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Guide to the AIDS Quilt in Washington DC July 21-25, 2012

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Quilt in the Capital 2012

presented by

in partnership with

Page 2: Quilt in the Capital 2012
Page 3: Quilt in the Capital 2012

LEARN MOREGO ONLINE TO FIND MORE INFORMATION Visit quilt2012.org and poz.

com/quilt to learn more about

the Quilt in the Capital initiative

and how you can get involved.

STAY CONNECTEDGET UPDATES THROUGH SOCIAL NETWORKSFollow us on Facebook and

Twitter for the latest info.

facebook.com/aidsquilt

facebook.com/pozmagazine

twitter.com/@aidsquilt

twitter.com/@pozmagazine

SHOW SUPPORTDONATE OR PURCHASE QUILT MERCHANDISEVisit the Quilt 2012 store right

around the corner from the

Farragut North Metro stop in

Washington, DC, or online at

aidsquilt.org/store/.

ON THE GOUSE YOUR PHONE TO FIND THE QUILT Use your mobile device and

scan the QR code below for a

complete listing of sites where

the AIDS Memorial Quilt will be

on display in Washington, DC.

We can end AIDS faster.

RFS & FAMILY

FOUNDATION

Support for Quilt in the Capital is provided by

WELCOME TO THE

WASHINGTON, DC, JULY 21-25, 2012

REMEMBERING THE PAST, REWRITING THE FUTUREThe AIDS Memorial Quilt has been deemed a National Treasure by an act of Congress. It

consists of more than 48,000 panels representing the lives of 94,000 people taken by

AIDS. It was sewn by more than 100,000 friends and family members. Over the years, the

composition of the panels has evolved to refl ect the changing nature of the epidemic.

The Quilt remembers people from all over the world; it is a global tribute to the 25 million

precious lives we have lost to AIDS.

The Quilt serves as a connector and a catalyst, an ambassador and an educator. Today,

there are medications that can keep people healthy and alive, but AIDS is far from under

control, including in America. Of the estimated 34 million people with HIV on the planet,

only 6 million are accessing treatment. This year’s display will hopefully reawaken the

world to the ongoing AIDS crisis and in doing so, engender a new era of AIDS support and

advocacy in America—and around the world.

The Quilt will be on display in locations throughout Washington, DC. The opening

ceremony takes place on the National Mall at 9 A.M. on Saturday, July 21. The display at the

National Mall is open from 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. daily and will include panel-making workshops, new

panel dedications, daily readings of the names and a digital experience tent where visitors

can browse Quilt panels online, check out a digital timeline of the Quilt and interact with the

Quilt mobile Web app. Visit quilt2012.org for a complete listing of locations and events.

Advocates

for YouthRights. Respect. Responsibility.®

Page 4: Quilt in the Capital 2012

Educating, Inspiring and Empowering

the HIV/AIDS Community Since 1994

poz.com

An official media partner of the XIX International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2012)

Page 5: Quilt in the Capital 2012

sorts of communities to get mobilized. Each individual panel is 3 feet by 6 feet.

The panels were designed to represent a human grave of each life, so that we could transform statistics into souls and try to wake up the world.

The Quilt doesn’t allow the world to deny that [the epidemic] happened and is happening. It galvanizes the conversation.

How has the Quilt evolved?

The Quilt is a mirror that reflects soci-ety’s responses—some good and some not so good—during the last 30 years of the epidemic.

When drugs [that prevent] mother-to-child transmission were made available, we started seeing fewer baby panels. To-day, the Quilt reflects what is happening in the African-American community and around the world.

Originally, [due to stigma] many panels carried only first names. A teacher came to us years after creating a panel for his lover and said, “I really want to put his last name on the panel.”

Moments like these reflect how people grapple with this disease over time.

How will the Quilt use social media? We will have oral history stations where people can tell their own story. Their experiences will become another volume in this lovely piece of material culture that teaches, informs and inspires.

We’ll also have QR codes on various panels where people can [use their smart-phones] to look up and listen to stories.

How does the Quilt help people?

In the panel-making workshops, people have a safe space to discuss HIV/AIDS.

Where [pieces of the] Quilt are on display people go, “Hmm, maybe it is OK to talk about HIV/AIDS.” It’s a way of starting dialogue in communities who have had a really hard time addressing it.

It’s amazing that we are 30 years into this epidemic and some of the driving factors around why people don’t get tested and don’t have access to care are still stigma, shame and phobia. The Quilt breaks down those barriers.

