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GMHC Founders, Friends and Activists Join to
Commemorate 25 Years of Leadership in the
Fight Against AIDS at
GMHC Heroes Honors 25th
Anniversary Dinner
New York, NY Nearly 1,000 friends and supporters of
Gay Men's Health Crisis raised almost $900,000 at the GMHC Heroes
Honors 25th Anniversary Dinner, commemorating the dual 25th
anniversaries of GMHC and the AIDS epidemic. The March 12th
event brought together activists, donors, community partners, board
members, celebrities, and elected officials from every era of the
AIDS movement to mark this important milestone and to demand
attention to AIDS here and now.
Senator
Hillary Clinton saluted GMHC's leadership and paid tribute to the agency's
vital work over the past quarter-century,
while reaffirming her commitment to people living with HIV/AIDS in
Congress and beyond.
The evening honored prominent individuals and institutions
who have committed themselves to leadership in the fight against
AIDS: Mathilde Krim, Ph.D., Founding Chairman of amfAR;
Craig R. Miller, AIDS Walk Founder; Davis Polk & Wardwell;
Viacom,Inc; Rev. Dr. Calvin O. Butts, III, Chairman of the Board, National
Black Leadership Commission on AIDS; fashion designer Michael
Kors; and renowned furniture designers Mitchell Gold and
Bob Williams.

Rosie O'Donnell,
Cyndi Lauper, NYC Council Speaker Christine
Quinn, and Stan Herman were among the evening's presenters. Other
special guests included Honorary Dinner Chair Phil Donahue, Marlo
Thomas, Judith Light, NYC Comptroller William Thompson, and former
NJ Governor James McGreevey. Many speakers acknowledged past and
present GMHC leadership over the past quarter-century, including
a special recognition of the agency's six founders, two of whom
Larry Kramer and Edmund White were in attendance.
Officially established in early 1982 before AIDS
or its causes were identified Gay Men's Health Crisis
was the first organized response to what was then perceived to
be an illness among gay men. GMHC was founded to provide support,
information, and advocacy for people with AIDS. To this day, GMHC
remains a leader in HIV prevention, creating innovative campaigns
to raise awareness of the epidemic particularly communities of color,
women and gay men, who continue to be disproportionately affected
while mobilizing communities to address the structural issues which
continue to drive the epidemic: poverty, racial and gender inequality,
and homophobia.
© 2007 Gay Men's Health Crisis |