Showing posts with label 25 TO LIFE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 25 TO LIFE. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

No More Stigma Film Series Kicks Off at Maysles Cinema Harlem



The husband can barely look his wife in the eye when she accuses him of having unprotected sex with other women.  The husband steals glances and shoots back denials, never quite looking her directly in the eye.  The wife continues.  She accuses him of infecting her with HIV.  The husband responds with the accusation that it might have been her ex-boyfriend that gave it to her, and she in turn, gave it to him.  A typical argument between husband and wife, except that the husband has three wives and this conversation was captured by a documentary crew in a rural village in modern day Zambia, Africa.  This scene in the film “The Carrier”, a must-see feature length documentary film by first-time director Maggie Betts, serves as a gap closer between the HIV epidemic among African Americans in the U.S. and our distant “cousins” on the continent.  As I watched the film, I could not help but feel connected.


Still Image From "The Carrier"

Albert Maysles (seated) and Maggie Betts, director, "The Carrier" at the No More Stigma Film Series



“The Carrier” was the first feature film shown at the debut of GET DOWN and Maysles Cinema’s No More Stigma Film Series on Thursday, June 21st.   The evening opened with a sneak preview super trailer from another first-time director Mike Brown“25 To Life” chronicles the aftermath of former Howard University student William Brawner’s stunning announcement that he was HIV positive.   The forthcoming feature documentary captured the reaction of William’s close friends, former Howard classmates, and family to his public disclosure on commercial radio.  According to the film, William’s mother instructed him at age two to never disclose this HIV status.  It was this, states William, that caused him to suppress this secret so deep down inside, that as a sexually active young adult, he was promiscuous and had unprotected sex.  The feature film will chronicle William’s redemptive journey to find past lovers and make amends with those his decisions have impacted, including his protective mother. 

Still Image From "25 To Life"

Peelahr Moore and Leah Thompson, producers, "25 To Life" at the No More Stigma Film Series
 

According to “25 To Life” producer Leah Thompson, the film includes interviews with his mother, wife, and a few of those past lovers.  The full-length film has had a few test screenings and according to director Brown “A number of people who have seen the latest cut of  "25 To Life" have said that the film will be an explosive conversation starter around sex, STDs, relationships, and beyond.  To help us keep the dialogue productive, we will enlist the support and assistance of experts and organizations such as the Balm in Gilead, Black AIDS Institute, the CDC, and the NAACP, to name a few.”  “25 To Life” has received funding and support from organizations such as the Ford Foundation, Sundance Documentary Institute, and IDA.

Q&A Panel at the No More Stigma Film Series. From left: Adrian Guzman, Center For HIV Law & Policy, director Maggie Betts, producers Leah Thompson and Peelahr Moore, David Lopez, Harlem United and moderator De'Von Christopher, President &CEO Bleu Life Media.

De'Von Christopher and Jessica Green, Cinema Director.
 
A post-screening Q&A, was moderated by De’Von Christopher, president and CEO of Bleu Life Media (Bleu Magazine), included the filmmakers along with Adrian Guzman of the Center For HIV Law and Policy/TeenSENSE and David Lopez of Harlem United. The conversation became quite spirited around the issue of criminalization of HIV, and whether someone who is HIV positive and has unprotected sex without disclosing their status should be prosecuted as a criminal.  GET DOWN covered this topic last year’s in the blog “Is It A Crime? A Look At HIV Criminalization in the U.S.”  Stopping by the event was Maysles Institute Founder Albert Maysles, who felt strongly that the world needed to see these films and that “The Carrier” is a film that deserves distribution.  We’re with you Mr. Maysles.  We’re with you.

The No More Stigma Film Series will continue on August 23rd, October 30th and December 1st for World Aids Day 2012.  Doors are 6:30pm and the screening starts at 7:30pm.

To stay up to date on the series, FRIEND US at http://www.facebook.com/getdownpsa and join the Maysles Cinema mailing list at www.mayslesinstitute.org.


