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A Youth Leader's Guide to Building Cultural Competence [PDF]
Chapter Four:
Cultural Background for HIV/AIDS Prevention
If you turned to this section without reading the previous sections,
STOP! Acquaint yourself with the steps to building cultural competence
outlined in the previous pages. Understand that reading the information
offered in this section is no substitute for gaining understanding of
your own culture, the individual young people in your program and their
cultural backgrounds.
This section offers some important information that can help you place
HIV/AIDS prevention efforts in a cultural context and perhaps understand
some of the beliefs and attitudes of your program participants and their
families. Due to the alarming rates of HIV infection among African-American,
Latino/Latina and gay male youth, this section will outline some of the
reasons that HIV/AIDS prevention messages might be resisted by African-Americans,
Latinos/Latinas and young gay men.
Economic Issues
As the HIV/AIDS epidemic moves into its second decade, it is hitting
particularly hard in communities in poor, urban communities of color.
African-Americans and Latinos/Latinas experience higher rates of unemployment,
poor housing, poor health, early death and inadequate medical insurance
than others. Many would argue that the greatest problems facing many
African-American and Latino/Latina communities are economic. In the words
of a Latino man in a poor neighborhood in New York: "Look around
our neighborhood. What do you see? All you see is extreme poverty. We
get sick mostly because we are poor. Our children get worse education
because we are poor. In order to fight the AIDS epidemic, we have to
fight the evils of poverty."16
For the many African-Americans and Latinos/Latinas whose daily lives
are a series of struggles rooted in poverty, worries about HIV/AIDS fall
way down on the list of concerns. When finding the next meal, paying
the rent or taking a sick child to the emergency room are common problems,
concern about a disease that might be fatal in 10 years is unlikely to
be a priority.
Childbearing has tremendous meaning for everyone. Various researchers
have commented on the fact that for African-Americans and Latinos/Latinas "who
live in poverty, having children is often the only way they have to prove
that they are socially productive and to demonstrate their manhood or
womanhood.17,18 HIV/AIDS
prevention messages that focus on condom use are in direct conflict with
this cultural value as condoms prevent pregnancy.
Distrust of
Public Health Officials
Society intrudes upon the lives of poor African-Americans and Latinos/Latinas
in many ways. Social workers, case managers, law enforcement officials
and child protective service workers are constantly telling them what
to do. In many ways, the private realm of sexuality is the last area
in which they feel a sense of control and power. When public health officials
start telling people to change those private sexual behaviors to prevent
HIV/AIDS it is understandable why the safer sex messages might be resisted.
There are several reasons that African-Americans in particular tend
to distrust public health messages about HIV/AIDS prevention. First,
that sense of distrust has roots in the legacy of the Tuskegee Syphilis
Study. In that Public Health Service study, black men with syphilis were
intentionally given inadequate or no treatment for syphilis and followed
for 40 years (1932 to 1972) to see the results of untreated disease.
The men were never told that they were not receiving treatment. Today,
it is not uncommon for African-Americans to refer to this study and many
believe that the government purposefully infected the men with syphilis.19
Second, conspiracy theories suggesting that the U.S. government introduced
HIV into poor, African-American communities are not uncommon and many
African-Americans do not believe that the government is telling the whole
truth about HIV/AIDS. Third, in the beginning of the epidemic, when so
little was known about the mysterious new illness, Haitians were labeled
by the government as a "risk group." This early labeling of
a group of black people resulted in bad feelings among many African-Americans.
Fourth, some of the theories—notably the "green monkey theory"—about
where HIV came from in the first place suggest that the virus first appeared
in Africa. These theories have been interpreted by some as blaming Africans
for the deadly illness.
Denial
Denial of the threat of HIV/AIDS is not unique to African-American and
Latino/Latina communities. Most people think that they are safe from
infection, even as they continue to engage in risky sexual behavior.
In fact, denial of danger, even in the face of facts, is a human trait.
How many of us always wear seatbelts, never speed, have quit smoking
and follow doctors' advice faithfully?
Many people still believe that HIV/AIDS is a disease that is only a
threat to gay white men and African-American and Latino/Latina teens
are no different. Creating HIV/AIDS prevention messages and programs
that personalize the risk for them is critical.
