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Kiyoshi Kuromiya, HIV/AIDS Activist, Dies in Philadelphia
We regret to inform you that Kiyoshi Kuromiya, one of the world's leading AIDS activists, died on the night of May 10, 2000, due to complications from AIDS. To the last, Kiyoshi remained an activist, insisting on and receiving the most aggressive treatment for cancer and the HIV that complicated its treatment. He participated fully in every treatment decision, making sure that he, his friends and fellow activists were involved with his treatment every step of the way. He never gave up.
Kiyoshi devoted his life to the struggle for social justice.
He was a committed civil rights and anti-war activist. He was also one of the founders of Gay Liberation Front - Philadelphia and served as an openly gay delegate to the Black Panther Convention that endorsed the gay liberation struggle.
As a pioneering AIDS activist, Kiyoshi was involved in all
aspects of the movement, including radical direct action with
ACT UP Philadelphia and the ACT UP network, PWA empowerment
and coalition-building through We The People Living with HIV/AIDS,
national and international research advocacy, and loving and
compassionate mentorship and care for hundreds of people living
with HIV. Kiyoshi was the editor of the ACT UP Standard of Care, the first standard of care for people living with HIV produced by
PWAs.
Kiyoshi is perhaps best known as the founder of the
Critical Path Project, which brought the strategies and theories of his associate/mentor Buckminster Fuller to the struggle
against AIDS. The Critical Path newsletter, one of the earliest and
most comprehensive sources of HIV treatment information,
was routinely mailed to thousands of people living with HIV all
over the world. He also sent newsletters to hundreds of incarcerated
individuals to insure their access to up-to-date treatment
information.
Critical Path provides free access to the Internet to thousands
of people living with HIV in Philadelphia and this region,
hosted over a hundred AIDS related web pages and discussion lists,
and showed a whole generation of activists and people living
with HIV that the Internet can be a tool for information, empowerment
and organizing. He was a leader in the struggle to maintain
freedom of speech on the Internet, participating in the successful lawsuit
against the Communications Decency Act.
Kiyoshi understood science and was involved locally, nationally and
internationally in AIDS research. As both a treatment activist and
clinical trials participant, he fought for community based research,
and for research that involves the community in its design. He fought
for research that mattered to the diversity of groups affected by AIDS,
including people of color, drug users, and women.
He fought for appropriate research on alternative and complementary
therapies as well, and was the lead plaintiff in the Federal class action
lawsuit on medicinal marijuana.
In the first issue of Critical Path, published in 1989, he wrote,
"it is our conviction that . . . a heroic endeavor is now needed
both to provide for the continuing health maintenance of Persons
With AIDS the world over, and, by the year 2001 to find a cure for
the ravages of AIDS for all time." That task he set us still
remains unfinished.
We will miss Kiyoshi's intelligence and the clear and even analysis
he brought to any meeting or political activity. We will miss
his commitment, and dedication to the idea that all people living
with HIV should participate in the decisions that will affect their lives.
And we will miss his wit, his smile, his sense of fun.
If you want to honor Kiyoshi, we urge you to make a donation to the
activist organization of your choice. And sometime soon, today, or
tomorrow, or next week, take the opportunity to speak truth to power,
join a picket line you might have passed by, or help plan a demonstration
against global injustice that you thought you were too busy to be involved
with. He would have liked that.
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