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Summit Focuses on AIDS

HIV-positive activist Perry presented with 'United Against AIDS Inspiration' Award

Over 200 students filled a Science Center lecture hall Saturday to listen to AIDS activist Jonathan Perry give his personal life story as the keynote speech of the first Unite Against AIDS summit.

Organized by the Black Men’s Forum, Harvard AIDS Coalition (HAC), Harvard African Students’ Association, and Harvard Concert Commission, the two-day event—including a hip-hop concert, a day-long conference, and a youth gala—was entirely student-run.

The summit’s mission was “Education, Inspiration and Action.”

“Universities seem to have lost a lot of energy about HIV issues,” said Drew E. Altman, president and chief executive officer of the Kaiser Foundation, a member of the summit’s advisory board and a speaker at the Plenary Session of the conference. “It’s great for Harvard that there’s a student-driven conference.”

The conference brought together prominent figures from all over the world to speak about various aspects of the HIV/AIDS crisis. Six panels addressed a range of topics from AIDS and international security to women’s empowerment vis-à-vis the AIDS crisis.

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Panelists included activists and scholars prominent in HIV/AIDS advocacy, three of whom were invited directly from South Africa specifically for the conference.

“The panelists were particularly insightful, educating students while engaging them in a dialogue,” said Sarah R. Heilbronner ’07, one of the co-directors of the conference.

“It was a powerful combination of experts talking about the crisis and others talking about the pandemic as it affected their own lives,” said Yusuf W. Randera-Rees ’05, another co-director.

Nondumiso T. Qwabe, a freshman at Middlebury College and an international student from Swaziland, said the speakers “enabled the audience to put a face to the statistics.”

Perry, an outspoken AIDS activist who is HIV-positive and openly gay and who was recently featured on Oprah Winfrey’s television show, captivated the audience with his frank recounting of his experience. He described being angry and depressed upon discovering that his partner had passed the virus to him—while aware of his own HIV-positive status.

Perry confided to the audience that he had unprotected sex after discovering his disease, which made some in the audience uncomfortable, according to Randera-Rees.

“I feel privileged to be a part of a Harvard first,” Perry said. He added, however, that he was disappointed at the audience’s response after he asked how many people had had unprotected sex. Four people tentatively raised their hands.

“I think I had a room with a lot of liars, which was discouraging,” Perry said. “[They] can’t step up and take responsibility for [their] own sexual behavior.”

Perry receiving a standing ovation from the audience upon being presented with the “Unite Against AIDS Inspiration Award” from the organizing committee.

The audience also applauded AIDS activist Sibulele Sibaca when she spoke in a panel on the orphan crisis in Africa about having lost both of her parents to AIDS.

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