Even young gay men demonstrate through their behavior that they deny
the threat of HIV/AIDS. Recent research shows that young gay men engage
in unprotected anal intercourse at higher rates than older gay men and
that their HIV infection rates are higher than those of older men.20,21
There are at least two explanations for this disturbing information.
Perhaps the most important is that few young gay men have experienced
the level of personal experience with the disease that older men have.
Second, there is a growing trend for schools to request that speakers
in HIV/AIDS prevention programs refrain from discussing homosexuality,
thus eliminating an important educational situations in which lesbian,
gay and bisexual issues can be discussed.22
Religious Issues
Religion has played, and continues to play, a tremendously important
role in the lives of many people, including African-Americans and Latinos/Latinas.
African-American churches have always been more than religious institutions,
serving as centers for the development of leadership, education and the
teaching of the values and traditions of the African-American community.
Beginning with slavery, when religion offered slaves the promise of eventual
freedom and comfort during captivity, religion has helped African-Americans
cope with their social and economic isolation.23
Churches in the Latino/Latina community play similar roles, as well,
moral guidance, spiritual comfort and serving as a community resource
in time of need. Over 85 percent of Latinos/Latinas are Catholic. Most
of the others are members of Protestant denominations and some follow
traditional religions of "espiritismo" and "santerismo" as
well.
There are several ways in which religious beliefs have an impact on
HIV/AIDS prevention education. First, in almost all religions, homosexuality
is seen as immoral, unnatural, sinful and evil. The amount of guilt and
shame that many religions create for lesbian, gay and bisexual people
is enormous. Religious intolerance is part of what makes it difficult
for many lesbian, gay and bisexual people to be honest with themselves
and their families about their sexual orientation. Safer sex demands
open and honest communication with sexual partners; this can be difficult
for lesbian, gay and bisexual people who feel guilt.
Second, the belief that AIDS is punishment from God for immoral behavior
is not uncommon. In a small study of African-American women from an urban
area, two-thirds believed that AIDS is a fulfillment of prophesy regarding
plagues from the Book of Revelations.24 A
study of Latino attitudes about HIV/AIDS revealed that their deeply held
religious views lead to the belief that AIDS is God's punishment for
younger Latinos' corruption by modern U.S. culture. This belief was found
to be most common with the older generation of Latinos/Latinas who were
raised outside the U.S.25
Third, the Catholic ban on any contraceptive use, even among married
couples, makes it difficult to convince religious Catholic Latinos and
Latinas to use condoms. Fourth, for Latinos/Latinas in particular, fatalism
is a significant barrier to HIV/AIDS prevention. Fatalism is the belief
that life is pre-determined and that individuals are powerless to change
what happens to them. Those familiar with Latino/Latina culture note
that fatalism results from both the tremendous influence of religion
and the reality of poverty and that it makes arguments for safer sex
difficult.26,27
Gender Role
Expectations
Gender role expectations refer to what is considered to be appropriate
and acceptable behavior for men and women. African-Americans and Latinos/Latinas
are no different from all other groups in the U.S. in having at least
some rigid views about what is okay for men to do and what is okay for
women to do. Nor are they immune from mass media messages that tell men
to be strong, silent and powerful and women to be pretty, emotional and
passive.
Some of the commonly gender role expectations held by African-Americans
and Latinos/Latinas, however, are significant for HIV/AIDS prevention
work.
The terms macho and machismo are often used when talking
about Latino men. The terms have a negative connotation when used by
many Americans. The fact that the direct translation of the word machismo
is simply "male pride" has been lost in the application of
the word to describe men of any ethnicity who are particularly chauvinist.28
A more accurate definition of the term, as understood by Latinos/Latinas,
includes men being in control their own lives, providing for and protecting
their families, not just being served by women and being skilled, desirable
lovers who must "have" many women. The macho ethic provides
a major obstacle to condom use. "Condom use is perceived by many
to be 'unmanly' and as an obstacle to intimacy and control of sexual
relations."29
Machismo also plays a role in homosexual behavior of Latino men. The
cultural pressure to marry and have children is enormous; gay Latinos
often do get married, in order to conform to their culture. They may
still engage in same-sex behavior, in bars or public places, but they
live lives as heterosexual, married men. In addition, Latinos who would
define themselves as heterosexual sometimes engage in sexual behavior
with other men, but as long as they take the "active" male
role of inserting the penis, they are not considered to be gay.
