Disability Day of Mourning 2026
March 2, 2026
5:00 PM - 6:30 PM
Location
235 BSB
Address
1007 W. Harrison St., Chicago, IL 60607
Zoom Registration
Calendar
Download iCal FileEvery year, communities across the country and around the world join together for the Disability Day of Mourning (DDOM).
The DDOM is a community vigil that honors the lives of people with disabilities killed by their families and caregivers. The disability community comes together in remembrance, to share hope for the future, and to offer support.
Nondisabled allies, family members, and friends are welcome to join.
Event Flow (What to Expect):
Welcome & background about the Disability Day of Mourning
Reading the names for 2025-26: people with disabilities who were killed by their caregivers, people with disabilities who have been killed by state violence, and disability community members who passed away.
Time for attendees to share thoughts, reflections, poems, etc.
This vigil is a hybrid event. It will be held on Zoom as well as in-person at the UIC Disability Cultural Center (with limited spots!).
Covid-19 Safety: UIC does not require masking, but we are still masking in our spaces and at our events to make them more accessible for chronically ill / immunocompromised folks and people who live with them. If it’s accessible for you, please wear a mask! We’ll have extras on hand.
Access information: The vigil will be held in the UIC DCC, which is on the 2nd floor and accessible by elevator. The building has men’s, women’s, and all-gender bathrooms with stalls that have grab bars but are not large. There is a large, single-user ADA restroom on the 1st floor of the building.
We will offer a separate Quiet Space for decompressing as needed.
We will have CART captions and ASL. The ASL interpreter will be on site with a dedicated camera logged into Zoom. The DCC uses fragrance-free cleaning supplies but UIC is not a fragrance-free campus. Please refrain from wearing scented products, such as scented lotion, perfume and cologne.
This event is a collaboration between the Chicagoland Disabled People of Color Coalition (Chicagoland DPOCC), the UIC Disability Cultural Center, the Center for Racial and Disability Justice at UCLA, the Coalition of Autistic and Neurodivergent Students (CANS), the UIC Institute on Disability and Human Development, and the Autism Self Advocacy Network (ASAN).
Date posted
Feb 11, 2026
Date updated
Feb 11, 2026