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Greetings From Ciudad de Mexico, Mexico: A Blog Entry by Heidi Nass

By Heidi Nass

August 2, 2008

Heidi Nass
August 2, 2008

Greetings From Ciudad de Mexico, Mexico

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Day 1: Saturday

Greetings from Ciudad de Mexico, Mexico. Mexico City is the site of AIDS 2008, the 17th international AIDS conference ever held and the first one to take place in Latin America. It is also my first one, so I am very excited, a little anxious and altogether delighted to be here.

It's worth noting that there has never been an international AIDS conference in the United States because the U.S. has prohibited entry of people living with HIV/AIDS into the country since 1987. Included in the new AIDS funding legislation that was passed by Congress in recent weeks, the legislative part of the HIV travel ban is repealed but the ban remains because the government still has HIV on a list of communicable diseases that bar entry into the country. It's a relic from the days of ignorance about how HIV is transmitted, but a shameful relic, for sure.

Meanwhile, in Mexico City, things are already underway at the conference even though the opening session isn't until tomorrow evening. The venue is enormous -- big enough to accommodate the estimated 25,000 people who will attend the conference.

Mexico City street (Fuente de la Diana Cazadora in center)

PHOTO (above): Mexico City street (Fuente de la Diana Cazadora in center)


Ruins from 1500 BC in the middle of a subway stop

PHOTO (above): Ruins from 1500 BC in the middle of a subway stop

On any given day at any given time, there can be upwards of 25 sessions running concurrently on a multitude of topics. I'm already in a panic about how in the world I will choose which sessions to attend. Sessions start as early as 7:00 a.m., usually run in two-hour segments, and conclude at 8:00 p.m. We are told that Mexico City traffic can easily add an hour each way in travel time to the day, so I'm not expecting a week of calm and relaxation, let's say.

Beyond the formal conference, there is an amazing place called the Global Village, which has its own whole agenda of events and is by, for and about people living with HIV/AIDS. It's in a separate building -- here in Mexico City it's a huge tent-like city in the infield of a horse race track. The Global Village is designed to engage the host community of advocates and people living with HIV/AIDS, most of whom don't routinely have the means to attend a conference like this, allow as many people as can physically get here to have a forum to interact and get involved with HIV/AIDS, and encourage conference delegates to step out into the community of people living with HIV/AIDS.

"La Discriminacion," art from the Global Village of the International AIDS Conference

PHOTO (above): "La Discriminación," art from the Global Village of the International AIDS Conference

I am here as a delegate with UNAIDS, an intra-agency program of the United Nations that is really the international "house" of HIV/AIDS policy and programming. I was asked to be part of a panel presentation for a session called "Making HIV Trials Work for Women and Adolescent Girls." My part is titled "Creating Meaningful Research for Women: Issues and barriers from the community perspective."

I am very honored, of course, to be participating in this session and yet I feel self-conscious. I know that I am "qualified" to speak -- I am a woman living with HIV, I work every day in a clinic of 800 patients and see up close the common struggles of people living with HIV/AIDS, and I have many years of research advocacy on the national level under my belt -- yet I am, in the end, one person with one experience. How can I speak to "the community's issues" as it is often put? I am comforted that there is not The Community, as some sort of monolithic entity of people living with HIV/AIDS. In the end, we are all just one person with one experience. Still, I struggle.

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