AIDS

Acting Up in the 21st Century

During CHAMP's March community forum to create intergenerational dialogue within the AIDS movement around the ACT UP Oral History Projects, we watched an incredible video compilation of ACT UP protests from the early days of AIDS activism, put together by panelist and ACT UP Oral History Project co-creator Sarah Schulman. An opening scene showed people sitting in the very same room at the LGBT Center that we were sitting in. The room was hadn’t changed in 25 years.  The crowd was even pretty similar-mostly white faces. The only difference was the most recent forum, while a good turnout for a 2009 event, didn't draw as much of a crowd as the standing-room only ACT UP meetings of yore.

This sort-of déjà vu seemed a metaphor for AIDS activism today. Watching the video, I was struck how some of the slogans-"AIDS Budgets Kill!"-and chants-"Act Up, fight back!" can be found in many of the rallies I've attended over the last two years.  As a young person new to the movement, it was incredible seeing the uncanny similarities that I hadn't fully grasped until I saw it firsthand.

ACT UP Philadelphia member Pascal Emmer noticed the similarities too when he first became involved in queer activism. "Most of our works and rhetoric was borrowed from earlier movements, but it lacked a historical context,” Pascal said. Emmer and his friend Jessica Rodriguez joined ACT UP Philadelphia where they started the group's oral history project to highlight the stories of the movement and preserve them for memory so these stories aren't lost.  read more »

CHAMP Activists Bring HIV Prevention Justice to the Heart of Creating Change

Like any good revival, Creating Change generated spirits on fire, weeping and dancing for AIDS activists and LGBTQ leaders across the generations.  CHAMP facilitated eight sessions exploring the facts, fictions, politics and deeply rooted social causes of the epidemic in this country.  And we took action then and there at the largest annual advocacy meeting of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer people and allies from across the country held in Denver last week.

Launching our Promo Homo campaign, we met with hundreds of participants who signed on with CHAMP’s HIV prevention justice mission, and planned new partnerships with grassroots groups.  This is a groundbreaking effort, reuniting across movements to build a powerful community-based movement at the complex intersection of HIV and homophobia and transphobia in the United States.

Together we are working to address the ways that institutionalized fear and hatred of sexual diversity makes our communities more vulnerable to HIV by supporting and strengthening local community leadership, weaving national networks, and building the movement for HIV prevention justice to challenge this deep and persistent structural vulnerability.
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Inaugurating President Obama: Fuel for the Fire of Movement Building

Stunning, to travel to the city where I had lived and had protested the Bush/Cheney ascension to power -- but instead to witness the inauguration of President Barack Obama.

The 8-year depression seemed to lift from the people of DC.  Around Union station and up to the Mall, makeshift stalls clustered in clearings hawking Obama t-shirts, First Family bags, a huge painting of Obama and Michelle as divine Egyptian royalty.  Friends who live there were hosting giant slumber parties of out of town guests.  Troops of kids from DC schools held hands and took each other’s photos, their teachers gleeful.  Chatty Obama-enthusiast taxi drivers.

The city is finally eager to be home to our Nation’s elected leader and the entire community of appointees, staffers and supporters who transform the restaurants, the schools, the fashions, the streets, the fabric and rhythm of the city by their doings.  The people of our Nation’s capital also suffer one of the highest HIV rates in this country, on par with worst epidemics in Africa.

Two million people were on the Mall, according to official estimates.   We walked for two hours through a tunnel and past the Tidal basin.  Three young women walked together with elbows linked, Kenyon flags flapping off their coat shoulders like superhero capes.  AIDS is the leading cause of death for Black women in America in their age group.  In their home country of Kenya, HIV rates for young women ages 15 to 25 are 5 times those of their male counterparts. 
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“STOP AIDS: KEEP THE PROMISE” World AIDS Day 2008 at Riverside

Blog by Lissa Gundlach, CHAMP Fellow and Student at Union Theological Seminary

As the snow is falling in New York and colleagues are departing for the holidays, I am thinking about Christmas, faith and the beautiful World AIDS Day Celebration at Riverside Church this year.

Over 40 years ago at the Riverside Church in Harlem, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King delivered his final speech at a meeting of Clergy and Laity Concerned about Vietnam (CLCV), and he opened: "A time comes when silence is betrayal.”

As we know from the ACT UP movement, silence is not only betrayal— it is death.  read more »

At this same historic church on the rainy, chilly eve of World AIDS Day—hundreds of people gathered at the intersection of these two great activist traditions and found a place of refuge in the warmth, hope, and inspiration.  Riverside’s Stop AIDS: Keep the Promise “Lead, Empower, Deliver” event commemorated the 20th anniversary of World AIDS Day and the UNAIDS Joint Programme on HIV/ AIDS.  Local, national, and global leaders addressed the crowd of community members from Harlem and around the world.

