June 18, 2001
"Massive amounts of money are needed for AIDS treatment as well as education," Tucker agreed. "But this plague is not like cancer or diabetes or Parkinson's. . . . Because AIDS is sexually transmitted and its earliest victims in this country were gay men, it carries a stigma that defies logic. It travels with not only the fear that surrounds any deadly disease but also a host of prejudices, hatreds and false assumptions that go to the heart of America's sexual hypocrisies and hysterias -- and homophobia," Tucker wrote. "Indeed, a virulent homophobia emanating from black pulpits and a widespread embarrassment about black homosexuality have stymied outreach" regarding safe sex messages in the black community.
"The battle against black homophobia has to be fought by black preachers, athletes, actors and celebrity-activists. Some have joined the fight: Coretta Scott King remains outspoken about the prejudices that block AIDS outreach. . . . Jesse Jackson, too, has joined the effort, urging black preachers to set a public example by getting tested for HIV. But those efforts are too quiet, too small. This movement must grow. The lives of black men and women depend on it," Tucker concluded.
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