It's December 1st, World AIDS Day... and this year is like no other for me. I am still speaking out about this disease, but now I am collaborating with some wonderful people who are on the forefront of it all. One such person is the beautiful Hydeia Broadbent. When you take a look at that innocent face, with the cheeks that make you think, "Haven't I seen you somewhere before?" You have. Somewhere on television, like Oprah Winfrey, Phil Donahue (maybe not, but I have, ya'll know I'm old), and Extreme Home Makeovers. She was the little girl we got introduced to because she was adopted after being left at an hospital, she was not only abandoned, but her mother passed HIV on to her. She received a grim diagnosis early on, when the doctor told her adoptive parents that she would not live beyond 5 years old. But look at how God works...this is Hydeia now...
Amazing is only one word, wise, intelligent, resourceful, a fighter, and committed! I know because I speak with her, and she never ceases to amaze me with her spirit. Not only is she an International Speaker, whisking off at a whim to speak to whomever will listen about HIV/AIDS, but she is a community activist right here in the Las Vegas, NV community. Hydeia is on the board of Purple W.I.N.G.S Org., as the reproductive health facilitator. Her mission is to raise awareness, help us defeat this teen pregnancy issue, by instilling self-esteem where there once was little to none. Please read on what she shared with WEENONLINE.org....What does HIV mean to Hip-Hop?
Since HIV is hitting the African American community the hardest it should mean a lot.While HIV is not something that just affects African American, and Hip Hop is not something just black people enjoy or support, we can't ignore the facts.Just like Hip Hop runs through the blood of our inner cities, so does HIV.Like Hip Hop, the fight against AIDS has been watered down. We are complacent with the medical advancements made just as Hip Hop is complacent with its commercial success.Hip Hop’s lyrical content seems to be only about sex, popping bottles, and clothes. It has forgotten how to make people think. Today’s Hip Hop reflects a void of understanding within our community.When it comes to AIDS in the African American community we have chosen to turn a blind eye and not talk about it. It makes us comfortable to ignore the subject.The fact is our community is being hit the hardest. How can we remain silent any longer?What happened to the Hip Hop campaigns in the early 1990s that told us to “Rap It Up?” Maybe some people are happy that we, as a community, have not learned how to work together in fighting HIV/AIDS or learned how to educate our brothers and sisters on safe sex. A line that replays in my head from Nas’ song “If I ruled the World” exclaims, "It's elementary, they want us all gone eventually."AIDS has not gone away. It has become a silent killer in the African American community because we have forgotten how to speak up and speak out. We don't seem to care about our neighbors or ourselves. This is evident in the lack of responsibility people are taking with their own sexual health. CDC estimates that more than one million people are living with HIV in the United States. One in five (21%) of those people living with HIV is unaware of their infection. This means that people could be unknowingly infecting others. At what point will we start talking about HIV without our minds drifting to the long held misconception that it is a gay disease? The H in HIV stands for human, meaning any part of the human body that gives life, or preserves life can transmit HIV.While African Americans make up only 12% of the US population, we make up 50% of all new diagnosis of HIV. For my African American women, HIV infection is nearly 15 times as high as that of white women and nearly 4 times that of Hispanic/Latina women.My Black men, unlike the lyrics in today’s Hip Hop would have you believe, our sexual behavior does have consequences. You account for two-thirds of new infections (65%) among all blacks.We have to talk to our sexual partners about HIV and STD’s like our life depends on it because guess what, it does. We have to become responsible for the images we portray and the lifestyles that we glamorize. I challenge you today to: 1) Get tested. Know your status. Early detection can be the difference between life and death. 2) Educate yourself on HIV/AIDS. 3) Talk about it to your family friends’ co-workers. Talk about HIV on Twitter, Facebook or whatever social media site you may use. Just speak up.AIDS is killing our people because of our fear of being judged if we bring up the subject. Well excuse me but I cannot and will not sit back and watch the demise of my community because of fear of what people will think of me, can you?Who will be the new pioneers in Hip Hop? Who will be the new voice of protest within our community?December 1st is World AIDS Day. This is an opportunity to raise awareness, commemorate those who have passed on, and celebrate victories such as increased access to treatment and prevention services, BUT December 1st is also the day Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a Montgomery bus, sparking the Montgomery Bus Boycott.The act of one person standing up for what is right set in motion the act of followers following and speaking up!
Who will be the Rosa Parks of today?
Please visit HydeiaBroadbent.com for more information, and to see when she will be at an event near you!
Stay Safe Ya'll
No comments:
Post a Comment