Meet Lucas Warren

Jonathan Lange, Only Human
Posted 3/20/18

Jonathan Lange column for March 20, 2018

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Meet Lucas Warren

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Ann Turner Cook recently celebrated her 91st birthday. You may not recognize her name, but you surely know her face. She is the iconic baby sketched in charcoal that has graced Gerber baby-food jars since 1928. 

More recently, Gerber has initiated an annual photo contest to name a national “Spokesbaby of the year.” This year more than 140,000 pictures were submitted, and on February 7 Gerber announced the winner.

Lucas Warren is the eighth annual Gerber Spokesbaby. Son of Courtney and Jason Warren of Dalton, Georgia, Lucas has an infectious smile and an endearing personality. The photo that made him famous caught him in mid-giggle sitting in a brown overstuffed chair with white pants, bare feet, and black polka-dot bowtie against an aqua dress shirt.

The name “Lucas” means “light.” He is certainly that. Courtney said, “We hope this opportunity sheds light on the special needs community and educates people that with acceptance and support, individuals with special needs have the potential to change the world — just like our Lucas!”

Part of what makes Lucas so adorable is genetic. Of course, that’s true of every photogenic person. He can’t take credit for his facial features or musculature, nor can he be blamed. These things are just as much a part of who he is as his gender, eye color, and innate abilities.

People have always appeared, in every nation, who have shared Lucas’ endearing characteristics. They have also shared a number of physical and mental challenges. In 1866, John Langdon Down described this grouping of characteristics and gave it the name “Down syndrome.” Later, in 1959, it was discovered that most (not all) of the people who share these characteristics have an extra copy of the 21st chromosome. 

All human beings have 23 pairs of chromosomes. When there is an extra copy at position 21, there are three, instead of two. The technical name for this is “Trisomy 21.” For reasons nobody fully understands, it tends to manifest itself in a cluster of symptoms that are similar, but not identical, from one person to another.

In 2006, the United Nations declared March 21, to be World Down Syndrome Day. The date was chosen because, when written: 3-21, it is reminiscent of three chromosomes at the 21st position.

Secretary-General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon said, “On this day, let us reaffirm that persons with Down syndrome are entitled to the full and effective enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms. Let us each do our part to enable children and persons with Down syndrome to participate fully in the development and life of their societies on an equal basis with others. Let us build an inclusive society for all.”

As we mark World Down Syndrome Day, let’s start by noting that it is a chromosomal reality, not a disease. Every person is born with a specific genetic makeup. It is unalterably a part of who you are. This specific makeup is duplicated in every single one of your 100 trillion cells. You cannot change your genes any more than you can change your past.

This condition is not a virus like the flu, nor is it an infection like leprosy, nor even a cancer. It is much more like blue eyes and blonde hair. But even this isn’t quite it. Blue eyes and blonde hair are hereditary. Down syndrome is not. It is simply one genetic trait among others.

That’s why Iceland’s attempts to wipe out Down syndrome are so evil. You cannot wipe it out like a disease, with drugs. You cannot even wipe it out like a race, through sterilization. You can only wipe out individual people who have it, with no hope of preventing it in the next generation. 

This is the purest form of genocide. It is selectively eliminating people for no other purpose than an irrational fear of their presence.

To treat people with Down syndrome as if they had a disease is both unjust and ignorant. But neither should we treat people with Down syndrome as if their genes don’t matter. What cannot be changed should not be punished, but neither should it be ignored. 

Basic human rights require that we treat all people with equal human dignity while also respecting the realities of their bodies. This is true whether we are considering the XY chromosomes in the 23rd position that make people male or female, or a triplicate chromosome in the 13th, 18th, or 21st place. Each is unalterably part of their humanity and should be treated as such.

The fact that people with Trisomy 21 often experience significant challenges to their health is no different from the fact that people with cancer in their genes will also experience significant challenges to their health. But until we come up with a way of detecting cancerous genes, people simply live their lives and deal with problems as they arise.

Trisomy 21 became singled out from every other genetic challenge around 1970 when tests became available to screen for it prior to birth. Although such tests can produce as many as 25 false positives for every true instance of Down syndrome, nearly nine in ten children are aborted after a positive test.

Trisomy 21 happens when either the mother’s egg (88 percent of the time) or the father’s sperm (12 percent of the time) contains a duplicated chromosome at the 21st place. When the child is conceived, and this DNA strand combines with the other, instead of the usual 23 sets of pairs, the set at place 21 is a triad. 

Triplicate chromosomes (Trisomies) can occur at any of the 23 places on the DNA strand. However, we rarely see people other than Trisomy 21 (Down syndrome) and Trisomy 23 (intersex). People with Trisomy at other places on the DNA chain usually do not survive to birth. 

Some believe that genetics is simply a matter of random chance. Such people don’t see any choice but the choice of accepting of or eliminating people with Down syndrome. 

But for those who believe in a God who creates all things, genetics is not dumb luck. It is, rather, a choice made by One higher than ourselves. God Himself has chosen to make Trisomy 21 and 23 so that they do not die before birth, but live and grace us with their presence.

This is a specific gift of God and not a “problem” to be fixed. It is a gift to be received with faith and thanksgiving. A society that keeps this view in mind will never make people with Down syndrome feel unwanted or undervalued. It will be “an inclusive society for all,” as Ban Ki-moon urged us to build.

Those who know people with Trisomy 21 have experienced God’s gift directly. There are few people on earth today who are so filled with joy, and bring so much joy to those around them. I have never known a parent of someone with Trisomy 21 who would trade this joy for a more “healthy” child. 

On this World Down Syndrome Day, seek out such people and experience the joy for yourself.