of the disability rights movement through Heumann and her friends. Her memoir Being Heumann (2020, co-written with Kristen Joiner) is readable and warm. A young reader's version, Rolling Warrior (2021), is also available. Heumann's 2016 TED Talk is on YouTube.

Key Ideas
1
Disability Rights as Civil Rights
2
The Independent Living Movement
3
From the Sit-In to the ADA
Key Quotations
"This is the beginning of a civil rights movement."
— Speech to Congressmen during the 1977 Section 504 sit-in, San Francisco
Heumann said this during the sit-in when two US Congressmen came to the federal building to hold a hearing. She was 29 years old. The building was full of disabled protesters who had been there for days without proper food or water. She spoke directly, declaring that what was happening was not a protest for a single law. It was the start of a movement. She was right. The Section 504 win led to the ADA 13 years later, and then to the UN Convention. For intermediate students, the quote is an example of naming a moment for what it is, in public, without hedging. She could have said 'we hope this leads to something.' She said 'this is the beginning.' Naming something confidently can help make it true.
"I'm a fire hazard. Until I wasn't."
— From her memoir Being Heumann and retold in many interviews
Heumann is looking back on the story of being called a 'fire hazard' as a five-year-old. The whole argument for excluding her was that she would be dangerous in an emergency. She lived to become a teacher, a federal official, and an international figure. She was never in a building she could not leave. The 'fire hazard' argument had been an excuse, not a reason. This kind of dressing up prejudice in practical language is common. It is worth noticing. When someone argues against including you 'for your own good' or 'for safety reasons', ask whether the argument actually holds. In Heumann's case, it did not.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Problem-Solving When teaching students how social movements actually succeed
How to introduce
Tell the story of the 1977 sit-in. Disabled activists had waited four years for a law to be enforced. Polite requests had not worked. So they occupied a building for 26 days. The Black Panthers brought food. Deaf people signed through windows. Eventually, the government gave in. Discuss with students: what made this work? Persistence. Allies. Willingness to be inconvenient. Being right. Planning for the long haul. This is practical political education, not just history.
Cultural Heritage and Identity When discussing cross-movement solidarity
How to introduce
Tell students about the Black Panthers bringing food to the San Francisco sit-in every day for almost four weeks. This was disabled people and Black activists working together. Ask students: why would one oppressed group help another? There are practical reasons. There are also moral reasons. Heumann saw disability rights as civil rights, and civil rights as human rights. When you help another group, you strengthen the whole idea that human rights apply to everyone. This is a powerful lesson about how movements gain strength by supporting each other.
Emotional Intelligence When teaching students about pity versus respect
How to introduce
Share Heumann's view that pity for disabled people often does more harm than help. A disabled person does not need someone to feel sorry for them. They need buildings they can enter, schools that will accept them, laws that protect them. Pity can feel kind, but it assumes the disabled person has a tragic life. Heumann made this point often. Discuss with students: when have they received pity when they wanted respect? What is the difference? This is a subtle but important emotional conversation, relevant to many relationships.
Further Reading

For deeper reading, Joseph Shapiro's No Pity: People with Disabilities Forging a New Civil Rights Movement (1993) is a classic history. Kim Nielsen's A Disability History of the United States provides broader context. Alice Wong's edited volume Disability Visibility (2020) includes Heumann's voice alongside many other disability activists and writers. The Zinn Education Project has excellent teaching materials on the 1977 sit-in.

Key Ideas
1
Making Trouble
2
Intersections the Movement Got Wrong
3
Disability Rights Worldwide
Key Quotations
"Disability rights are human rights."
— Standard Heumann statement in many speeches and UN advocacy
This short phrase captures decades of Heumann's work. It sounds obvious. It is not. For most of history, disability was treated as separate from human rights. Human rights were about freedom of speech, religion, fair trials, things governments might or might not give their citizens. Disability was treated as a medical matter or a private family problem. Heumann and others pushed to change this. They argued that being able to enter a public building, attend school, or live independently are as basic as any other human right. A person denied these things is not facing a private problem. They are facing a human rights violation. For advanced students, the quote is an example of using a short phrase to carry a long political argument. Good activism often involves making the complicated sound obvious, so that future generations wonder how anyone ever thought otherwise.
"Nothing about us without us."
— Slogan of the international disability rights movement, associated with Heumann's advocacy
This phrase is not original to Heumann. It was used by Central European political movements in the 16th century and became a disability rights slogan in the 1990s. But Heumann made it famous in international disability circles. The meaning is direct. When governments, charities, or professionals make decisions about disabled people, disabled people themselves must be in the room. No more panels of doctors deciding what is best for patients. No more committees of officials designing services without consulting the people who will use them. No more charity events where disabled people are subjects rather than speakers. For advanced students, the slogan applies far beyond disability. Many decisions affecting particular groups are made by others 'on their behalf'. A mature movement insists on being present for its own decisions. The phrase is a practical rule as well as a moral one.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Ethical Thinking When discussing when polite requests are not enough
How to introduce
Heumann and her allies made requests for years. Nothing happened. Then they sat in a building for 26 days. The law was enforced. Discuss with students: when is disruption justified? When is it the only thing that works? This is a serious ethical question. Heumann did not enjoy making trouble. She did it because she had to. Students can learn that sometimes the most ethical action is the one that makes comfortable people uncomfortable. But discuss carefully when this is right and when it crosses a line.
Critical Thinking When discussing how movements continue to grow beyond their founders
How to introduce
Heumann in her later years praised younger disabled activists of colour who were expanding the movement beyond its mostly-white founding. Discuss with students: why is it important for movements to keep changing? What happens when early leaders resist new voices? Heumann's openness to criticism was one of her strengths. This is a mature lesson about how movements stay alive across generations. The first wave never gets everything right. The second wave has to complete and correct the first.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

The disability rights movement is mainly about accessibility ramps.

