Showing posts with label AIDS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AIDS. Show all posts

Friday, June 14, 2013

No More Stigma Film Series screens T.V. Transvestite on June 27th!!!


GET DOWN Campaign, Maysles Cinema, and Global Network of Black Pride

Invite You To An Evening of Pushing The Conversation Forward
In partnership with GMAD, SWERV, Harlem Pride, Anti Violence Project and Until There's A Cure

"CELEBRATING BALLROOM HISTORY"

NO MORE STIGMA FILM SERIES
presents

T.V. Transvestite
the first-ever feature ballroom scene documentary film by
Simone di Bagno and Michele Capozzi
Before Paris is Burning, there was T.V. Transvestite.
A rare glimpse into Harlem’s Ballroom Community in 1982.



preceded by
The Show Must Go On: The Story of Snookie Lanore
a documentary short directed by Zachary Kussin

Thursday, June 27th 2013
6:30pm Meet and Greet Reception
7:30pm Screening

Poetry By Sephology The Lyrical Prodigy
In person Q&A with filmmakers immediately following the screening

Post-Screening Mini-Ball featuring The Paragon House of GianMarco Lorenzi
Commentator & Host
Iconic Father Kamari Lorenzi – Miyake Mugler

Private HIV Testing by GMAD available

at

Maysles Cinema
343 Lenox Avenue, Harlem, NY
Between 128th and 129th Streets

GET YOUR TICKETS!!!
$10 General Admission
$25 GET DOWN/Until There’s A Cure Fundraising Ticket
Includes UTAC Red Bead Bracelet and UTAC and Celebrity Poster


SPACE IS LIMITED. GET ADVANCED TICKETS HEREhttp://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/403827


Special fundraising partnership with Until There’s A Cure®
Get Down is partnered with Until There’s A Cure®.  Until There’s A Cure® is a national organization dedicated to eradicating HIV/AIDS by raising awareness and funds to combat this pandemic. Fueled by concerns about the effects of HIV/AIDS on the lives of their children, two California mothers were inspired to create the non-profit organization Until There’s A Cure® Foundation in 1993.  The Foundation was the first non-profit organization to create and sell a bracelet to raise funds for a cause.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Beach Freak Fests: The New Sexual Tourism Breeding Ground?

With Memorial Day weekend fast approaching in the United States, the flyers start to appear.  Some read “Beach Fest”, “Freak Fest”, and “Urban Paradise”.  They all advertise some kind of Caribbean get away and most of them feature an overtly sexual image of a bikini clad Latina, who is meant to represent the island where the weekend fantasy escape is being held.  Set against a backdrop of pristine blue waters, white sand and upscale resorts, she has a “come hither” look in her eye that promises, for your weekend package of less than $1,000 all inclusive, a non-stop roller coaster of freaky beach fun.  Throw in some urban, rap or Latin music celebrity involvement and a good time will be had by all, right? 
 
Source:  www.urbanparadise2013.com

 
In the February 2010 issue of Essence Magazine, writer Keith Murphy blew up the spot with an article “Fools Paradise” which detailed that men, and especially African American men, are traveling to the Dominican Republic for “sexual vacations”.   As a young Dominicana, who grew up in the neighborhoods with some of the very girls and young ladies who are exploiting themselves (and being exploited) for sexual gain of tourists, I thought I take a closer look at the link between prostitution among school aged youth and the “new” sexual tourism these weekends promote and how the two contribute to the spread of HIV and other STDs among the diaspora in the Dominican Republic and neighboring United States.

I was born and raised in the Dominican Republic.  Growing up I would witness a lot of women from my small neighborhood standing outside, into the wee hours of the night.  I grew very curious about why these young women would wore exotic clothes with heels and stood to wait for cars driven by men to pick them up.  I never understood the reason behind this till I asked my mother one day.  I was 11 at the time, still hitting puberty and very curious just about anything.   When I have asked my mother about it, my mother said, “that is the work place for most of those women”.  I didn’t understand why someone would go to work dressed in such manner and have pickups from different men at different times of the night.  I guess at that time I was young to understand prostitution so my mother kept it from me. 

Prostitution has always existed in every corner of the globe, and goes as far back as time itself.  While in many countries, including the United States, prostitution is illegal, in the Dominican Republic, it is legal, as long as a third-party does not benefit (e.g. a pimp, brothels, etc.).  No go betweens.   In some countries, it is usually not viewed as a “serious crime”.  This is seen as a morality issue instead.  Every country has their specific respective view of prostitution and the Dominican Republic is no exception.