To support and find out more about Maggie Bett’s “The Carrier”, go to http://www.facebook.com/thecarrierfilm and visit their website here http://www.thecarrierfilm.com/.

Check out Mike Brown’s “25 To Life” here https://www.facebook.com/25ToLifeFilm and join their mailing list here http://25tolifefilmsite.com/.


For more information on the No More Stigma Film Series and upcoming films, check out www.facebook.com/getdownpsa and www.mayslesinstitute.org.



Read.  Share.  Discuss.  Educate.

--Kim J. Ford
GET DOWN Creator/Executive Producer
Getdownpsa2008@gmail.com

Saturday, June 9, 2012

NO STIGMA FILM SERIES: "25 TO LIFE"


GET DOWN understands that there is a need for more HIV, AIDS, and overall sexual health awareness. Additionally, more education is required around gender and sexual identity.  Cultural mores and spiritual beliefs, which are often reinforced at home and among peers, are often a barrier to gender identity studies or acceptance of alternative lifestyles outside of the home.   Thirty years later, we still have to reinforce the fact that HIV and AIDS does not discriminate.  It is not a “gay disease”.  Stigma is still a huge barrier to testing.  The NO MORE STIGMA FILM SERIES seeks to use the filmed medium to “edu-tain”, and encourage dialogue around all things sexual identity and HIV/AIDS.  The NO MORE STIGMA FILM SERIES will show conversation worthy films followed by Q&A panels.  
 
Kicking off Thursday, June 21st at the renown Maysles Cinema in Harlem, NY, the NO MORE STIGMA FILM SERIES will highlight an excerpt from "25 To Life", the buzz-worthy documentary by Mike Brown about William Brawner, a young man who kept his HIV status a secret for over twenty-five years, since he was two years old.  Now he seeks redemption from his promiscuous past, and embarks on a new phase of life with his wife who is HIV negative.  

William Brawner, subject of documentary "25 To Life"

Immediately following, the critically acclaimed feature length documentary "The Carrier" by Maggie Betts.   When 28-year-old Mutinta Mweemba first shares all the hopes and dreams she once nurtured as a child, her aspirations seem no different from those of many other young women around the world. She dreams of meeting and falling in love with a handsome man, being married and raising children and hopefully one day providing those children with a better life than her own.  But Mutinta's dreams were never realized. Her soft-spoken husband came with two other wives, and the remote Zambian village that she calls home is being ravaged by a deadly new epidemic -- a mysterious disease called AIDS.  Set against the backdrop of today's most urgent plague, Maggie Betts's "The Carrier" is a stunning portrait of both a family and a community, caught in a desperate struggle to emancipate their next generation from AIDS.




The NO MORE STIGMA FILM SERIES is inconjunction with GET DOWN, Maysles Cinema and Bleu Magazine.  The Maysles Cinema is a non-profit organization and there is a suggested donation at the door.

RSVP here: http://www.facebook.com/events/308881262528955/


-- GET DOWN Team
getdownpsa2008@gmail.com

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Is It A Crime? A Look At HIV Criminalization in U.S.


Brooklyn native Nushawn J. Williams was informed that he had HIV in 1996.  Despite this, he was determined by health officials to have had sex with up to 75 partners.  By his own unabashed admission, he actually slept with 300 women.  He did not use protection in these encounters and caused an outbreak of HIV in upstate New York. [i]  His youngest partner was 13 years old.[ii]  By 1998, two of his partners had given birth to HIV-positive children.[iii]     His case was one of the earliest involving HIV status disclosure and Nushawn became the poster child for HIV criminalization.