Go to quilt2012.org for more information. HA

RO

LD

DA

NIE

LS

THE AIDS MEMORIAL QUILT IS ONE OF THE WORLD’S MOST powerful symbols of the public’s response to the AIDS pandemic. It consists of more than 48,000 panels representing the lives of 94,000 people taken by AIDS. The last time the entire Quilt was on display was in 1996. The NAMES Project Foundation, in partnership with POZ,

now returns the Quilt to the National Mall and at more than 50 sites around the capital in conjunction with the XIX International AIDS Conference (AIDS 2012).

Julie Rhoad has been president and CEO of the NAMES Project Foundation, the organization that serves as custodian of the Quilt, since 2001. As she explains here, the Quilt has a powerful history of awakening the world to the AIDS crisis. It can help people remember the past and shape a brighter future for people living with the virus.

How would you describe the power of the Quilt?

The Quilt is like no other instrument on earth. It is a place where people can find inspiration and motivation to act. It’s a great example of how art can inspire advocacy.

Looking back at the last 30 years we find that the Quilt helped start the [HIV/AIDS] advocacy movement. It said, “We are dying, somebody has to pay attention.” Then mothers and fathers, and brothers and sisters, and uncles and aunts began to get involved and take action. If we are going to end HIV/AIDS, we need people from all

Uncommon ThreadsJulie Rhoad leverages the power of the AIDS Memorial Quilt to usher in a new era of AIDS advocacy.

Julie Rhoad, president and

CEO of the NAMES Project

Foundation

Page 6: Quilt in the Capital 2012

1 American Red Cross 430 17th St. NWJuly 20 – 25

2 American Red Cross Headquarters2025 E St. NW July 20 – 25

3 Carnegie Library801 K St. NWJuly 21 – 25

4 Constitution GardensNear the pond20th St. NW andConstitution Ave. NW July 21 – 25

5 Department of the Interior South Building Plaza1951 Constitution Ave. NWJuly 21 – 25

6 Donovan House Hotel1155 14th St. NWJuly 21 – 25

7 Eastern Market225 7th St. SEJuly 21 – 25

8 George Washington UniversityMarvin Center 22nd St. NW and H St. NWJuly 21 – 25

9 Grant Memorial ParkU.S. Capitol Building groundsJuly 21 – 25

q The Harman Center for the Arts610 F St. NW July 1 – 25

w Henry Bacon Ball Field23rd St. NW andConstitution Ave. NWJuly 21 – 25

e Human Rights Campaign Headquarters1640 Rhode Island Ave. NWJuly 1 – 25

r The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts2700 F St. NWJune 26 – July 26

t JFK Hockey FieldPark area below LincolnMemorialJuly 21 – 25

y John Marshall Memorial Park501 Pennsylvania Ave. NWJuly 21 – 25

u Martin Luther King MemorialGrassy area near bookstoreJuly 21 – 25

i The Mayfl ower RenaissanceWashington, DC, Hotel1127 Connecticut Ave. NWJune 25 – July 26

o National Building Museum401 F St. NW July 21 – 25

p National Education Association Building1201 16th St. NW July 21 – 25

a The National Mall8th – 14th StreetsJuly 21 – 25

s National Museum of American History /Smithsonian Institution 1400 Constitution Ave. NW Third Floor / Hall of Music July 21 – 25

d Organization of American States / Art Museum of the Americas1889 F St. NWJuly 21 – 25

f Peace Corps 1111 20th St. NW May 24 – July 26

g The Renaissance Washington, DC, Downtown Hotel999 9th St. NW June 25 – July 26

Reflecting Pool

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PENNSYLVANIA AVE NW

PENNSYLVANIA AVE NW

PENNSYLVANIA AVE NW

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RE ROOSEVELT

AL BRIDGE

Strayer

University

University of

California

Washington

Center

Johns

Hopkins

University

Cornell In

Washington

Market at

Columbia Plaza

Watergate

Shopping Center

The Shops

at 2000 Penn

Old Post

Office Pavilion

Shopping Center

George

Washington

University

Hospital

MLK Jr.

Memorial

Library

West End

Neighborhood

Library

Agriculture

Annex

Agriculture

South Building

Jackson

Place

Old

Executive

Office

Building

Agriculture Administration

Building (James Whitten)

State Department

Theodore

Roosevelt

Bldg.

