|
|
| |
 |
I am only one of many youth working towards the goal of inclusion.
- Brian |
|
|
| |
|
|
Transitions
Volume 14, No. 1,
October 2001
This Transitions is
also available in [PDF] format.
The Accidental
Activist
By Brian Vincent Griffith, Online Peer Educator for YouthHIV
I
have often found myself wearing many different hats as I make my way
through life and its various activities. In high school, I was known
as Brian, the "Band Geek," and Brian, the "Speech & Debate
Nerd." These were boring labels, I often found, and I looked forward
to the days when I could attach classier labels to my name. Brian V.
Griffith, Attorney at Law, always had an amazing ring to me; or, to please
my parents' secret desire for a scholar, Dr. Brian V. Griffith, professor
of English; but Brian Griffith, Youth Activist? No way! This, however,
has become my most recent incarnation of identity. This field is not
a lonely one either, as I am only one of many youth working towards the
goal of inclusion.
To borrow from a well-known cliché, it all began when I, and
many others, walked through the front doors of the downtown Atlanta Hyatt
for the 2000 United States Conference on AIDS. I was among the youth
invited to attend by Advocates for Youth. I would be focusing my energies
on an online peer education training session and on attending conference
workshops, institutes, and plenary sessions. Within the first day, I
became highly aware of the way in which youth were being "tokenized " on
every level at the conference. Few workshops addressed the HIV/AIDS epidemic
among the youth of the world. Even more disturbing was the fact that
many of the conference participants were unwilling to permit youth even
to participate in discussions held during workshops. We were young and
didn't know what we were talking about. We were nineteen and didn't hold
degrees. We represented the youth that account for 50 percent of all
new HIV infections, and we were being silenced, time after time, by adults.
We could not stand for this!
Immediately,
not to my surprise, a group of concerned young participants began organizing,
meeting to set out a list of concerns about the lack of youth's involvement
in the conference. We met in hotel rooms, and our group of concerned
youth began to grow and grow and grow. By the second and third days of
the conference, we had made enough waves to be granted a meeting with
the Executive Director of the organization sponsoring the conference.
After this meeting, we drafted a letter to the National Minority AIDS
Council (NMAC) and other partner organizations that had participated
in planning the conference. In the letter, the youth at the conference
laid out complaints, concerns, and suggestions for the future improvement
of the United States Conference on AIDS.
We did not stop mobilizing at this point either. We would not settle
for a nod of the head and a cordial "thanks for the letter." We
continued our efforts after the conference. We set up an Internet listserv
so we could keep in contact with each other as we brainstormed more ideas
to present to NMAC. When it became apparent that we were not the kind
of individuals who would easily fold up and go away, NMAC started giving
our movement a little more thought. We organized conference phone calls
to discuss pertinent issues, and we continued to circulate our letter
of complaint to member organizations of the NMAC. We met youth at other
conferences, including the Ryan White National Youth Conference on HIV/AIDS,
and made our case more and more widely known.
Although this story continues to play out, there is definitely happy
news about youth empowered activism. NMAC, after our continued prodding,
recognized the weaknesses in its previous planning and is taking steps
to improve future conferences. Youth have been given more opportunity
to influence the future direction of the conference through a seat on
the planning committee created for a youth representative. NMAC has also
promised that more youth will be able to attend future conferences through
scholarships and has pledged more youth-oriented, and youth-led workshops.
I am now able to sit back and admire, with some amazement, the accomplishments
of a group of determined peer educators that were able to sway the system.
I am proud to have been among the youth who were not willing to take
a back seat and accept the pat on the head that adult conference attendees
tried to hand us. I am glad to see that progress is being made, albeit
slowly, towards recognizing the importance of youth in the battle against
HIV/AIDS. Brian V. Griffith, Youth Activist, is a label to hang proudly
on my bedroom door, and my chief concern for the time being is finding
a cute pair of shoes to go with this brand new hat!
Transitions (ISSN
1097-1254) © 2001, is a quarterly publication of Advocates for Youth—Helping
young people make safe and responsible decisions about
sex. For permission
to reprint, contact Transitions' editor at 202.419.3420.
Editor: Sue Alford
Click here to view the Publications Catalog and/or
to order this publication.
|