Source:  http://dominicanamor.wordpress.com/2011/05/12/dominican-prostitution
  

 In general, prostitutes are depicted on American television and in Hollywood films in a wide range of ways from drug addicted homeless women lurking in the shadows of urban city streets to high priced escorts who cater to some of the richest men in the world.   Growing up I had no idea the pretty faces with great bodies and provocative clothes were simply doing their job, selling their bodies.  Since I lived in middle class neighborhood prostitution was common for both sex.  More often young girls, more so than young boys, were seen being escorted by “johns” who will go to get a pickup in exchange for money.  Quickly rumors spread about girls my age and especially the ones infected with HIV/AIDS.

My mother offered no help.  Sex was – and still in – a touchy subject in my household.  My parents were very private when it came to this subject.  When I came across my menstrual cycle my mother was the only one who opened the subject but wasn’t entirely open to it either.  I completed elementary grades first through fourth grade in the Dominican Republic.  In my opinion, public education in Dominican Republic is not that great, as compared to United States.  I was attending public school in my neighborhood of Santiago in Dominican Republic, when sex education was introduced to me.  Typically, in DR, when it comes to boys, typically families they never speak about the subject.  Men just grow up with the influence of what is around them in typical neighborhoods.  Parents don’t talk to boys about sex the same way they talk to girls.  Girls are handled in a more protective, strict and prudish fashion.  They are not aware or taught proper sex education.  Most families in Dominican Republic are either Christian, catholic or Jehovah Witness.  Religion and cultural mores play a huge role in how a child is raised and educated about sex.

After leaving the dangerous streets back in my country, we moved to a tiny community of Dominicans in downtown Brooklyn.  Sex education became more clear and respectful to talk about it with my school counselors in public school, where I finished my puberty years.  Now in the United States, I began to see the same pattern - girl friends that would work late hours and miss school because of their alternative way of living.   Now college aged, I am more sexually educated and aware of the sex trade that exploits young girls and women.  Flyers that advertise my favorite artists will appear during Memorial Day Weekend “urban fantasy escapes”, or even during Spring Break vacations, are meant to capture my attention, but I often wonder if the young men, some my peers, who are attracted to the promise of unbridled sex, are thinking about the consequences.  Surely, everyone is not packing condoms in their swim trunks for the nighttime beach bikini affair.  Unfortunately, some of these “urban fantasy escapes” can lead to unwanted HIV, STDs.   Not exactly the music video fantasy advertised on the flyer.



According to statistical data from the Presidential AIDS Council (COPRESIDA), in the Dominican Republic it is estimated that approximately 46,500 people are living with the HIV virus.  Statistical data revealed that 18 % of the AIDS cases reported in the country occur among young people of 15 to 24 years olds.

These are only with the possibility that some may have children infected as well.  The disease has greatly affected the female population, as it has become the leading cause of death among women of reproductive age.  There are currently 23,000 adult women between the ages of 15 and 49 with HIV/AIDS.  COPRESIDA stated in the same article that HIV/AIDS has also greatly affected children in the Dominican Republic.  Estimates indicate that they’re 2,200 children below the age of 15 infected by the disease, and that approximately 58,000 children were either orphans or at risk of becoming orphans because of HIV/AIDS infected parents.   

The especially disturbing news, given the sexual tourism trade that flourishes on the island, is that the main mode of transmission of HIV/AIDS in the Dominican Republic is through heterosexual sex.  According to the article, HIV/AIDS and the Dominican Republic: A look at a Pandemic” (http://dr1.com/articles/hiv.shtml), roughly 1.7% of the Dominican population has been infected with the disease, which translates to an estimated 46,500 people infected in the country.  Of the 46,500 infected with HIV/AIDS, 23,500 are adult men between the ages of 15 and 49.

According to the US National Library of Medicine, the abstract article of “HIV/AIDS and Tourism in the Caribbean” (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2791250/), published January 2010, “Studies suggest that tourism areas are epicenters of demographic and social changes linked to HIV risk, such as transactional sex”. It continues that “Despite this, no formative HIV-prevention studies have examined tourism areas as ecologies that heighten HIV vulnerability.” 

While there is still a sexual tourism epidemic, many charities and organizations are collaborating together to stop and limit the spread of HIV (and other STDs) by informing people and creating policies that provide protection.   Some of the local main organizations where you can always find information are the DREAM Project, Outreach 360, Sister Island Project and the Una Vida organization.  Mainly all of these programs share the common mission to spread the awareness of this fast growing epidemic disease that is ending pretty young lives.

