There is a color that lights up the world on April 2: it is blue, a light that breaks the silence and ignites awareness. World Autism Awareness Day, celebrated today, was born as a collective call for inclusion, an invitation to look beyond the norm and listen to those who are often misunderstood or left on the margins.

In Italy, it is estimated that there are about 600,000 people on the autism spectrum, and 550,000 of them are under the age of twenty. Behind these numbers, there are faces, stories, families who fight against invisible barriers and deep-rooted prejudices every day.

School, work, social life are still difficult terrains to navigate for those who move on different coordinates , for those who communicate in ways that society struggles to understand and accept.

Yet, diversity is not a lack, but another way of being in the world. Autistic people bring with them sensitivity, intelligence, unique talents, often suffocated by a society that tends to simplify, classify, exclude those who do not fit into conventions.

The use of the term “spectrum”, in fact, is not accidental: there is not just one way of being autistic, just as there is not just one way of being human. Variability is the key to understanding a universe that does not allow itself to be caged in rigid definitions.

For years, associations and families have been fighting for the recognition of essential rights and for a culture of inclusion that is not just a word, but a daily practice . And events like Light It Up Blue, which paints monuments and cities all over the world in blue, are a strong message, a light that cuts through the darkness of indifference.

However, awareness is not built in a day, it is nourished by listening, by knowledge and above all by the courage to change perspective .

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