#Parshachat creates forum for disability-informed Torah
“Some people might be having struggles and might not be able to go to shul, but we can talk about things and it can make a difference,” Regan said. “[It’s about] having space outside the pressure to be positive.”
Regan says there is a “rich tradition” of Twitter discussions, including some about Jewish liturgy, but #parshachat appears to be the first ongoing one at the intersection of Torah study and disability.
Social media brings the geographically dispersed #parshachat community together in ways unavailable before the advent of the Internet. Regan lives in New York and Bartmess in San Francisco. Online discussions can also be easier for people with disabilities to access than in-person ones.
Bartmess explains that Twitter can also be an especially useful discussion tool for people with disabilities because the open-ended nature of the chats — people chime in whenever they like with comments marked with a hashtag — erases some of the stress of real-time conversation for people like her with auditory processing issues.
“It gives you time to think because you don’t have to respond immediately,” Bartmess said. “You can really think the question over, you’re not on the spot and don’t have to say something right away.”
Regan added that the platform’s character limit — 140 for now — prevents people from unleashing wordy and unwieldy “monologues” like they do on other platforms such as Facebook. Further, while people often become friends on Facebook based on geographical proximity or after an in-person meeting, those who chat on Twitter often cluster around shared interests.
For Regan, finding people on Twitter with similar interests reminds her of the days when she used AOL’s popular Instant Messenger service, which offered countless chat rooms for people based on specific topics.
“I had so much trouble finding people who wanted to talk to me and who weren’t annoyed by my intense interests,” Regan said. “As an autistic kid, that was totally game-changing for me.”
Savannah Breakstone, 28, who lives in rural Pennsylvania more than an hour away from the nearest synagogue, has regularly participated in the #parshachat since it started. Most of her family does not identify as Jewish, but she discovered that she is descended from Jews forced to convert to Catholicism during the Spanish Inquisition and she now identifies as an anusah, or a returner to the Jewish faith.
Since Breakstone also is autistic and has other chronic health issues, she calls #parshachat a “huge relief.”
“Beyond just learning about other people’s thoughts on different parshas, I’ve more importantly learned some confidence as a Jew, and [developed] more confidence in participating in Jewish life,” Breakstone said.
Illustrative: A Twitter app on an iPhone screen. (AP/Richard Drew/File)