Jay Ellis is
committed to finding a cure for HIV by 2020.
In
commemoration of National Black HIV Awareness Day on February 7, the “Insecure” actor has partnered with leading HIV and
AIDS research organization, amfAR,
to help eradicate the staggering rates of HIV cases in the black community.
Ellis, a newly
appointed member of the organization’s Board of Trustees, told The Huffington
Post that he learned his uncle had died from the immunodeficiency virus years
ago.
“Growing up in
the early ‘90s it was not talked about, it wasn’t explained [what he passed
from]. So growing up I actually didn’t know for a really long time that that’s
what it was,” he said. “It wasn’t until I got a little bit older that I found
out that’s what he passed from.”
“So as I got a
little bit older, I just always knew that it was something that was a part of
me to just share my story with the world and just talk about it.”
According to
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, African
Americans account for nearly half of all new HIV infections each year, despite
representing only 12 percent of the U.S. population. amfAR has stated that they
are working to find an applicable cure for HIV/AIDS by 2020.
National Black
HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, which was started by the Strategic Leadership Council in 1999, was founded
to focus on preventive education, community mobilization, testing, and
treatment of the disease, according
to the organization’s website.
As February is
also Black History Month, Ellis says he thinks the month is
a great opportunity to highlight HIV/AIDS awareness.
“I think the
thing that’s so important about raising awareness during Black History Month is
that it’s also a moment for us to step back to realize that we still need to
reach out to our community,” he said. “We still need to be helping our
community and raising awareness for our community. So I think they chose a good
month to do it, because the awareness is there, the spotlight is there.
And so it’s a chance for us to get the word out a little bit more and get
people thinking and talking, and helping, and learning about what’s going on in
our community.”
As a result,
the 35-year-old actor encourages his peers in media and film to push for more
dialogue surrounding the topic.
“I think if
there’s an opportunity to tell those stories, then I think those stories do
need to be told,” he said. “I do think across the board, whether it’s in art,
whether it’s in film, whether it’s in music, whether it’s in writing of any
kind, I do believe that we have a responsibility to talk to our fan bases, talk
to the people that we reach, and make sure that they know what’s going on.”
“This isn’t
this thing that we need to give up hope on that it’s never gonna be finished.
amfAR and their entire team have said there is a reality to beating AIDS and
having a cure for HIV by 2020… And whatever they need me to do, I’ll do,” he
added.
For more info
on National Black HIV Awareness Day, including Six Things You Need to Know for
National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, click here.
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