
Healing the Hurt
by Rita Rubin, POZ Magazine, Issue 182, September 2012 | Retrieved from the Internet on August 16, 2012 by SJ
A recent epidemic of attacks on women, transgender women and people with HIV exposes a link as toxic as the virus itself: Trauma not only fuels HIV, it also makes living with it harder. But HIV-positive women and their allies in the realms of science, medicine and social justice are ready to fight back—with programs, education and lifesaving advocacy.http://www.poz.com/articles/Women_Trauma_HIV_2731_22821.shtml
In the middle of the night on May 24, fire ripped through the offices of Women With a Vision (WWAV), a New Orleans grassroots organization founded in 1991 to respond to HIV/AIDS in communities of color. The flames destroyed the group's offices, forcing it to relocate temporarily to a church. Deon Haywood, WWAV executive director, immediately called the fire a hate crime, and after a two-month investigation, police and fire department officials agreed, categorizing it as aggravated arson.
HIV and women's health activists see the fire as one in a series of violent attacks on women and transwomen, particularly those of color, who are advocating for their rights. The fire did more than destroy property; it also served as a cruel reminder of women's vulnerability and the violence they experience. "Since the attack on our office, I feel that many of us with Women With a Vision have revisited every trauma that we've been through," Haywood says. "Violence seems to be this normal thing, because we're used to seeing it."