lifestyle | health
AIDS Rally Calls Attention to Disease's Devastation
Among Blacks
HIV Patients Plan To Lobby Congress
By Lori Montgomery
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, November 6, 2005; Page C03
Kendal Richardson, 27, tested positive for the AIDS virus in 1996,
not long after graduating from high school in Sterling. He said
he continued to have unprotected sex with men for five years before
seeking treatment.
Geno Dunnington, 49, tested positive in 1985. "The first thing
I did was went out and got married," he said. His wife and
two children were not infected, he said, but he continued to have
unprotected sex with men for more than a decade.
Marchers organized by the Campaign to End AIDS travel along the
Anacostia River. About one in 20 District residents is infected
with HIV, and the figure climbs to about one in seven among black
men.
Marchers organized by the Campaign to End AIDS travel along the
Anacostia River. About one in 20 District residents is infected
with HIV, and the figure climbs to about one in seven among black
men. (Photos By Ricky Carioti -- The Washington Post)
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Ronald Morgan, 43, tested positive in 1984 but continued to have
unprotected sex until last winter, when his skin broke out in boils.
"My HIV had progressed to full-blown AIDS," he said.
Yesterday, Richardson, Dunnington and Morgan joined nearly 300
other people with HIV from across the country outside Robert F.
Kennedy Memorial Stadium to call on the president, Congress and
society to make a renewed commitment to ending the AIDS epidemic.
Then the crowd, organized by the Campaign to End AIDS, marched
to Anacostia Park to call attention to the virus's growing devastation
of the black community, particularly in the nation's capital.
Washington has a far higher incidence of AIDS -- 170.6 cases per
100,000 people, according to federal statistics -- than other major
U.S. cities, including New York and San Francisco. An estimated
one in 20 District residents is infected with HIV, the virus that
causes AIDS. And that number climbs to an estimated one in seven
among black men in the District, said Michael Pickering of RAP Inc.,
a drug treatment program that works with people who have AIDS.
"That number should petrify us all," Pickering said as
marchers chanting to a single snare drum and carrying colorful state
flags straggled into Anacostia Park to listen to music and hear
speeches from AIDS activists and D.C. Council member Adrian M. Fenty
(D-Ward 4). "There shouldn't be room to stand in this park,"
Pickering said.
Richardson, Dunnington and Morgan are among the statistics. All
three are African Americans who contracted HIV while living in or
around the District. They are also examples of why the virus can
spread so rapidly in the city's black community: All said they initially
dealt with news of their infection not by seeking treatment, but
by withdrawing into a state of denial.
"I wanted to be regular. I wanted to fit in. So I did everything
everyone else was doing so they wouldn't know," said Richardson,
who lives in Atlanta. That included going to "the sex shops,
the O Street Follies, and just doing anything and everything,"
he said.
Since seeking treatment and finding religion, Richardson said,
he has contacted former sex partners and was relieved to find that
none had contracted the virus. "But you don't know who else
you could have done it to," he said.
Dunnington, who lives near RFK Stadium, and Morgan, who lives at
RAP's treatment center in Northeast Washington, said they have no
doubt that they passed the AIDS virus on to others before seeking
treatment for drug and alcohol addictions -- behavior similar to
that of Sundiata Basir, the former D.C. government worker who was
sentenced last week to 21 years in prison for exposing at least
seven women and girls as young as 15 to the AIDS virus.
Although Basir was unapologetic, Dunnington and Morgan said they
are trying to atone for their actions by getting involved in advocacy
programs and reaching out to young people who might be making the
same mistakes they did.
"We need to stop, take a chill pill and get a new direction,"
Morgan said. "If you have HIV, you need to learn to disclose."
Although the marchers voiced concern chiefly about changing individual
behavior, leaders of the Campaign to End AIDS said little will improve
until Congress fully funds education and prevention programs that
teach people to do more than practice abstinence. They also decried
proposed cuts in the Medicaid budget and the expiration of the Ryan
White CARE Act, both of which provide a crucial safety net for hundreds
of thousands of people with HIV.
Over the next three days, leaders of the campaign will lobby Congress
for more attention and money for research on the disease.
They also will protest outside the White House and the offices
of conservative organizations.
But most important, they said, they will urge national leaders
to fund research into a cure for the disease that is still killing
millions worldwide.
No one "is articulating a vision of a world without AIDS,"
said Charles King, president of Housing Works, a nonprofit organization
that serves the HIV-infected homeless in New York and Mississippi.
"We really could end this epidemic if we had the will, the
compassion to do that." |