There is obviously still room for improvement in inclusion. For Elaine, 9, an afternoon at Parc du Bocas in France doesn’t equate to a good laugh. Every year she is entitled to a family picnic with her parents and other siblings at the main amusement park of Seine-Maritime near Clérres on Sunday, August 28. Elin, who lives in Maddenville near Pucci, suffers from agenesis, missing her left arm and a large portion of her forearm.
“We used to go on little boat rides that ended up in a ‘toboggan,'” says his mother, Sandy Godu. But when settling down, the man in charge of the attraction told him: “”A young woman without arms cannot, she cannot go happily,” he testifies in the columns of Paris. Normandy””. The girl “came out in tears”.
Eileen’s mother decries the lack of expertise: “We later found out that there was a sign at the start of the queue indicating that the park had to refuse disabled situations for safety reasons. But I wish someone had told me earlier rather than standing in line for 45 minutes for nothing. Especially when I paid the normal fee at checkout. There, we were not told anything about my daughter’s disability,” laments Sandy.
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