What to teach instead

Ramps matter, but they are a small part of the picture. Heumann and her fellow activists fought for much more: the right to attend public schools, to work as professionals, to live outside institutions, to make their own medical decisions, to have children, to vote. The ADA covers employment, public services, transport, and communication, not just physical access. Reducing disability rights to ramps is like reducing civil rights to drinking fountains. It mistakes a visible symbol for the whole struggle.

Common misconception

Disabled people are inspiring just for living their lives.

What to teach instead

Many disabled people, including Heumann, have objected to being called 'inspiring' for ordinary activities. Heumann teaching her class, going to work, raising her voice, was not inspirational. It was her life. Treating disabled people as automatic heroes for doing normal things is a form of condescension. It also sets an impossible standard: every disabled person must be extraordinary or they are not worth noticing. Heumann wanted disabled people to be allowed to be ordinary: to have good days and bad days, talent and failures, like everyone else. The 'inspiration' label can get in the way of this.

Common misconception

Disability rights were won in a single law or moment.

What to teach instead

The rights disabled people now have in the United States came from decades of work by thousands of activists. Heumann's 1977 sit-in was one key moment. The ADA in 1990 was another. But the work started in the 1960s and continues today. Many rights are still unevenly enforced. Laws without enforcement do not help. Heumann herself often said that the ADA was not the end of the fight but a tool for the next phase. Treating disability rights as a closed file misses the ongoing struggle.

Common misconception

The social model of disability says disability does not really exist.

What to teach instead

It does not. The social model says that most of the hardship disabled people face comes from society, not from their bodies. It does not deny that disabilities are real, that some cause pain, or that some require medical care. It says that the difference between a hard life and a good life for a disabled person is usually about environment, law, and attitude, not about the body itself. Heumann held this view. She also had a real disability that affected her every day. The two are not in conflict. The social model is a political analysis, not a denial of biology.

Intellectual Connections
Develops
Frederick Douglass
Heumann studied the Black civil rights tradition carefully and built on its methods. Douglass, in the 19th century, had insisted that rights do not come from pity or charity but from the demand and organising of those denied them. Heumann took this directly into disability rights. Her sit-in, her lawsuits, and her speeches all follow a pattern Douglass would have recognised: speak plainly, organise, and refuse to accept what you are told about who you are. The inheritance is clear even though the two never met.
In Dialogue With
Paulo Freire
Freire argued that education was either a tool of oppression or a tool of liberation. Heumann's own education was almost blocked by a school principal. She then became a teacher and later a federal official shaping disability education policy in the US. She understood what Freire described: schools can lock people out or let them in, and the decision is political. Both thinkers treated the right to learn as a right to become a full citizen. Reading them together shows education as a central site of the wider human rights struggle.
Complements
Robin Wall Kimmerer
Kimmerer, writing from an Indigenous Potawatomi tradition, and Heumann, writing from disability rights, both reject models of human life that treat independence and self-sufficiency as ideals. Kimmerer sees humans as embedded in webs of relation with nature and community. Heumann saw disabled people as needing, like all humans, care and support from others. Both argue that dependence is not weakness but a basic fact of life. Reading them together shifts how we think about what a full human life requires.
In Dialogue With
Silvia Rivera Cusicanqui
Rivera Cusicanqui and Heumann both worked on how movements can be captured by the systems they oppose. Rivera Cusicanqui wrote about Bolivian Indigenous movements being absorbed by the state. Heumann saw risks when disability rights became an industry of consultants and bureaucrats who spoke for disabled people rather than alongside them. Both insisted that real change keeps the affected people at the centre of decisions. The slogan 'nothing about us without us' would have made sense in both their worlds.
Complements
C.L.R. James
James argued that The Black Jacobins was the story of the masses, not just of Toussaint Louverture. Heumann similarly insisted that the disability rights movement was the work of many, not one. She often refused to be called the 'mother' of the movement, pointing instead to the hundreds of activists who had organised with her. Both thinkers distrusted the great-leader view of history. Reading them together shows a shared ethic: movements are made by many, and leaders who forget this damage the movements they lead.
Influenced
Malala Yousafzai
Malala's argument that education is a basic right, not a favour, echoes Heumann's lifelong argument about disability. Both women were denied education and then spent their lives fighting for it. Malala has spoken respectfully of the disability rights movement and of the need to include disabled girls in her Fund's work. The influence is not direct and personal but clear at the level of ideas. Reading them together shows how different rights struggles (for girls, for disabled people) share a common structure: denied access, organised response, refusal to accept the status quo.
Further Reading

For research-level engagement, the Bancroft Library at UC Berkeley holds the Disability Rights and Independent Living Movement Oral History Project, including long interviews with Heumann. The Journal of Disability Studies publishes ongoing scholarship. For the legal history, Samuel Bagenstos's Law and the Contradictions of the Disability Rights Movement is a major study. For broader disability theory, Rosemarie Garland-Thomson's work on 'normate' bodies and Tobin Siebers's Disability Theory are important. Heumann's own policy writings from her State Department years are available through US government archives.