Marianismo is the term for the traditional ideal of the submissive
Latina who centers her life around her family and is generally obedient
to the men in her life. This view of Latinas does not include the reality
that within the home, in the arenas of childrearing and family matters,
Latinas have much power. Marianismo is an obstacle to safer sex and condom
use, however, because a "good wife" is one who submits to her
husband's wishes. If he refuses to use condoms, even if he has extramarital
affairs, it is very difficult for a Latina wife to insist on protected
sex. In addition, motherhood is highly valued in Latino/Latina cultures
and women are taught from childhood that their proper role is to be a
mother. Condoms prevent disease, but they also prevent conception, and
are often resisted on those grounds.
An important fact about the African-American community is the high rates
of incarceration for African-American men. Unemployment of African-American
men is rampant and too few African-American men can financially provide
for their families.
The results of these inequities are several: many African-American men
are prevented from carrying out traditional functions of providing for
a family and gaining self-respect through work. African-American men
from lower socioeconomic classes may try to fulfill these roles in other
ways, including through their sexuality. Thus, men who are powerless
in many other arenas may cling to patterns of behavior, including sexual
risk-taking, that are traditionally male.
African-American women, it has been suggested, might be willing to tolerate
objectionable behavior from the men they are involved with because there
are not enough men to go around, given how many die early, spend years
in prison or are undereducated and unemployed.30
Sexual Attitudes
and Behaviors
Homosexuality
Homosexuality is stigmatized, to at least
some degree, in all racial and ethnic cultures in the U.S. Lesbian, gay
and bisexual people of all colors face
rejection from family, church and community. All must struggle for self-acceptance
in a world that tells them that who they are is bad.
African-Americans and Latinos/Latinas are no different from other Americans
in being fearful and ignorant of gay, lesbian and bisexual people and
issues. In many African-American and Latino/Latina communities, homosexuality
is viewed as a "white thing" and denial of African-American
or Latino/Latina homosexual behavior is common. African-American and
Latino/Latina gay/lesbian/bisexual people face at least two struggles:
for acceptance as gay people in their own communities, and for acceptance
as people of color in the gay community. Finding complete acceptance
and understanding in either can be difficult. African-American and Latina
lesbians face a third struggle against sexism in their own and in larger
communities.
There is a huge difference between sexual identity and sexual behavior.
Researchers who have focused on Latino/Latina cultures in particular
note that many Latino men who call themselves "heterosexual" in
fact engage in homosexual sex. The reasons for this are many. First,
being gay is so stigmatized that some Latino gay men choose to live "in
the closet," getting married but also having sex with men. Second,
other men do not admit their homosexual feelings, but act on them only
when under the influence of alcohol or drugs. Third, if a Latino man
takes the role of receiving another man's penis in his mouth or anus,
he is seen as the passive, female partner. The man who took
the active role of inserting his penis is culturally understood to be
a heterosexual man; it is only the passive partner who is negatively
labeled as gay.31
Anal Intercourse
The recipient of anal intercourse
is most at risk for HIV infection. Anecdotal evidence from urban areas
suggests that anal intercourse is practiced by
heterosexual young people as a form of birth control. For some young, unmarried
Latino couples, it is used as a way to protect against the loss of female
virginity.
Talking About Sex
Safer sex practices require that partners talk to each other about their sexual
histories, condom use and sexual acts. These conversations and topics are
not easy for anyone, but the general Latino/Latina population in the U.S.
has been described by many as sexually conservative. Direct sexual talk in
public and private is still basically unacceptable among Latinos/Latinas
and health educators may startle and offend their audience by talking about
taboo sexual subjects.32
Source/Citation:
Messina SA. A
Youth Leader's Guide to Building Cultural Competence. Washington,
DC: Advocates for Youth, 1994.
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