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Experts Agree
That Churchill Did Stutter
Stuttering
"not a myth" say speech
experts of famous orator
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For more information, contact:
Jane Fraser
(202) 686-4494
info@stutteringhelp.org
(Memphis, TN) Seeking to "remove Winston
Churchill's stutter by second guessing the diagnosis" indicates
neither a truthful retelling of history nor an informed opinion about
a complex speech disorder, say experts in the field of speech-language
pathology.
Recent news reports that quote Dr. John Mather,
a Washington physician, as saying that Churchill's stutter "is a lie"
brought adamant critical response from specialists in the field of
stuttering and fluency disorders.
"One need not consult numerous historians or
contemporary or family records to verify this: a well-circulated
medical education film on stuttering that we use in our clinical
teaching each semester shows excerpts from Churchill's famous "Iron
Curtain" speech that clearly evidence classic stuttering
behaviors," said Nan Bernstein Ratner, Ed.D, and Vivian Sisskin,
M.A., of the Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences at the
University of Maryland. "That Churchill was not seen to stutter in
some records is in fact a classic and frustrating feature of
stuttering."
"Perhaps Dr. Mather believes that Churchill
never stuttered because he heard him give so many speeches fluently.
But remember that many people who stutter, such as James Earl Jones,
John Stossel, and Bruce Willis, are often fluent when they speak
before an audience. But all three have overcome significant stuttering
problems," said Barry Guitar, Ph.D., professor of Communication
Sciences at the University of Vermont.
Guitar is a world-renowned expert on the topic
whose text-book is currently being used in more than half of all
college classes on stuttering. In the training videotape featuring
Churchill, "The Doctor is In," produced by Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical
Center, Guitar, himself a stutterer, notes several instances of
Churchill's stuttering and, specifically, his use of "a classic
maneuver that those who stutter often use."
"We stand on very firm ground concerning
Churchill and his stammer," says Jane Fraser, president of The
Stuttering Foundation. "There was no doubt among his contemporaries
that he stuttered. The diary of Lord Moran, Churchill's personal
physician, who presumably knew him better than John Mather, describes
Churchill's early stammer. Churchill's son, Sir Randolph Churchill,
discusses it in his biography as does William Manchester in his
outstanding 1983 biography, The Last Lion, describing Churchill
as "speaking with a lisp and a slight stutter".
The Foundation's public service advertisements
featuring Churchill have been called "a misrepresentation" by Mather,
who says he believes Churchill had only a slight lisp.
"Stuttering can manifest in many forms,"
explained Lisa Scott Trautman, Ph.D., of The Florida State University.
"It is also important to note that current research indicates that 30
percent of those who stutter have a concomitant articulation disorder,
such as a lisp."
"We now know that stuttering is a
neurologically-based condition that does not emerge from or reflect
psychological maladjustment," added Dr. Ratner.
Concluded Dr. Guitar, " Although evidence
clearly shows that Churchill stuttered, the important point here is
that he overcame the problem to become a stirring and eloquent
speaker. He gave us some of the most memorable words in history. The
fact that he sometimes stuttered when he said them was—and is—nothing
to be ashamed of."
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