HIV/AIDS: Black Activists That You Should Know
Influential Black HIV/AIDS Activists You Need To Know
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1. Rae Lewis-Thornton

Rae Lewis-Thornton is an Emmy Award-winning AIDS activist who has been living with HIV for 36 years and AIDS for 26. Through public speaking engagements, writing, and media appearances, she advocates for HIV/AIDS education, particularly addressing the stigma and discrimination faced by those living with the virus. Thornton rose to fame after she opened up to Essence Magazine about living with the condition in 1994.
On World Aids Day Dec. 1, the author and public speaker took to Facebook to reflect on her journey living with the virus.
“Over 35 years ago, I was diagnosed with HIV and only found out because I donated blood. It was a scary time to be diagnosed with HIV, and I had no idea what the future would look like for me, or if I even had a future,” Thornton penned. “But I was proactive about my health, and as soon as HIV medicines became available, I started and stayed on HIV treatment as prescribed. Today, I’m grateful to be undetectable.”
2. Deon Haywood

Deon Haywood, the Executive Director of Women With A Vision, works tirelessly to address the intersection of HIV/AIDS, reproductive justice and social change. Her organization focuses on supporting marginalized communities, including Black women and LGBTQ+ individuals, affected by the epidemic.
3. Marvelyn Brown

Marvelyn Brown, a native of Tennessee, became HIV-positive at the age of 19. Through her humanitarian work and advocacy, Brown has helped to speak out against the struggles of those living with the virus.
In 2007, she earned an Emmy Award for Outstanding National PSA. She was also named one of the 25 “HEROES” in the HIV/AIDS epidemic by BET’s Rap It Up campaign, according to her website. The public speaker and author was also inducted into The Black AIDS Institute in 2010.
4. Alicia Diggs

HIV consultant and humanitarian Alicia Diggs is a fierce advocate for people living with HIV. Throughout her dedicated work, she aims to educate communities on STD/STI prevention and provides resources on how to live a healthy lifestyle living with the virus. “I have a passion to assist black women living with HIV in healing through traumas that have prevented them from flourishing in their lives,” the activist notes on her LinkedIn page.
In 2021, Diggs was named one of Plus+ Magazine’s Amazing People Of The Year living with HIV.
“Through my trials and tribulations, I made a decision to fight and stand strong as a woman living with HIV so that I can help my fellow brothers and sisters fight and stand strong,” the star, who serves as the manager for the Office of Community Engagement for AIDS Research at UNC-Chapel Hill said in a statement.
“It has been important to me to help build coalitions and solidarity within and amongst our diverse communities to that we can dispel the myths, rid the stigma, and educate others about HIV.”
5. David Malebranche

David Malebranche, a medicine physician, writer and advocate, has focused his work on addressing health disparities in the Black LGBTQ+ community, including HIV/AIDS. His research and activism emphasize the importance of culturally competent care and comprehensive support services.
6. Dr. Keith Green

Dr. Keith Green is a founding member of the Chicago Black Gay Men’s Caucus and helped to spread awareness about HIV through his advocacy with the AIDS Foundation of Chicago. A native of Chicago’s Southside, Dr. Green was diagnosed with the virus at 17. He has dedicated his life to creating prevention resources aimed to at those living with the virus.
According to HivPlusMag, Green is reportedly “the first black gay man in the world to become directly involved in the management and implementation of a study focused on the biomedical HIV prevention strategy.”
7. Phil Wilson

Phil Wilson is the former Executive Director of the Black AIDS Institute. Founded by Wilson in 1999, the non-profit has become a leader in the fight to educate people about the HIV/AIDS epidemic. The organization works to spread awareness and prevention education to African American communities in the US.
Wilson has been living with HIV for most of his life, the activist revealed in an op-ed for NBC News in 2016.
“I never expected to make it to 30, much less 60. I am of a generation that lost scores of friends and loved ones through this disease, and I was given a death sentence on more than one occasion,” he penned. “Eventually I came to understand that the only way to save my life and the lives of those I love was to fight—to fight the disease, to fight all the “isms”, to fight the stigma, to fight an uncaring government, to fight an ignorant public, to fight an inadequate health care system, and to fight my own fears of inadequacy.”
In 2018, he retired from the Black AIDS Institute.
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