More than two dozen prominent African American pastors met last week with Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to talk about how black churches could use federal grants to fight the spread of HIV in Africa and help that continent's tens of millions of AIDS orphans. The need is enormous. So is the irony.
African Americans, who account for 13% of the nation's population, represent 51% of new HIV cases -- and 69% of the new cases among women. Yet here at home, black churches have been even slower than their white counterparts to join in the fight against AIDS. Last year, for example, a well-known L.A. AIDS activist wrote to the leaders of 300 local black churches inviting them to a summit on HIV and AIDS in minority communities. She heard back from five.
White evangelical churches also were slow to respond to the disease once dubbed "the gay plague." Some prominent pastors even said that AIDS was God's punishment for homosexuality. Most now disavow such responses, even if they remain disapproving of gay relationships.
Fiery sermons condemning homosexuality remain the norm in many black churches. But HIV in this country is spread predominately by sex between men, and hell-and-brimstone sermons don't make effective public health policy. Rather than deterring gay relationships, such preaching just drives them underground -- and an atmosphere of secrecy and shame discourages men from getting tested for HIV. It's common for African American men who engage in sex with other men not to identify themselves as gay. Many marry or have girlfriends and, if they have contracted HIV, pass on the infection.