Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Party Aims To Give People With Disabilities A Chance To Explore Sexuality

The Canadian Press, 09 Aug, 2015 12:45 PM
    TORONTO — A party meant to give people with disabilities a chance to explore and express their sexuality is shining a spotlight on an enduring and often ignored barrier for those with physical and mental limitations.
     
    But though guests at the Deliciously Disabled party, to be held in Toronto next week, are free to act on their consensual desires, don't call it an orgy.
     
    "An orgy is when everybody comes together and has sex together," said Fatima Mechtab, one of the event's organizers. "This is a sex-positive play party."
     
    "The difference is that people can attend the event but they don't have to participate if they don't want to — they can be voyeurs, they can enjoy it like you would enjoy any other type of party... but then there's the added bonus of being able to be intimate with your partner or explore some sexual activity if you want to."
     
    The Aug. 14 event, a masquerade that will take place in a wheelchair-accessible theatre, is believed to be the first of its kind in Canada.
     
    Most discussions on accessibility focus on physical barriers, but the event's organizers said it's also important to look at the emotional and social hurdles that people with disabilities face, such as the widespread belief that they aren't sexual beings.
     
    "Access (to sexuality) is such a major barrier for people with disabilities — I don't think there's any other group in society that, depending on the level of their physical limitation, can't even pleasure themselves sexually," said Stella Palikarova, a disability awareness consultant.
     
    "You can imagine trying to go through life being completely unable to have any sort of sexual relief or even to think that you are perceived by others as being sexually desirable or a sexual person," said Palikarova, who uses a wheelchair.
     
    "That becomes a really major human rights issue for me."
     
    Palikarova, Mechtab and Andrew Morrison-Gurza, another disability awareness consultant, began planning the event several months ago but struggled to find an appropriate venue.
     
    Mechtab, who works at the Toronto sex club Oasis Aqualounge, initially suggested holding it there, but quickly realized the historic building isn't wheelchair accessible. 
     
    Finding a location that was both accessible and allowed nudity and sex proved a challenge, she said.
     
    The group eventually booked the Buddies in Bad Times theatre, not far from Oasis. The space can hold 125 people including roughly 25 wheelchairs. Tickets are $20 each.
     
    Personal support workers can attend for free, and there will be interpreters for the hearing impaired.
     
    The event is set to take place during the Parapan Am Games, which began Friday and end next weekend. The international competition has drawn more than 1,000 athletes with disabilities to the Toronto region.
     
    Palikarova said the timing isn't purely coincidental.
     
    "Some of the athletes perhaps might be interested in coming to an event like this," she said.
     
    As buzz around the event grows, a spokeswoman with the Council of Canadians With Disabilities said the issue the party seeks to highlight is an important one.
     
    "The reality is that we are sexual beings," said vice-chair Path Danforth. "It's an issue that remains seldom talked about, which I find quite bizarre."
     
    Danforth, who uses a wheelchair, said she's met a number of individuals with significant disabilities who've told her "no one ever gave them permission before to be sexual."
     
    "With this event, one of the things it will do is it will give people permission to have an opportunity to explore their own sexuality," she said. "If it's in such a way that it's demonstrating a healthy take on sexuality, then that's a good thing. It makes people aware and it makes some people less uncomfortable."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall Says Equalization Program Too Rich For Hydro Provinces

    "It is a lot of money to go out in a way that seems to be dated and not always efficient, and infrastructure and tax relief might be an option instead," Wall said

    Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall Says Equalization Program Too Rich For Hydro Provinces

    Inquest Called For In-custody Death After Woman Jailed In Terrace, B.C.

    Inquest Called For In-custody Death After Woman Jailed In Terrace, B.C.
    The coroners' service will investigate the death of a 25-year-old woman found in medical distress shortly after she was transported to a northern British Columbia jail.

    Inquest Called For In-custody Death After Woman Jailed In Terrace, B.C.

    Needle Barely Moves As Unemployment Rate Sticks At 6.8 Per Cent For Sixth Month

    Needle Barely Moves As Unemployment Rate Sticks At 6.8 Per Cent For Sixth Month
    Canada's economy added about 6,600 jobs last month, essentially reversing a similar decline in June but having too little effect to change a national unemployment rate that has been stuck at 6.8 per cent for six months in a row.

    Needle Barely Moves As Unemployment Rate Sticks At 6.8 Per Cent For Sixth Month

    B.C. Fishing Guide And His Client Accused Of Trying To Corral Deer In Water

    B.C. Fishing Guide And His Client Accused Of Trying To Corral Deer In Water
    KITIMAT, B.C. — A British Columbia fishing guide and his Portuguese client face several charges over allegations they tried to catch a deer while it was swimming in the Douglas Channel, on the northern coast.

    B.C. Fishing Guide And His Client Accused Of Trying To Corral Deer In Water

    About To Launch Album Debut, Chris Hadfield Talks Recording Music In Space

    TORONTO — Even two months away from launch, Chris Hadfield can claim without a trace of immodesty that his upcoming debut album is out of this world.

    About To Launch Album Debut, Chris Hadfield Talks Recording Music In Space

    Hundreds Attending United Church Triennial General Council In Newfoundland

    Hundreds Attending United Church Triennial General Council In Newfoundland
    TORONTO — Hundreds of people have been descending on Corner Brook, N.L., ahead of Saturday's opening of the United Church of Canada's triennial conference, which will elect a new spiritual leader and thrash out governance issues.

    Hundreds Attending United Church Triennial General Council In Newfoundland