70 años de progreso

Today, UCP of Central Arizona is one of the state’s oldest and most valuable non-profits, serving almost 3,000 members across a broad range of disabilities and delays. But that didn’t happen overnight. People with disabilities have fought a long and arduous battle for equality and respect over decades, even centuries.

America, 1948. Across the country, across the world, people treat those with disabilities as second-class citizens. The average person lacks any understanding of disabilities, and as it so often does, that lack of understanding ferments into fear and prejudice. Desperate for help, parents confine their children with disabilities to draconian institutions, depriving them of social interaction and personal development. Far from helping, this only fuels the perception that people with disabilities are not capable of enjoying rich, full lives. A new “science”, called Eugenics, tells the world that only the physically strong are fit to survive. Much of society listens.

Aún así, muchos padres en todo el mundo eligen el amor sobre el miedo y se comprometen a proporcionar la mejor vida posible para sus hijos.

Pero sin recursos, servicios o el apoyo de otras familias y profesionales de la salud, se siente como escalar un glaciar en la oscuridad. Los padres se sienten aislados. Indefenso. Solo.

No one is immune, not even the powerful. Enter two prominent New York couples, Leonard and Isabelle Goldenson & Jack and Ethel Hausman, who both want to give their own children with cerebral palsy — and others like them — the brightest future they can. But like so many others, they don’t know how.  Together they take out an advertisement in New York Herald Tribune, calling out to families like them, families that want to improve the services for people with disabilities, families that refuse to watch their loved ones be relegated to the fringes of society.

Black and white photo of a couple in tuxedos.

The response is immediate and overwhelming. Hundreds of letters pour into the Goldenson’s and Hausman’s from parents across the nation, all searching for a community powerful enough to change the country’s misperception of disability. And so, in 1949, UCP National was born, committed to improving the well-being of people everywhere and bringing disabilities into the spotlight. Only this time, it would be on their terms.

Las afiliadas de UCP surgieron en todo el país, y en 1952 un grupo de padres de Phoenix fundó una afiliada de Arizona conocida como UCP de Arizona central. En los últimos 68 años y con la ayuda de algunas familias increíbles, personal, organizaciones asociadas y nuestros generosos donantes, UCP de Arizona Central ha ayudado a miles de miembros de Arizona y sus familias en su viaje hacia una vida sin límites.

An old photo of a man talking to a woman at the pediatric therapy center.

The Goldenson’s and Hausman’s legacy of committed and caring parents going to any length to provide for their family is continued to this day. UCP National works tirelessly on issues from homeownership to health care reform, inclusive education to competitive employment, and so much more. As long as there are people with disabilities, UCP will be there every step of the way, helping them thrive on their journey. And we wouldn’t have it any other way.

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Creando milagros cotidianos para niños y adultos con discapacidades

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1802 West Parkside Lane
Phoenix, AZ 85027

(602) 943-5472
(888) 943-5472

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