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People with HIV, activists, family members and allies gather for Housing Works' annual observance of World AIDS Day: The Reading of the Names.
Housing Works began the tradition of The Reading of the Names in December 1995, emerging from an act of civil disobedience and a 24-hour reading of names. This year, more than 140 volunteers have come together to read from a list of over 30,000 community-sourced names, continuing this powerful act of remembrance and resistance.
Photography by Alexander Sargent, Courtesy of the New York City AIDS Memorial
People with HIV, activists, family members and allies gather for Housing Works' annual observance of World AIDS Day: The Reading of the Names.
Housing Works began the tradition of The Reading of the Names in December 1995, emerging from an act of civil disobedience and a 24-hour reading of names. This year, more than 140 volunteers have come together to read from a list of over 30,000 community-sourced names, continuing this powerful act of remembrance and resistance.
Photography by Alexander Sargent, Courtesy of the New York City AIDS Memorial
ACT UP New York took to the streets on December 1, 2018 to draw attention to World AIDS Day, an international recognition of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. ACT UP NY staged a speak out in Times Square to emphasize: people with HIV and AIDS are still here fighting for the end of the AIDS epidemic in New York, the US, and around the world. The action was followed by the Out of Darkness candlelight vigil and march at the NYC AIDS Memorial to remember those lost on World AIDS Day. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
ACT UP New York took to the streets on December 1, 2018 to draw attention to World AIDS Day, an international recognition of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. ACT UP NY staged a speak out in Times Square to emphasize: people with HIV and AIDS are still here fighting for the end of the AIDS epidemic in New York, the US, and around the world. The action was followed by the Out of Darkness candlelight vigil and march at the NYC AIDS Memorial to remember those lost on World AIDS Day. (Photo by Erik McGregor)
People with HIV, activists, family members and allies gather for Housing Works' annual observance of World AIDS Day: The Reading of the Names.
Housing Works began the tradition of The Reading of the Names in December 1995, emerging from an act of civil disobedience and a 24-hour reading of names. This year, more than 140 volunteers have come together to read from a list of over 30,000 community-sourced names, continuing this powerful act of remembrance and resistance.
Photography by Alexander Sargent, Courtesy of the New York City AIDS Memorial