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Impact


AAMR Statement on Spirituality and Religious Freedom

(Sidebar in original publication.)

The following policy statement was adopted by the American Association on Mental Retardation (AAMR) in 2001. It is excerpted here with permission:

Spirituality is an important part of human experience that may be expressed both through religious practice and through expressions of personal meaning and values. Spirituality and religious preference should be part of any holistic, interdisciplinary assessment of individual and family needs, interests, and strengths.

Spirituality, spiritual growth, and religious expression are rights that should be honored by supports from service systems and religious communities that respect a person’s history, tradition, and current preference or choice.

Faith communities and other community expressions of spirituality may also need support and assistance to build their capacity to welcome and include people with disabilities and their families.

The need for meaningful supports that respect and honor spiritual needs and religious preferences in both service systems and faith communities represents an important opportunity for partnership and shared responsibility between provider agencies, advocacy organizations, and religious communities.

Training and education regarding spiritual supports for people with mental retardation and their families should be provided within both public agencies and spiritual communities.


The complete text of the policy statement can be found on the AAMR Web site at www.aamr.org.

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Retrieved from the Web site of the Institute on Community Integration, University of Minnesota (http://ici.umn.edu). Citation: Gaylord, V., Gaventa, B., Simon, S.R., Norman-McNaney, R., Amado, A.N. (Eds.). (2002). Impact: Feature Issue on Faith Communities and Persons with Developmental Disabilities, 14(3) [online]. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, Institute on Community Integration. Available at http://ici.umn.edu/products/impact/143.

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Hard copies of Impact are available from the Publications Office of the Institute on Community Integration. The first copy of this issue is free; additional copies are $4 each. You can request copies by phone at 612/624-4512 or e-mail at icipub@umn.edu, or you can fax or mail us an order form. See our listing of other issues of Impact for more information.

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The print design version (PDF, 692K, 28 pp.) of this issue of Impact is also available for free, complete with the color layout and photographs. This version looks the most like the newsletter as it was printed.

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