Sex Workers March on Washington, DC to Say, “Stop shaming us to death!”

Wednesday, December 17 is the 6th annual International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers, initiated by the Sex Workers Outreach Project (SWOP).  In cities across the U.S., Canada and Europe, and in Skopje, Macedonia, and Sydney, Australia, sex workers will remember their dead and show their movement’s strength at vigils, demonstrations and film showings.  For a list of events across the country and the world, visit http://swopusa.org/dec17/locations.htm.

This year, there will be a first-time-ever national march in Washington, DC.  Sex workers and their allies will gather in Franklin Square Park (14th St. NW and I St. NW) for a rally, and march to the Department of Justice to read the names of sex workers who have been murdered in the past year.

“Sex workers experience a disproportionate level of preventable violence,” said Kelli Dorsey, director of the Washington DC community organization Different Avenues, in a press release supporting the protest.  “People of color and transgender people are overwhelmingly targeted.  This discrimination is too often ignored.”<!--break-->

Arrest, deportation and police abuse, as well as the stigma and violence sex workers often experience from clients, in their workplace and in society, also put them at risk for HIV. It’s hard to demand your client use a condom when your first priority is preventing him from raping or killing you.  It’s hard to carry condoms while working on the street if cops use them against you as evidence. 
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Radically Revisioning the Root of Government: 60 Years and Counting for the Realization of Human Rights

Today, Wednesday, December 10, marks the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR).

Last Saturday, at the invitation of ThirdRoot Community Health Center in Brooklyn, Hadiyah Charles from the HIV Law Project, Center for Women and HIV Advocacy and I facilitated a workshop for a small group of social justice minded health workers and advocates. 

We presented an outline of a tree on a large sheet of a paper taped to the spring green studio wall.  Then from reclined positions on yoga bolsters, the group mapped out how HIV and AIDS looks in this country and in our lives as words among the leaves of the tree.  Among a tangle of roots, we charted the inequities and mistaken values that drive the epidemic, such as racial injustice, gender inequity, homophobia and transphobia.  In the trunk, we listed the institutions that carry these social injustices into our lives. 

We went on to map how and where every one’s work intervenes in the AIDS crisis, and where our work comes together.  Specifically, we showed how CHAMP works to revision the roots and demand that institutions instead carry principles that empower and sustain us into our lives.  As we crossed out "gender inequity" for "gender justice," we added human rights to the root system.

A human rights analysis leads us to governments' many doors to make demands.   The Universal Declaration of Human Rights offers a set of principles on which any government should found its work, positioning the state as a mechanism to have our basic needs met.   Human rights promise that means all of us and all of our needs.

The violation of human rights leads to HIV vulnerability, and human rights also provide a framework for working our way out of the AIDS crisis, perhaps foremost through the right to the highest attainable standard of health.

Let’s hold our government officials accountable for delivering our human right to health, including our mental and sexual health.  We each have this right regardless of our income or immigration status, our criminal record or sexual practices.  Rights, however, are only meaningful when we demand them and then realize them in our lives and communities.

Nancy Ordover reminded CHAMPsters that the drafters of the UDHR specifically noted that it should be disseminated and, in particular, should be read in schools and other educational settings. 

There are many legitimate criticisms of the United Nations and even of how this document came to be.  People worldwide are still working to make the idea of human rights meaningful for women, young people, and any of us who live in the intersections of oppressions in our societies.  The document itself, however, provides a guiding principles for humane states accountable to the people they serve.

Hope + Action: Rally in DC Heralds Obama's Promises to Address AIDS

CHAMP at Nov 20 Rally - Walt!!It was cold like January in DC last Thursday—the atmosphere fittingly freezing for our community inauguration of President-Elect Barack Obama as the first true AIDS president, a theatrical enactment to seal the promise of January 20th.   read more »

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About the HIV PJA

The HIV Prevention Justice Alliance (HIV PJA) is a network of organizations advocating for effective and just HIV prevention policies for the United States. We grew out of the successful 2007 Prevention Justice Mobilization, which united hundreds of groups across the country at the intersection of HIV/AIDS, human rights, and struggles for social, racial, gender, and economic justice.

The HIV PJA is coordinated by Community HIV/AIDS Mobilization Project (CHAMP) in collaboration with AIDS Foundation of Chicago, and SisterLove.

 

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