BEIJING, Aug. 12 -- "I must have been the only fully dressed man to ever hang out in a gay sauna," laughs Wang Ming. "No wonder everyone stared at me." Wang can only laugh when he recalls the unique challenges he faced as a timid heterosexual man entering the baffling world of gay men. To break the ice, the bespectacled young man
from the Yunnan provincial health education institute began playing chess at the
sauna, handing out pamphlets and condoms to curious onlookers during breaks.
When the China-UK HIV/AIDS Prevention and Care
Project sponsored the health institute in 2002 to start intervention work in the
homosexual community of Kunming, Wang knew little about gay lifestyles.
He struggled to find even a single member of this
somewhat-invisible community in this provincial capital of southwestern China.
This changed after the China-UK AIDS project office
hosted an AIDS conference in Kunming in 2002, inviting Professor Zhang Beichuan
as speaker. As a pioneer in HIV/AIDS intervention work, Professor Zhang invited
readers of his national newsletter to participate in the conference. Not many
came to the conference in the daytime: but many more sneaked into the hotel at
night to collar Zhang.
In the end, 14 brave souls pledged to co-operate with
Wang as volunteers for a fledgling project called "Colourful Sky."
They included Li Jinyong, the eventual team manager.
Li and Wang joined forces to improve awareness in the gay community.
At first, the sauna's owner wasn't too happy to see
the team. He feared condoms could attract unwanted attention from police and his
business would suffer. But in 2004, when the provincial government required
condoms be made available at all hotels and entertainment venues, his worries
subsided. Colourful Sky has also installed AIDS-related billboards inside
Kunming's main gay bar, winning the owner's permission after hard negotiations.
The owner even agreed to have AIDS-themed gatherings in the venue, inserting
AIDS prevention tips in the night show quiz. Prizes include condoms and
lubricants.
Joining hands
Co-operation between Wang's official institute and
gay volunteers has not always been smooth, but joint efforts can pay off for all
sides. The provincial health institute coordinated a face-to-face meeting of the
gay community and police in which they discussed the prevalent problem of gay
people being blackmailed. Police promised to do their best to respect a gay
person's right to privacy while also investigating the crime.
In 2005, the Colourful Sky project's activity centre
was born where visitors leaf through newspapers and magazines, play ping-pong,
watch videos, and meet new friends. Qiu Feng, 30, is one of the four full-time
employees. After a car accident he quit his east coast job in 2004 and headed
off for west to Yunnan, the province where urban Chinese youth traditionally
seek spiritual solace.
He first learned of Colourful Sky via an ad on the
Internet recruiting volunteers for the centre and joined last year. One day last
October, a man on the verge of suicide, called the Colourful Sky hotline and
told Qiu he had had unprotected sex and was now noticing AIDS-like symptoms.
During a marathon series of phone and Internet conversations over the following
days, Qiu tried to convince the caller to take a blood test. "It's hard enough
to be gay in this society," says Qiu. "Let alone be a gay person with AIDS."
The test was negative. "I don't know who was happier
or more relieved him or me."
AIDS, like homosexuality, remains taboo in certain
regions of China's mainland. But as the province with the fastest growth of the
virus, Yunnan has also been the fastest to come to terms with the issues raised
by the epidemic.
More than 20 grassroots community groups like
Colourful Sky have sprung up in Yunnan, mainly through the support of the
China-UK HIV/AIDS Prevention and Care Project.
Coming into the open
The threat of AIDS is still growing. The latest estimates by the UN and the Chinese government on HIV prevalence puts China at somewhere around 650,000.
As its deathly reach expands, the virus has
challenged society to rapidly rethink attitudes and age-old prejudices. One of
the most unexpected side-effects of AIDS in China is that it has given voice to
otherwise-silent groups.
Governments, as well as the rest of society, have
finally found they have no choice but to listen.
In March 2004, Colourful Sky co-founders Wang and Li
were invited to talk on a provincial radio phone-in programme, where they openly
discussed not only AIDS prevention but also homosexuality and the little-known
gay community life of Kunming. Following the show, letters of protest
immediately landed on the table of the programme producers. Seven more shows
have followed.
The letters have stopped.
(Source: China
Daily)