Members of the Human Rights Campaign at the Walk to End HIV. Photo courtesy of Noël Gordon Jr. |
Noël Gordon Jr. and Marvell L. Terry II are fighting the virus at the Human Rights Campaign
By
Alicia Green
June 1, 2017
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In 2013, the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) decided to ramp up its
public education and outreach efforts around HIV. Two years later, HRC’s
HIV and Health Equity Project was born. At the forefront of this team,
which consists of about 14 individuals across the LGBT advocacy group,
are Noël Gordon Jr. and Marvell L. Terry II.
“I like to
think of myself and Marvell as the co-quarterbacks leading the team of
people who do work on HIV at HRC,” says Gordon, senior program
specialist for HIV prevention and health equity, who was instrumental in
expanding HRC’s mission to more specifically address HIV and other LGBT
health issues.
Noël Gordon Jr. and Marvell L. Terry II at AIDSWatch. Photo courtesy of Marvell L. Terry II |
Although Gordon and Terry arrived at HRC a couple of years apart,
they shared an interest in HIV advocacy. Now, they work closely together
as HRC’s only full-time staff members focusing on HIV.
“What
brought me to advocacy was my own diagnosis,” says Terry, who learned
he was HIV positive in 2007. “When I arrived here, I made a commitment
to myself that I would never forget the process I, too, went through of
looking into care and the struggle I had of retaining care.”
He
continues, “Daily, I show up as a Black gay man living with HIV from
the South. The greatest opportunity for me is the eagerness to bring
that voice into my HIV work and into the Human Rights Campaign.” Terry
currently serves as the HIV and AIDS program manager.
Gordon’s
interest was both professional and personal. While a student at the
University of Michigan, he took a trip to Kingston, Jamaica, where he
did direct education work with people at high risk of contracting HIV.
The transformative experience led him on a path to advocacy around
issues concerning HIV.
“I also identify strongly with
the fact that the communities most affected by HIV are Black gay and
bisexual men,” Gordon says. “As a Black gay man, even though I am not
living with HIV, I feel a deep sense of passion and a desire to change
the course of this epidemic.”
The HIV and health equity
team has three goals: to educate LGBT people and allies about the
current realities of HIV; to mobilize them to combat the dual epidemics
of HIV and HIV stigma; and to advocate for the dignity, rights and
well-being of people living with and affected by HIV.
As
part of its educational efforts, the organization teaches people about
available prevention options, including the daily blue pill Truvada as
pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). HRC even invested in two social media
campaigns, #BeInTheKnow and #DailyBlue, to raise awareness about the HIV
prevention pill.
“In October 2014, HRC became one of
the first national LGBTQ organizations to publicly embrace the use of
PrEP and to call on major stakeholders to increase PrEP access,
education and resources,” says Gordon.
When it comes to
mobilization, HRC travels to more than 200 Pride festivals across the
country to engage with individuals about their sexual health and
wellness in an attempt to normalize discussions around HIV.
The advocacy group also publishes a number of publications and resources, including its Safer Sex for Trans Bodies guide and What Do I Do? A Handbook to Understanding Health and HIV, which Gordon says are the ones that make him proudest.
“What Do I Do? was
our first major HIV-related publication out of the HIV and health
equity shop,” says Gordon. “We worked with AIDS United to produce a
guide that really filled two needs that we did not see in literature. At
the time that we published the guide, we did not see a resource
centered around HIV and the health-related needs of LGBTQ people.”
Noël Gordon Jr. Photo courtesy of Noël Gordon Jr |
Gordon adds that neither was there a resource that took into account
the current realities of HIV or that discussed the virus in simple
terms.
Since its publication, HRC has sent about 15,000 copies of What Do I Do? to different organizations across the United States.
While
Gordon focuses on prevention, Terry leads treatment efforts. Terry
says, “My sole mission is to change hearts and minds around HIV/AIDS.”
Terry
also helps integrate HIV into every department at HRC. For example, he
works with the manager of the historically Black colleges and
universities (HBCU) program to ensure that students at those
institutions are educated about HIV and have access to PrEP.
“It
is through our Children, Youth and Families Program we try to talk
about HIV in grade school,” Terry explains. “It is through our policy
and legal team that we have conversations around criminalization and the
impact of HIV laws in various states. It’s a daily cross-spectrum
approach of where you find opportunities.”
Terry was
also the driving force behind the HRC Foundation’s HIV 360° Fellowship
Program, which is currently in its second year and receives funding from
the Elton John AIDS Foundation. The program provides 10 young HIV
advocates with nine months of training and support to address
communities most heavily impacted by HIV.
Terry, who
started The Red Door Foundation in 2007, explains that the fellowship
came about from his own struggles as a young leader of an organization
in the South.
“We wanted to find young people under
age 35 who were in leadership roles who needed the skills building,
capacity building and, more than anything, the network of other people
who were doing the same thing,” Terry says. “I brought all of those
experiences and needs that I knew that I needed or that helped me to
write a grant for the fellowship program.”
According to
Terry, the program has been a financial, emotional and mental success
for the fellows as evidenced by the fact that they have built
encouraging networks and made their programs stronger through their
improved leadership.
“When we talk about getting to
zero new HIV infections in our communities,” Terry points out, “we help
support leaders that in turn help support organizations that in turn
help support communities to fight the epidemic a little harder.”
Marvell L. Terry II Photo courtesy of Marvell L. Terry II |
Although HRC has reached out to young people on the front lines of
the epidemic, Gordon says one of the biggest challenges moving forward
is bringing all the energy and enthusiasm young folks are feeling in the
wake of the recent election into the effort to end HIV.
The
Trump administration presents another challenge to HIV advocacy, he
says, but that hasn’t deterred him. “I believe we will persevere and
weather these storms of uncertainty we now find ourselves in,” he
asserts.
Besides, he noted that HRC is “going full
throttle” to ensure that HIV is not left out of the
conversation—especially regarding health care—by marching, addressing
members of Congress and joining forces with other organizations to
create a unified voice.
Terry believes it is important to let the current administration know that “LGBTQ people are here, and we are here to stay.”
HRC is also looking toward the future. In the next year, the organization is hoping to focus its efforts on HIV and faith.
“We
believe we can’t address HIV in communities of color without talking
about the role of faith communities in perpetuating but also providing a
safe haven from homophobia, transphobia and other forms of bias,” says
Gordon.
Two other areas of focus will be the South,
where the epidemic has the most people living with HIV, and advocacy
issues related to HIV, such as drug pricing and discrimination.
“In
the same way that we can’t end the epidemic without addressing
communities of color,” explains Gordon, “we can’t address the epidemic
without addressing the challenges faced by people living in the U.S.
South.”
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