Looking at the statistics on HIV/AIDS in the Dominican Republic and the Caribbean can be overwhelming, but it could be said that there is a move towards curbing the rise of the pandemic in the region.  I hope with the help of new volunteers and other organizations we are able to decrease this number of infected people and continue to empower communities with interventional educational programs for the younger crowd who sweeping the streets right now; and also who the highest in risk of being infected.   I hope that other young Dominicans like myself, will stem the cycle of not talking about sex and take time learn more about HIV and other STDs.  We need to collectively talk more openly about sex and break the cycle of silence, for all of our sakes.

Source: www.dr2013.net




I hope that all children born in the Dominican Republic have the opportunity to receive an education and learn to their full potential.  It is my hope that organizational efforts can be multiplied to allow the opportunity for every child and adult sex education be met with support.  We cannot do so unless we break the cycle of poverty and change people’s destinies in alleviating poverty, strengthening education, and enhancing public health.  It is my dream that the world will be a better place for the children and families of the next generation.

We can’t do it alone.  So, before you book that “urban oasis fantasy getaway”, ask yourself, will what happens on vacation, really stay on vacation?  Think about it.



Melissa Rodriguez
GET DOWN Youth Blogger


For HIV information and assistance in the Dominican Republic:

The World Health Organization

UNICEF
https://www.unicef.org

United States Peace Corps
www.peacecorps.gov

UNAIDS
www.unaids.org

Family Health International

For youth and family assistance and empowerment in the Dominican Republic:

The DREAM Project
http://dominicandream.org

The Outreach360 Project
 http://www.outreach360.org/dominicanrepublic/

The Sister Island Project
http://www.sisterislandproject.org/index.html

Una Vida Project
 http://una-vida.org/meet-dominican-republic/

Monday, March 25, 2013

Spring Is Here! Time to GET DOWN!!

Spring Is Here! You know what that means! The high school and college kids get that Spring fever.  Start shedding clothes and making a bee line for hot fun, sun and sand!  Time to GET DOWN!! Well, for us that means, keep pushing! The warmer the weather, the more GETTING DOWN.

Once again, we're ramping up for a new season.  Just started the new Spring 2013 semester interns!

First, meet Melissa.   Melissa Rodriguez is a senior at Brooklyn College, double majoring in psychology and creative writing.  Her passion is writing and blogging about fashion, art, talent, human awareness and more.   She also has a passion for science and her goal is to become a doctor one day and have some of her work published.  She feels fortunate very fortunate to have been selected in this internship from many who have applied previously.  Says Melissa, “I am very grateful and excited to get started this year.  I have taken an interest in the awareness of HIV/AIDS around the world. I have studied, read many articles from the past to now and I have written some blogs about my views. I have also participated in projects in the past to teach what is this STD and everything it has influenced.  I am just a normal girl who works hard in her studies, loves to write, works hard and appreciates the effort of others spreading knowledge to those most in need.” Well said Melissa! 
Welcome aboard!

Melissa Rodriguez

Meet Carlos Maximiliano  Brufau.  But you can call him "Maxi".  He's is a proud Spring 2013 GET DOWN Campaign intern.  Maxi attended Bloomfield College, played soccer and graphic design is his passion.  Carlos says “My special interested is creating graphically and also visually concepts that will express myself but also give you what GET DOWN needs.” 

Maxi Brufau

We can’t wait! Welcome!

Friday, February 8, 2013

Photos From "The Other City" at No More Stigma Film Series

The GET DOWN Campaign, Maysles Cinema, and partners Global Network of Black Pride, GMAD, MEGA Personalities and A-Marketing/Be Life Media screening of “The Other City” by director Susan Koch.

(From Left to Right) Kim J. Ford, founder GET DOWN campaign and No More Stigma Film Series; Ulysses Williams, VP Operations, Global Network of Black Pride and Ksisay of Maysles Cinema.

(From Left to Right) Romeo So-Leng Milan, GMAD and Kim J. Ford

Kim J. Ford kicking off the evening


Check out more photos from the event here:  http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.4362063500693.2147927.1561001943&type=1&notif_t=like

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The Two Washington's Explored in "The Other City"


We just witnessed HISTORY. The second swearing in of the first African American President of the United States. With an eye on Washington – or is it "DC, The Chocolate City"– we bring you our No More Stigma Film Series at Maysles Cinema on February 7th - African American HIV Awareness Day.  Maysles Cinema, the GET DOWN Campaign and our event partners A-Marketing, MEGA Personalities, Global Network of Black Pride present the documentary film "The Other City". 
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In every city, there's another city that visitors rarely see. But this other city isn't just anywhere, it's in Washington, D.C.  The very city that is home to the capital of the most powerful country in the world has an HIV/AIDS rate that is not only the nation's highest, but rivals some African countries.  "The Other City" introduces us to the people who live in the shadow of the Capitol but remain almost invisible to the lawmakers and lobbyists who live there.

