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Diego Chiapello, legally blind since birth, isn’t one of Italy’s famous
“mama’s boys” who live with their parents into adulthood. The 27-year-old lives
alone in Milan, works as a network administrator, loves diving and dreams of
sailing across the Atlantic with a sight-impaired(有视力障碍的)crew.
Obviously, he’s not your average disabled person — but especially so in
Italy. The country has more barriers to integration than almost anywhere else on
the continent. Among European countries, Italy ranks third from the bottom in
accessibility for the disabled, ahead of only Greece and Portugal. People who
use wheelchairs, especially, find it difficult to navigate the country’s
cobblestone(鹅卵石)streets, ride buses or visit restaurants, shops and museums.
Less than a quarter of Italy’s disabled hold jobs compared with 47 percent for
Europe.
But the biggest obstacle for the country’s physically challenged may, in
fact, be the fabled Italian family. Because of the social defect that still
attaches to disabilities, “they tend to keep disabled people at home and out of
public view,” explains Giovanni Marri, head of an employment training center in
Milan that caters to the handicapped. Thus while 15 percent of the country’s
families include a disabled person, according to surveys, only 2 percent of
Italians report going to school with a disabled person and only 4 percent work
with one.
Italians are beginning to recognize the problem. Over the past decade, the
government has passed laws targeting everything from workplace discrimination to
accessibility requirements. A recent study by the European Union found that 85
percent of Italians admit that public transportation and infrastructure(基础设施)are
inadequate for the handicapped, and 97 percent say action is needed. But the
biggest barrier is psychological. “Italian companies are afraid of hiring
disabled people,” says Chiapello. The only way to alter that, he says, is for
Italy’s disabled to do what he did — get out of the house and demand change.
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