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AIDS Memorial Grove: SF's Best Kept Secret?

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Candle at the National AIDS Memorial Grove. (Photo by: Scott Shafer/KQED)
Candle at the National AIDS Memorial Grove. (Photo by: Scott Shafer/KQED)

San Francisco's Golden Gate Park is one of the city's top tourist attractions. And yet very few of the thousands who visit the park each year ever stop to see the National AIDS Memorial Grove, just a stone's throw from the popular de Young Museum.

And until last night, I was one of them.

I attended a candlelight event, and returned today for World AIDS Day.

Nestled beneath a gorgeous stand of trees, the Grove is a living memorial to those who died from HIV/AIDS and others who cared for them. In its designation as a national memorial, it's comparable to the Vietnam Wall in Washington or the U.S.S. Arizona at Pearl Harbor. But unlike those memorials remembering past wars, this one continues adding names of those lost to this epidemic. A new documentary, "The Grove," tells the memorial's story, including a controversy over how best to artistically depict it. "The Grove" airs this month at different times on KQED TV and on PBS stations across the nation.

At today's event I met the parents of the person whose name was most recently added. Yolanda and Richard Jordan traveled from El Paso, Texas to see the memorial and the unveiling of their son Richard's name. He died of HIV/AIDS in February at the age of 41. As tears streamed down their faces, the Jordans said how proud they were of their late son and what he had accomplished in his too-short life.

Richard and Yolanda Jordan of El Paso, Texas, saw their son's name engraved at the memorial for the first time Thursday. (Photo by: Scott Shafer/KQED)
Richard and Yolanda Jordan of El Paso, Texas, saw their son's name engraved at the memorial for the first time Thursday. (Photo by: Scott Shafer/KQED)

Like anyone who was here 30 years ago, I remember vividly those first news reports of a mysterious illness striking young gay men. In the days before a cause was determined, much less any treatment, I was among the "worried well" -- filled with anxiety that we might be the next "victims" of the disease then called GRID (Gay Related Immune Deficiency).

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Among the honorees at today's event were survivors of that "war," the staff of San Francisco General Hospital's Wards 5A and 5B and Ward 86. It was there in the early '80s that the first people infected with HIV were cared for and comforted -- that's about all they could do back then since there was almost no treatment.

They are still on the leading edge of the epidemic, fighting the virus and the stigma and discrimination still present 30 years later.

Events like today's World AIDS Day ceremony are a good time to remember those lost (like Norm Woodruff, the pioneering radio veteran who gave me my first job in the industry and the first person I knew well to succumb) and to remind ourselves that today, with some 34 million people worldwide living with HIV/AIDS, the epidemic is still very much with us.

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