BMX NY EDITORIAL PAGE
Gay = White = Short-Circut to Effective Black HIV Prevention
by JM Green
Considering
the fact that nearly half of all Black men who have sex with men in New
York are HIV infected, and that this trend is on the increase, perhaps
it’s time we recognize what is not working about such prevention
strategies as have been deployed among us thus far.
Key
to developing effective strategies for stemming the tide of HIV/AIDS in
the Black community is overcoming our apprehension to acknowledging
Black male homosexuality, commonly referred to as "gay."
We
have long known that the epicenter of the incidence of HIV/AIDS in the
Black community is among Black men who have sex with men (BMSM) and BMSM
who also have female partners. As it happens, there are still many more BMSM who do not identify as gay than there are who do. Hence, the necessity of coining the term in the first place.
As
a result of the literal and figurative emasculation of Black men,
manhood is a precious and fragile commodity in the Black community.
At
the heart of all the struggles Africans have waged for freedom in
America from abolition and manumission, to desegregation and Civil
Rights, to Black Power and Black Consciousness, has been the call for
our acknowledgement as men.
Intensifying
our anxiety about manhood is the patriarchal American context in which
manhood is valued in terms of power, aggression, domination, and which
is undergirded by misogyny. By and large, Black men have been out of the power and domination loop for some time now. And,
as a function of internalized white supremacy, where aggression is
concerned, we generally tend to reserve that behavior for each other.
Misogyny prompts disrespect of women. Regarding
homosex, where a man would have another man as would a woman, those men
are deemed even less worthy of respect than women. In this environment, the anxiety about manhood is heightened exponentially among Black men.
Our
collective anxiety about manhood has created the shame, guilt and fear
around homosexuality which has for too long kept us silent about the
much deadlier threat of a pandemic which is still infecting and killing
us at an alarming rate.
Discussions
about homosexuality, which in most people’s minds is synonymous with
gay identity, and which many Black folk see as “White,” make the topic
threatening in multiple ways.
In turn, we rarely get to HIV/AIDS. And, even when we do, the topic is rarely considered multi-dimensionally.
It
is time we muster the courage to face our fears and create safe spaces
within which we critically examine anti-homosexual dispositions in the
Black community as a precursor to dialogues about effective means of
stopping the spread of HIV/AIDS.