Concordia’s
HIV/AIDS 20th Anniversary Lecturer talks Curlers and Condoms
There have been many illustrious and influential figures who
have brought their stories and work to Concordia’s H110 auditorium for the
Lecture Series on HIV and AIDS since its inception in 1993. Singer Diamanda
Galas, dance legend Margie Gillis, General Idea surviving member AA Bronson,
AIDS hero Steven Lewis, activist writer Sarah Schulman, South African
documentarian Khalo Matabane, and recently, adult film actress Lara Roxx, to
name only a few that come to mind. Fittingly, the Lecture Series team has
chosen to invite a figure who was active at the height of the AIDS crisis for
their 20th anniversary lecture, and have gone somewhat far afield of
the global AIDS celebrity and NGO milieu to bring us a fierce grass roots
activist who started the radical, up-hill task of doing HIV prevention in 1980s
Columbia, South Carolina. Meet DiAna DiAna, the hairdresser who knew too much.
“It
was in 1986 that I became aware of HIV and AIDS,” DiAna tells me over the phone
as she prepares for a day of cutting, styling, listening and teaching at her
salon in a primary black neighbourhood of Columbia. “I just saw [AIDS] on the
front of a magazine. Nobody wanted to talk about it because it was all sexual
and needles and of course nobody in
South Carolina does any of those things,” she tells me, her beautiful Bostonian
accent still intact after decades of living and working south of Dixie. In 1991,
DiAna’s then-unorthodox methods for talking about sex and condoms were
documented in the short film DiAna’s Hair
Ego, which will also be screened on Thursday. Today, Columbia has the forth-highest rate of HIV infection per
capita in the United States, she says, and according to one Centre for Disease
Control study, HIV infection is the leading cause of death for black women aged
25 to 34, the same age of many of the women who visit DiAna’s salon. Black
heterosexual women remain one of the populations most affected by HIV in the
US, disproportionately so.
The
magazine DiAna read that day, perhaps Cosmopolitan
or Marie Claire or one of the
more liberal magazines of the period, had a cover headline about a woman who
had contracted HIV from her boyfriend, and she got thinking about how this
could and would affect her community. “Both of them were ‘straight’ she yet she
still got infected. I started to get curious because it was something that
nobody really knew about... So I got the information, and people started
sharing the articles that I was getting. It snowballed from there, and I
eventually started doing presentations and going into churches where they
didn’t want to talk about sex or AIDS or anything, especially in the Bible
Belt. They were quite shocked that I was able to talk about HIV and AIDS,” she
tells me with the fluid verbal arc of someone who has talked about her activist
beginnings many times, with concentration and generosity.
“I
had to figure out a way for people to start using condoms. So I started
wrapping them up in wrapping paper so that clients would start taking them
home. You didn’t have to be a client, you could just come and get condoms and
information and see videos on HIV and AIDS,” she says with a smile her voice.
She knew she was onto something: she had found a way past the sexual shame that
prevented women from asking their male partners to use condoms, and eventually
men would come into the salon and elaborately ask for condoms for their
“friend,” or more sadly, to demand that DiAna stop giving out condoms to girls
who would ask for them. She went on to found the South Carolina AIDS Education
Network (SCAEN), which then spun off into the South Carolina HIV/AIDS Council,
a drastically underfunded charity run by her friend and one-time trainee Bambi
Gaddist “I asked her ‘Do you wanna be
the VP of a company that pays nothing?’ And she said yes,” DiAna laughs warmly
as she recalls inviting her BFF to helm the organization that started in a
salon and went on to do workshops in schools, and safer sex outreach with sex
workers and with men in cruising parks. She would do HIV saliva tests in her salon,
but found that people were reluctant, as they still are, to come in for their
results.
“I gave the whole thing
[until] 2000: by then everybody should be cured and we should know what AIDS is,
right? It was very difficult to deal with agencies that didn’t want to give any
money. Some of the politicians didn’t want to talk about AIDS at all because it
would be bad for their election, and they gave no support,” she tells me with
more than a hint of despair. Many of the men who opposed her grass-roots
prevention methods are still in power in the heavily Republican state, and
continue to defund and oppose her and Gaddist’s efforts to provide prevention
at the grass-roots level. In the years since DiAna has stopped working on the
front lines of radical sex ed in Columbia, South Carolina’s bureaucrats have
shown even less support for initiatives that she and her peers have begun, even
though grass-roots prevention and peer support has proven to be more effective
than top-down methods.
“I’ve had clients come in
and ask me ‘Is the AIDS thing still going around?’” she laments. The lessons
DiAna learned go deep. The effects of misogyny, homophobia, religious
conservatism and bureaucratic public health policies lead to only one thing:
more illness, less knowledge, and a crisis that may never end unless we stop it
ourselves.
DiAna
DiAna "Curlers & Condoms: Grassroots Prevention Then and Now"
Thursday March 21, 7 p.m. // Room H-110 of the Henry F. Hall
Building, 1455 de Maisonneuve Ouest. FREE, followed by reception with DiAna
DiAna and former guests of the Lecture Series
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