FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 1, 2009
Contact: Circe J. Gray Le Compte, Director of Communications
Contact: Circe J. Gray Le Compte, Director of Communications
National Minority AIDS Council
clecompte@nmac.org; (202) 483-6622 ext. 309 or (202) 352-7240
NMAC Honors World AIDS Day with a Special Website Video
Raising Awareness about the Continued Impact of HIV/AIDS in theU.S.
Raising Awareness about the Continued Impact of HIV/AIDS in the
Ravinia Hayes-Cozier, NMAC’s Director of Government Relations and Public Policy, who introduces the video, says “This year’s World AIDS Day theme, 'Universal Access and Human Rights', is particularly timely in light of the nationwide conversation taking place around the formation of a National HIV/AIDS Strategy and the future of health care overall.
“Unfortunately, many people, including the media, the public and even some government officials, both here and abroad, think of AIDS as a disease occurring elsewhere that no longer impacts the
HIV/AIDS has disproportionately impacted undeserved and marginalized populations in the
“Since its inception in 1988 by the World Health Organization, World AIDS Day has given us an opportunity to remember the more than 25 million people lost to global AIDS pandemic since it began nearly three decades ago,” says Paul A. Kawata, NMAC’s Executive Director. “More than a million of these deaths have occurred here in the
"It is unacceptable that HIV/AIDS remains unchecked in communities of color, and that AIDS is the number one killer of women worldwide between the ages of 15 and 44. Honoring their memory demands that we commit ourselves to mitigating the impact of HIV/AIDS on future generations. That means having difficult discussions about everything around AIDS – from the need to support HIV vaccine and microbicide research, to how homophobia, sexism and racism help spread HIV.”
To that end, NMAC launched the Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) HIV/AIDS Peer Education Initiative, which will train HBCU students on how to get involved and educate one another about HIV/AIDS, at the September 25th “An Evening Without Politics: A Benefit Reception” (EWP) held during the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation Annual Legislative Conference. Many of the interviews featured in the special video report on NMAC.org were shot during the EWP. Featured speakers include:
Jim Brown, Football Legend, Actor, Activist
G.K. Butterfield, Congressman (D-North Carolina)
James Clyburn, Congressman, House Majority Whip (D-South Carolina)
Danny Davis, Congressman (D-Illinois)
Gregory W. Edwards, Executive Director, Flowers Heritage Foundation
Debra Fraser-Howze, Vice President of External Affairs, Orasure Technologies
Vincent Gray, Washington , DC City Council Chair
Barbara Lee, Congresswoman (D-California)
Sheryl Lee Ralph, Actress and Activist
Julianne Malveaux, President, Bennett College
Dr. Marsh Martin, Get Screened Oakland
Darian “Big Tigger” Morgan, Television and Radio Personality
Julianne Scofield, Executive Director, National Alliance of State and Territorial Directors
Maxine Waters, Congresswoman (D-California)
“The HBCU HIV/AIDS Peer Education Initiative will train a new generation of leaders in our communities who can discuss the epidemic in the
About NMAC
The National Minority AIDS Council (NMAC) has advanced its mission, “to develop leadership within communities of color to address the challenges of HIV/AIDS” since 1987 through individualized capacity building assistance; technical assistance trainings; public policy education programs; national and regional conferences; treatment and research education programs; online and printed resource materials; and a website: http://www.nmac.org/. The agency also serves as a membership association for its constituent AIDS service organizations and minority faith- and community-based organizations delivering HIV/AIDS services in communities of color and advocates on their behalf in Washington , D.C.
NMAC's advocacy efforts are funded through private funders and donors only. For more information, please contact NMAC directly at (202) 483-NMAC (6622) or communications@nmac.org. You may find us online at http://www.nmac.org/ as well as on Facebook.com, Wikipedia.com, Twitter.com, MyPhotoAlbum.com and YouTube.com.
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