Produced by Sheila C. Johnson, “The Other City” tells the stories of people who haven’t let lack of government assistance stop them, and have taken matters into their own hands. After contracting HIV from a boyfriend who didn’t disclose he was infected, Jose Ramirez devotes his life to promoting HIV awareness among Hispanic teens. While living with AIDS and fighting desperately to keep herself and her three young children from being thrown out of their home, J’Mia Edwards realizes she can play a role in helping others. A one-time addict now living with AIDS, Ron Daniels saves lives by providing clean needles and helping drug users receive treatment. And finally, the staff of the AIDS hospice Joseph’s House struggles to provide solace to terminal patients’ last days, to deal with their own sense of loss, and their constantly declining funding.


Courtesy of Cabin Films.  Photo by Jonah Koch.  J'mia Edwards, a young mother living with AIDS, faces a 2-3 year wait for housing.


For these activists, remedies can’t be found within the confines of an office or a regular schedule: for some the work encompasses round-the-clock care-giving, and for others a never-ending trek through the squalid drug dens and clandestine park trails where people engage in risky behavior. Informal HIV/AIDS organizations are set up wherever people can congregate to share experiences and offer mutual support. Still, without financial support, large-scale progress is beyond the scope of these endeavors. In this environment, forward movement means providing comfort for the afflicted and saving as many lives as possible.

Come join us for the screening of "The Other City" at Maysles Cinema.  The event will be hosted by Richard E. Pelzer II and Ulysses Williams (Global Network of Black Pride). Doors open for a cocktail reception at 6:30pm and screening starts at 7:30pm.  Maysles Cinema is located at  343 Malcolm X Boulevard / Lenox Avenue, between 127th and 128th Street. Two blocks from the #2/#3 trains to 125th Street, near the world famous Apollo Theater.  Admission is $10.  

For advanced tickets: 
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See you there!

GET DOWN Campaign Team

EMAIL US:
getdownpsa2008@gmail.com

FIND US ON THE WEB
 

African American HIV Awareness Day Screening of “The Other City”








Maysles Cinema
GET DOWN Campaign

& our event partners
A-Marketing
MEGA Personalities
Global Network of Black Pride

Invite You To A
African American HIV Awareness Day Event

NO MORE STIGMA FILM SERIES
Sex, Sexual Identity, and Sexual Health Awareness

Hosted by Richard E. Pelzer II and Ulysses Williams

The Other City
the feature documentary film by Susan Koch


Thursday, February 7th, 2013
6:30pm Reception
7:30pm Screening
Maysles Cinema
343 Malcolm X Boulevard / Lenox Avenue
between 127th and 128th Streets

Suggested Admission Donation $10

No Matter How You GET DOWN, Protect Yourself and Get Tested.

Saturday, December 8, 2012

THE GET DOWN CAMPAIGN AND MAYSLES CINEMA 
SCREENS WE WERE HERE 
BY DIRECTOR DAVID WEISSMAN at the NO MORE STIGMA FILM SERIES  
WORLD AIDS DAY 2012


No More Stigma Film Series on World Aids Day 2012



Intern Kyle Sweet makes directorial debut at the No More Stigma Film Series


SKYPE Q&A with David Weissman, director, "We Were Here" at No More Stigma Film Series

http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.4005352663145.2143565.1561001943&type=3

Sunday, October 21, 2012

NO MORE STIGMA FILM SERIES OCTOBER 26TH!!


THE GET DOWN CAMPAIGN AND MAYSLES CINEMA
SCREENS WE WERE HERE BY DIRECTOR DAVID WEISSMAN
at the NO MORE STIGMA FILM SERIES

WE WERE HERE  IS FIRST DOCUMENTARY TO TAKE A DEEP AND REFLECTIVE LOOK BACK AT THE ARRIVAL AND IMPACT OF AIDS IN SAN FRANCISCO

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30TH, 2012
At MAYSLES CINEMA
343 Lenox Avenue, New York, NY

IN PARTNERSHIP WITH ORGANIZATIONS A-MARKETING, GMHC,
THE LESBIAN GAY BISEXUAL & TRANSGENDER COMMUNITY CENTER
LOGO NETWORK AND POZ MAGAZINE








"We Were Here" a film by director David Weissman
Tuesday, October 30th
6:30pm Reception, 7:30pm Screening
Maysles Cinema
343 Malcolm X Boulevard / Lenox Avenue
between 127th and 128th Streets

Suggested Admission Donation $10
ADVANCE TICKETS: http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/282088
MORE INFO: http://www.mayslesinstitute.org/cinema/nomorestigma.html