
Alan Reich, Disability Activist
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When Alan Reich broke his neck while diving at age 32, he neither retreated home nor plunged into advocacy; he simply went back to work. Only years later, when he began traveling in his job
with the State Department, did his worldview on disability rights broaden. People with disabilities are "the most vulnerable, the most needy, the most discriminated against, in each
society," Reich told us, shortly before his death in November at age 75. "I felt I had a responsibility to do something." And so he founded the National Organization on Disability (NOD), a
nonprofit devoted to increasing the rights and participation of the 600 million disabled men, women, and children worldwide. Reich got the United Nations to declare its first International
Year of Disabled Persons, created a $50,000 annual award to promote progress in disability rights, aggressively promoted the Americans With Disabilities Act, and forced a redesign of the
Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial in Washington, D.C., to show the wartime president in his wheelchair. Most recently, NOD has been working to establish guidelines for including disabled
people in post-9/11 disaster recovery plans. "Alan has provided a platform to help raise the standards for people living with disabilities all over the world," says Dana Reeve, whose late
husband, Christopher, served as vice chairman of NOD. For the 54 million Americans living with disabilities, Reich—a former track star—will always be a champion.
*The name of this award was originally the Impact Award. In 2008, the awards were renamed as the Inspire Awards.
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