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AIDS memorial quilt still filled with new names 35 years later

AIDS MEMORIAL QUILTS.png
Posted at 11:49 AM, Apr 27, 2022
and last updated 2022-04-27 14:49:50-04

SAN LEANDRO, Calif. — Some fight with anger, others with love. The keepers of the AIDS Memorial Quilt – fight with a needle and thread. 2022 marks the quilt's 35th anniversary.   

It's a living tribute to people who've died from HIV/AIDS — a disease that attacks the body's immune system. 

Newsy visited the quilt's home in San Leandro, California. Looking around it’s emotional and overwhelming. 

Rows of shelves sprawl floor to ceiling, stacked full of folded colorful patches of cloth. Patches the size of a grave.  

Gert McMullin has mothered the quilt since its beginning. 

She has archives of sewing machines and the arthritis to prove it. 

"I don't have kids," she said. "That's what I call the quilt. I've called it my boys from day one. I call it my boys, but I look at them like soldiers."

Every quilt — or panel, as they're called here — has a history, a celebration of someone's life, a rich story. Some date all the way back to the late 80s. Other new pieces are coming now coming in.

Before any stitching, Gert inspects the panel and gives it an ID number for storage. Six can fit on each shelf. 

She also takes in its person, saving everything but the box. People send her personal trinkets, photos and letters.  

"The background to all the letters of his name is made from his dentist lab coat, which he wore most every working day," Gert said. "They'll get documented ... Eventually digitized and archived with the Library of Congress."

Her favorite part is picking which panels to sew into 12 by 12 blocks for display. 

"I go for themes and colors," Gert continued. "But I also try to mix it up so that people, maybe just like a child, might be with a leather man. So when they go, you know, they bring the little students over and they look at the child and they can also see that this poor leather guy you know, didn't deserve it either."

She's done this since the first quilt in 1987. 

Gay activists hung about a thousand panels then over San Francisco City Hall. They were simple, sheet-like, spray-painted with names.  

Gert says back then, 15 fit on a shelf.  

The Quilt made its first trip to Washington that year. 

"We were laying down our dead in front of the White House to make them do something, you know, to make them care,"  she said.

It would be 1996 before a sitting president and vice president would take the time to see the quilt in person. 

Duane Cramer lives with AIDS.  

"You can't deny that these are people. These are just not statistics," he said.

He walked with then-Vice President Al Gore and the Second Lady, Tipper Gore. 

He showed Newsy the panel he showed them. It's for his best friend. 

"My best friend was my father, Joe J. Cramer. And, you know, that was a really tough experience," Cramer said. "We told people initially that he died of cancer. Because we just we didn't know what to say, and we were scared of what people would think, and what they would think about us. I made a very intentional decision to put his face on there so that other people that look like me and that look like him could see themselves and go, wow, this is affecting us."

The Quilt's caretakers agree representation on the memorial needs improvement.  

Of the 55 miles of quilt, only a half-mile represents Black or African American victims despite the CDC saying they make up the most HIV/AIDS deaths. 

Jada Harris runs a program aimed at connecting communities of color with quilting. 

"In the African American tradition, you know, we know not to say 'funerals,' we say 'celebration of life.' We're going to celebrate a life. This is a home going," she said.

"It does not have to be a somber environment, but if it needs to be somber for you, we can do that too."

Harris says the AIDS memorial quilt is not just for the people on the panels or for the people making it. It's for those impacted by HIV/AIDS in the future.    

"We want these communities, marginalized communities, to know that there is a place for you here," Harris said.  

A future, she hopes, includes sewing the last quilt panel.

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