When you hear stories like this, the question of whether to criminalize HIV exposure seems like a no-brainer.  Legislators apparently agreed; Williams’ case was cited in a number legal proposals, including requiring states to keep registries of HIV-positive residents and making it a felony not to disclose one’s positive status to sexual partners.[iv]   

As of 2008, 34 states in the US have laws that allow prosecution for criminal HIV exposure.  The provisions of these laws vary widely by state and by the context of exposure.  In New Jersey, for example, someone who knows he or she is HIV-positive and has sex without a partner’s informed consent is guilty of a third-degree crime.  This offense can be punished by up to five years in prison and a fine of up to $15,000.  In states such as California and Alaska, being HIV-positive can be an aggravating factor in sexual offenses.[v]

Those who argue against HIV criminalization often claim that mandating disclosure for individuals with HIV violates their right to privacy.  Additionally, it can increase the stigma associated with the virus.  Such laws therefore infringe on the civil rights of the HIV-positive person.[vi]  


William Brawner was born with HIV and had developed AIDS by the time he was in college.  Described as a ladies’ man, he had unprotected sex with numerous girls before going public with his status and participating in a documentary on his journey with AIDS.  When asked in an interview with Loop 21 if he wished he had come clean sooner, Brawner responded in the negative.  He said, I think everything happens in its time.  Everything has its time and has its purpose. It was just my time.”[i]

The obvious counter is that the right time would have been when Brawner first had unprotected sex.  The HIV-positive person’s right to privacy ends where he or she puts another person at risk.  What about the rights of this person?  You didn’t bother to tell me that if I have sex with you I may end up getting a horrible disease that changes my life and that’s ok because you have a right to privacy? Really?

 

While the high profile Williams and Brawner cases are cited here, there are many other cases that go unreported in the media.  Further, many are not as clear cut.  For legal purposes, it is difficult to prove which party originally had the virus, especially when multiple partners are involved.  The first person to get tested and find out his or her status may shoulder the blame, even if he or she was actually infected by someone else who was not diagnosed until later.  It also possible for people to use the legal system to seek revenge against former partners who are HIV-positive.[i] 

Laws that criminalize HIV exposure may have the paradoxical effect of increasing transmission.  Research does not support the idea that the law plays a role in anyone’s sexual behavior.  Sexual activity is often impulsive and laws based on rational analysis therefore have a very limited impact.  Getting tested for HIV, on the other hand, requires deliberation and effort.   Laws that impose obligations on those who know their HIV-positive status and make it possible for this status to be made public and used against them in prosecution may deter testing.[ii] 

While there should be legal options for extreme cases like Nushawn Williams, criminalization is not a very useful tool in the fight against HIV/AIDS.  We would hope that those with HIV do the right thing and be honest with their sexual partners.  However, legally mandating that they do so is not an effective prevention tactic.  At the end of the day, it is up to you to protect yourself. 

Here’s what you can do:

1.    Get tested
2.   Have your partner to do the same
3.   Always ask what someone’s status is before a sexual encounter
4.   Be honest about your own status
5.    Don’t go through with it if you don’t trust them to tell you the truth or you’re not willing to take the risk
6.   Use protection

To find an HIV testing site near you, please go to http://www.hivtest.org/

--Melanie Pino-Elliott
GET DOWN Youth Blogger
mpino@sas.upenn.edu



[ii] Richard Elliott.  Criminal Law, Public Health, and HIV Transmission: A Policy Options Paper. http://data.unaids.org/publications/IRC-pub02/jc733-criminallaw_en.pdf


[i] Darren Sands.  “25 to Life: In New Film, Man with AIDS Confesses Unprotected Past.” http://loop21.com/life/coming-clean-hiv-postive-man-confronts-lives-he-destroyed


[i] Michael Cooper.  “Drifter Says He Had Sex with up to 300.” http://www.nytimes.com/1999/07/29/nyregion/drifter-says-he-had-sex-with-up-to-300.html
[ii] Jennifer Frey.  “Jamestown and the Story of 'Nushawn's Girls.'”  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/features/jamestown0601.htm
[iii] Richard Perez-Pena.  “Two Births Lengthen List in One-Man HIV Spree.”  http://www.nytimes.com/1998/01/29/nyregion/two-births-lengthen-list-in-one-man-hiv-spree.html
[v] American Civil Liberties Union.  State Criminal Statutes on HIV Transmission—2008.  http://www.aclu.org/files/images/asset_upload_file292_35655.pdf
[vi] AVERT.  Criminal Transmission of HIV. http://www.avert.org/criminal-transmission.htm