Environment: We Bid You Welcome
We bid you welcome, who enter this hall as a homecoming,
Who have found here room for your spirit.
Who find in this people a family.
Whoever you are, whatever you are,
Wherever you are in your journey.
We bid you welcome.
– Richard S. Gilbert (Singing The Living Tradition: Reading 442)
Our hymnal speaks these moving words. Yet how our congregations
are able to bid people welcome depends on many things – in part,
on how and when our individual churches were built. Almost all of
our Unitarian Universalist churches were constructed before the
Americans with Disabilities Act, before there was consciousness
about making churches physically accessible to everybody – whether
that person walked or wheeled in. In fact, our older churches were
inaccessible by design:
Ralph Adams Cram, renowned ecclesiastical architect and critic
of American church design, identified the elevation of sacred space
as central to the practice of faith. According to Cram, places of
worship... were to be spiritual oases, set apart from their
pedestrian environment through substantial, soaring walls and monumental
stairs approaching impressive entrances well above the street.
Unfortunately, our legacy is daunting stairs, heavy doors, and
soaring walls. Much as our hearts may want to welcome everyone to
enter our halls "as a homecoming" the reality is that
we are sometimes confronted with architectural designs that make
hospitality a difficult undertaking, to say the least.
The quote above is from a 54-page online publication Accessible
Faith: A Technical Guide for Accessibility in Houses of Worship . In the Environment section, we will be making frequent reference
to this booklet, well worth downloading if you are planning or hoping
to make physical changes in your congregational environment.
There is a saying in the Disability Community "Nothing about
us without us." For any accessibility planning, we encourage
you to contact your local Independent
Living Center .
Independent Living Centers are non-residential, non-profit, consumer-controlled,
community-based organizations providing services and advocacy by
and for people with disabilities. They have expert staff, and can
help you with your assessment and discussion of changes.
|