Reagan

Building

Liberty

Loan Bldg

Forrestal

Bldg Transp

J. Edgar

Hoover Bldg./

FBI

President's

Guest House

New

Executive

Office

Building

National Courts

(Madison Place

Complex)

Internal

Revenue

Service

Justice

Department

Hoover

Herbert

Building

(Department

of Commerce)

Customs

Service

BuildingMellon

Auditorium

Interstate

Commerce

Commission

Building

Potomac Annex

Building

E Street Complex -

Central Building

E Street Complex -

East Building

E Street Complex -

South Building

Auditors

Building

Lafayette

Building

Main

Interior

Building

Winder

Building

Ariel Rios

Federal

Building

(New Post

Office Bldg)

GSA HQ

Veterans'

Admin.

Dept

Interior S

Rock Creek &

Potomac Parkway

Dupont

Circle

Logan

Circle

Scott

Cir

Thomas

Circle

Samuel Gompers

Memorial Park

Washington

Circle

Farr

agu

t

Sq

uare Franklin

Square Park

Mcp

her

son

Sq

uare

James Monroe

Park

Edward

Murrow

Park

Thompson's

Boat House Lafayette

Square

Juarez

Statue

Ford's Theatre

National Historical

Site

Commerce

Blg Plaza

(Pershing Square)

Freedom

PlazaPark

Walt Whitman

ParkRawlins

Park

Edward

J. Kelly

Park

L'enfant

Square

The Mall,

Smithsonian Grounds

Washington

Monument

President's

Park

The Ellipse

West Potomac

Park National

Ro

ck C

reek

Pa

rk

The White

House

Lincoln

Memorial

John F

Kennedy

Center

Convention

George

Washington

University

Carnegie Institution

of Washington

Hotel

International

Square

World

Bank

Int’l

Monetary

Fund

Int’l

Monetary

Fund

American

Red Cross

Corcoran

Art Gallery

US Chamber

of Commerce

Federal Deposit

Insurance

Corporation

The Washington

Post Building

National

Geographic

Society

Headquarters

World

Bank

Columbia

Center

US

Treasury

Dept

Ellipse

Visitor

Center

DC World

War Memorial

Korean War

Veterans'

Memorial

National Academy

of Sciences

and Engineering

American

Pharmaceutical

Institute

Federal Reserve

Martin Annex

Federal

Reserve

Board Organization of

American States

Annex

Organization of

American States

American

National

Red Cross

Bureau of

Engraving

and Printing

Freer

Gallery

of Arts

One Metro

Center

National

Place

National

Theatre

US Secret

Service

Nation

of Am

Nation

Studio

Theater

Smithsonian Institution

Building

National Museum

of American History

Department

of EnergyHolocaust

Museum

National Museum

of Natural History

Arts and

Industry

Museum

Old Post Office/

Department

of Revenue

National

Museum

of African Art

Sackler

Gallery

Lincoln

Square

Columbia

Square

International

Cultural Trade

Center

Internation

Spy Museu

IADB

One Franklin

Square

Franklin

Square

Franklin

Square

North

Columbia

Plaza

Melvin

Gelman

Library

Watergate

Office

Building

Bureau Of

Nat’l Affairs

Thaddeus

Stevens

School

Lisner

Auditorium

The

Westbridge

Building

Navy Bureau

of Medicine

and Science

Warwick

Building

National

Education

Assoc.

Liberty Plaza

National

Wildlife

Federation

Pan American

Union

FoggyBottom-GWU

FarragutNorth

FarragutWest

McphersonSquare

MetroCenter

FederalTriangle

66

1

2

4

5

6

8

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e

r

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i

p

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d

fh

j

k

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x

Page 7: Quilt in the Capital 2012

h The Renaissance Washington, DC, DuPont Circle Hotel1143 New Hampshire Ave. NW June 25 – July 26

j S. Dillon Ripley Center /Smithsonian Institution1100 Jefferson Dr. SW June 26 – July 26

k Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center1300 Pennsylvania Ave. NWJuly 21 – 25

l U.S. Department of Health & Human ServicesHubert H. Humphrey Building / Great Hall200 Independence Ave. SWJuly 20 – 25

; The Washington Monument / NW Corner Corner of 17th St. NW and Constitution Ave. NWJuly 21 – 25

z The John A. Wilson Building1350 Pennsylvania Ave. NWJuly 21 – 25

x QUILT 2012 STOREFarragut Square1030 17th St. NWaidsquilt.org/store/June 27 – July 27

c AIDS 2012Global Village Walter E. WashingtonConvention Center801 Mount Vernon Pl. NWaids2012.orgJuly 22 – 27

