Past Event
The Personal And the Political: Losing Parents to AIDS
With Alysia Abbott, Kia Benbow, Mathew Rodriguez, and Sarah Schulman
Visual AIDS facilitated a conversation with adult children who lost their parents to AIDS.
Even though AIDS was identified (as GRID) in 1981, we now know that people were dying from it ten to thirty years before. Of those who died of AIDS, many had children. Some of their children were born HIV positive, some were born negative because of medications given in utero. The amount of people whose parents died of AIDS may number in the hundreds of thousands nationally, and in the tens of thousands in New York City. Yet they have never been heard from as a community. Other nations have culturally acknowledged this experience, yet the US has remained silent.
This event was created to start this conversation. What are the experiences of people whose parents died of AIDS? How do they understand these experiences? What do they need? There was substantially fifteen years of government inaction regarding AIDS that lead to the global crisis we face today. Did their parents die of AIDS, or of government indifference and neglect? How can such a significant experience be brought to light in its range and scope and integrated into our understanding of the AIDS community?
Watch the discussion here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BnZsMDEZV98
The Personal And the Political: Losing Parents to AIDS
Tuesday, February 25, 2013
Auditorium, New York Public Library
Panelists:
Alysia Abbott is the author of Fairyland: A Memoir of My Father, which is a story about growing up in the iconic moment of Haight-Ashbury in the 1970s with her father, the writer Steve Abbott who died of AIDS related complications in 1994.
Abbott has written for numerous publications including The Atlantic, Psychology Today and many others. She lives with her husband and two children in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Kia Labeija (Benbow) is a multi-disciplinary artist working in photography, illustration dance, performance and installation. Benbow is a member of the iconic house of Labeija. As an activist Benbow has been a champion of HIV/AIDS related causes, including raising awareness of young people living with HIV and increasing people's exposure to art through nightlife. Currently, Benbow is at the New School.
Mathew Rodriguez is a writer and is the Editorial Project Manager at TheBody.com, the web's most complete HIV/AIDS resource, where he has written about his relationship to his father, Alfredo Rodriguez, who was living with HIV and passed away from an AIDS-related illness at the age of 55 in the year 2011. Rodriguez is a queer Latino who engages in both AIDS and queer activism.
Moderator:
Sarah Schulman is a writer, teacher and AIDS historian. Her books focused on the AIDS crisis include the novels People In Trouble, Rat Bohemia and The Child and the nonfiction books, My American History: Lesbian and Gay Life During the Reagan/Bush Years, Stagestruck: Theater, AIDS and the Marketing of Gay America and The Gentrification of the Mind: Witness to a Lost Imagination. With Jim Hubbard she is co-director of the ACT UP Oral History Project and co-producer of the feature documentary film UNITED IN ANGER :The History of ACT UP. As a journalist, Sarah reported on AIDS for The Village Voice, The Nation and other publications. She was a member of ACT UP from 1987 to 1992.
This conversation is part of Why We Fight at the New York Public Library
Historically, the national and international response to the HIV
epidemic lagged behind the passionate work of dedicated individuals who
tended the sick, challenged prejudices against people living with HIV,
educated their communities, and fought for resources and research.
Acknowledging the crucial work of all AIDS activists, Why We Fight
focuses on the contributions of those whose work was undertaken in New
York City, which was an early epicenter for both the recognition of the
disease and the grassroots response to the epidemic. The New York Public
Library is a major repository for this history, preserving the archives
of key organizations and individuals that have been pivotal in the
response to AIDS.
Now through April 6, Stephen A. Schwarzman Building