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By Karen Ocamb
1979 seemed like a banner year for gay equality. Up to 100,000
gay people participated in the Oct. 14 March on Washington
and President Jimmy Carter's mother Lillian attended, actress
Lily Tomlin hosted, and California Gov. Jerry Brown delivered
the keynote speech at a black tie gala roasting Sheldon Andelson,
retiring L.A. Gay Community Services Center boardmember.

But Hugh Rice noticed something strange about a very sick,
thin young penniless gay men who came to the Center's STD
Clinic for a shot of antibiotics. He had purple lesions all
over his body which Rice thought was some mysterious dermitological
problem. It turned out to be Kaposi Sarcoma. Six weeks later,
the young man died in isolation at L.A. County Hospital.
Meanwhile, Dr. Joel Weisman, a West Los Angeles internist,
noticed a mononucleosis-like condition among two of his gay
male patients who suffered weight loss, fever, and swollen
lymph nodes. The following year, in November 1980, Dr. Michael
Gottlieb, a 33-year-old assistant professor and immunology
researcher at UCLA, diagnosed an emergency room patient with
Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, which was also characterized
by weight loss and fevers. Word spread about the diagnosis
and Weisman sent his patients to see Gottlieb.
“At that point, early in 1981, we had three patients,
three gay men in their early 30s, with Pneumocystis, and
we all had the queasy feeling that this was not going to
be rare. We also knew from the experience of Joel and others
that there were many other gay men with enlarged lymph glands
and other milder unexplained illness,” Gottlieb told
IN. “That lead us to believe that something peculiar
was going on. By April 1981, Gottlieb realized an earlier
patient had the same symptoms and this was the beginning
of a new epidemic. “But if anyone back then had predicted
that four case reports in 1981 would become 40 million people
infected worldwide, they would have been considered mad.”
Gottlieb called Dr. Wayne Shandera in the Centers for Disease
Control's L.A. office, who found a fifth patient. On June
5, 1981, the CDC published Gottlieb's report, marking the
first public announcement of what would be called AIDS --
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome. On Aug. 28, 1981, The
Associated Press reported: “Two rare diseases have
struck more than 100 homosexual men in the United States
in recent months, killing almost half of them, and a medical
study group has been formed to find out why.”
Gay men in Los Angeles, New York, and San Francisco were
terrified as AIDS spread, killing mysteriously, exponentially,
rapidly, and randomly. By Oct. 1982, Matt Redman, Nancy Cole
Sawaya, Ervin Munro, and Max Drew set up a hotline in a closet
at the Center where Gottlieb-trained volunteers read limited
information to panicked callers, saying the disease was a
virus transmitted through sexual contact and blood. In New
York, singer Michael Callen (who later moved to L.A.) invented “safe
sex” and preached the use of condoms. He also co-founded
the AIDS Medical Foundation (AMF) with Dr. Mathilde Krim
and Dr. Joseph Sonnabend as an AIDS research organization.
But many gays and most of society thought the disease could
be airborne like tuberculosis or spread through casual contact.
After the heady days of gay liberation and sex-craved disco,
gay men sank into a deep depression and inconsolable grief.
Lesbians, who had developed their own separate culture, recognized
gay men as their brothers and took care of them in hospitals
and at home when they were deserted and considered untouchable
by hospital staff, partners, and family. Redman and friends
also realized the disease would probably not remain isolated
among gay men so, after raising $7,000 at a Christmas fund-raiser,
they founded AIDS Project Los Angeles to reach out to all
those impacted by AIDS.
Faced with government indifference (with the exception
of hearings held by L.A. Congressmember Henry Waxman), gay
men and their friends realized it was up to them to help
themselves. A number of volunteer-run organizations sprang
up over the years, including L.A. Shanti, which provided
grief counseling to the infected and survivors, and AID for
AIDS, co-founded by Morris Kight. Dr. Mark Katz provided
regulars AIDS updates. In March 1984, Joan Rivers appeared
at a Studio One fund raiser that raised $45,000.
But it wasn't until the summer of 1985, when movie star
Rock Hudson announced he had AIDS, that the other America
took notice. With a $250,000 donation from Hudson, the National
AIDS Research Foundation of Los Angeles was established,
which was later merged with AMF to become the American Foundation
for AIDS Research (amFAR), with Gottlieb and Krim as co-chairs
and Elizabeth Taylor as national chairman. With the founding
of the City of West Hollywood, John Heilman and others created
West Hollywood Cares, the first government-sponsored prevention
program. By Dec. 31, 1985, 15,527 cases of AIDS were reported
with 12,529 deaths.
The late '80s and early '90s were marked with vigils, protests,
and fund-raisers to keep the AIDS effort afloat. The tide
started to change with the election of President Bill Clinton
in 1992 and the 1995 announcement of new combination drug
therapies. But by Dec. 1, 2005, more than 40 million people
had died of AIDS globally, nearly 29,000 in the L.A. area,
according to Mario Perez of the County Office of AIDS Programs
and Practices.
Over the last 25 years, the LGBT community has lost a generation
of gay men, including Sheldon Andelson and Hugh Rice. Right-winger
Patrick Buchanan was right -- there is a cultural war going
on in America -- and these are our war dead. And once again
the government's response on the domestic front is to propose
budget cuts. But listening to anecdotal stories from therapists
Dr. Don Kilhefner and Dr. Kevin Koffler, the epidemic of
crystal meth coupled with the belief among many that AIDS
is no longer a problematic disease -- and the emergence of
a drug-resistant strain of the HIV virus -- may mean that
without action now, the LGBT community may be on the verge
of losing another generation.
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