OTHER DISPLAY SITESAmerican University4400 Massachusetts Ave. NW June 11 – July 25

Arena Stage1101 6th St. SWJune 1 – July 26

Bloomingdale’s Chevy Chase5300 Western Ave.Chevy Chase, MDJuly 21 – 25

Christ Church118 North Washington St.Alexandria, VA July 21 – 25

Dulles Airport 1 Saarinen CircleDulles, VAJune 26 – July 25

Falls Church Presbyterian Church225 East Broad St.Falls Church, VAJuly 21 – 25

FHI 3601825 Connecticut Ave. NWJuly 20 – 25

National Cathedral /Interfaith Healing Service3101 Wisconsin Ave. NWJuly 21

Nationals Stadium1500 South Capitol St. SEJuly 7

Reagan International Airport1 Aviation CircleArlington, VAJune 26 – July 25

St. Paul’s Lutheran Church /Muhlenberg Park4900 Connecticut Ave. NWJuly 21 – 25

The Textile Museum2320 S St. NWJuly 21 – 25

Torpedo Factory Arts Center105 North Union St.Alexandria, VA July 21 – 25

University of Maryland / College ParkAdele H. Stamp Student Union1132 Regents Dr.College Park, MD July 21 – 25

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MORSE ST NE

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ST

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6T

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W

5T

H S

T N

W

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H S

T N

W

Georgetown

Law SchoolShops at

Union Station

H Street Connection

Shopping Center

Eastern

Market

Superior CourtDOH/DMV

Federal Trade

Commission

GSA

Dept. Of Labor

(Perkins Bldg)

Dept. of

Transportation/

FAA

Dept. of

Transportation/

FAA

Washington

FBI HQ

Tax

Court

Hubert

Humphrey

Building

Prettyman, E. Barrett

Fed. Courthouse

Pension Building

(National Building Museum)

HOLC

(Patterson Tract)

Judiciary Square

Gonzaga

Field

FDR

Memorial

StoneL'enfant

Square

Mellon

Fountain

Seaton Park,

East

Park

Garfield

Monument

Peace

Monument

National

Mall

Stanton

Park

US

Capitol

Union

Station

Emancipation

Memorial

Gallaudet

University

Convention

Center

Verizon

Center

National Air And Space Museum

National Gallery

of Art - EastNational Gallery of Art

- West

National Museum of

the American Indian

Food and Drug

AdministrationMary E Switzer

B ildi

Department

of Education

Capital

Gallery

Wilbur J. Cohen

Building

Federal

Center

US Capitol

Visitor

Center

Supreme Court

Library Of Congress -

Jefferson Building

Library of

Congress

Adams

Building

Annex

Municipal Center

Shakespeare

Theatre

National Musem

of American Art

National Portrait

Gallery

Library of Congress

Madison Building

Annex

Hirshhorn

Museum

Dirksen

Senate

Office

Building

Hart

Senate

Office

Building

US Dept of

Justice

Longworth

Building

H.O.R.

Folger

Shakespeare

Library

AFGEThurgood

Marshall

Federal

Judicial

Building

International

Spy Museum IRS

Hall of the

States

Sentinel

Square

Postal

Museum

Bureau of Labor

Statistics

US Naval

Memorial

US Army Corps

of Engineers

US Gov't

Printing Office

US Gov't

Printing Office

Federal Energy Regulatory

Commission (FERC)

NoMa

Station

Housing

Authority

Headquarters

City

Vista

Mt. Vernon

Place

Newseum

Cannon House

of Representatives

Building

Russell Senate

Office Building

Rayburn House of

Representatives

Office Building

General

Accounting

Office

WMTA

Building

Judiciary

Square

Building

CWA

Building

DC Gov’t

Judiciary

Center

Old City

Hall

American Association

of Retired Persons

Liberty

Square

Union Center

Plaza

Capital

Plaza

Federal

Express

Bureau of Alcohol

Tobacco & Firearms

National

Archives

Archives-Navy Mem.Penn Quarter

JudiciarySquare

Gallery PlaceChinatown

Mt Vernon Square7th StConvention Center

Union StationMarc Washington

UnionStation

NY AveFL AveGallaudet Univ

395

3

c

7

9

q

y

o

g

l

Page 8: Quilt in the Capital 2012