President and treasurer Honor Thy Children

Al & Jane Nakatani lost two of their sons to AIDS. They share their heartache, struggles and activism in honor of their sons as part of the National AIDS Memorial Surviving Voices oral history project.  

The series is dedicated to Asians and Pacific Islanders (A&PIs). The A&PI community is unique in that it includes people from all over the globe encompassing a multitude of diverse countries and cultures such as China and India, regions such as Southeast Asia and Pacific Island Countries & Territories such as Guam.

Many different languages and even more dialects are spoken, which makes outreach and education a challenge. And yet A&PI activists and their allies not only established a network of successful A&PI focused HIV and AIDS organizations across the US, but in the process they helped in shaping and organizing groups at all levels to serve those who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people, that prior to AIDS had not existed within the A&PI community. 

Hear all the stories of API Community and AIDS at Surviving Voices

"The boys gave me a very sacred gift in life, and that's to be positive. Guy worked so hard to be positive and try to help and support other kids...And I think his reach for life is such a gift. He worried about us surviving, and I'm surviving because of him."

— Jane Nakatani

40 years of stories

We share the important story of AIDS --

the fear, stigma and discrimination. We share the stories of hope, courage, compassion, and love.  And, we bring to light the harsh reality that four decades later, there is no cure and the rates of infection are on the rise, particularly in communities of color.

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