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The AIDS Memorial Quilt Lives On

The AIDS Memorial Quilt project began in San Francisco in 1987 and has grown to more than 44,000 panels today--a massive expression of love and memory.

What’s known today as the AIDS Memorial Quilt was created in June 1987 when a group of strangers gathered in San Francisco to commemorate those who had died. The group’s work served as a foundation for the AIDS Memorial Quilt, which has since taken on a life of its own.
More than 44,000 individual memorial panels have been sewn into the actual quilt by friends, family members and loved ones of those who have been lost to the disease. Today the AIDS Memorial Quilt weighs an estimated 54 tons and is considered the largest piece of community folk art in the world.
The goal of the quilt is to bring awareness to how massive the AIDS pandemic really is, and to bring support and healing to those affected by it. Another goal is to raise funds for community-based AIDS service organizations  to support AIDS prevention and education. To date, millions of dollars have been raised, and the effort continues to this day.

 

Please take a moment and sign BET.com's virtual AIDS quilt.

For more information on HIV, AIDS and World AIDS Day, please visit BET.com and  thebody.com.

 

BET Health News - We go beyond the music and entertainment world to bring you important medical information and health-related tips of special relevance to Blacks in the U.S. and around the world.

(Photo: Chuck Kennedy/MCT/Landov)

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