Ashamed to Die: Silence, Denial, and the AIDS Epidemic in the South

Ashamed to Die: Silence, Denial, and the AIDS Epidemic in the South

by Andrew J. Skerritt
Ashamed to Die: Silence, Denial, and the AIDS Epidemic in the South

Ashamed to Die: Silence, Denial, and the AIDS Epidemic in the South

by Andrew J. Skerritt

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Overview

By focusing on a small town in South Carolina, this study of the HIV/AIDS crisis in the South reveals the hard truths of an ongoing and complex issue. Skerritt contends that the United States has failed to adequately address the threat of HIV and AIDS in communities of color and that taboos about love, race, and sexuality-combined with Southern conservatism, white privilege, and black oppression-continue to create an unacceptable death toll. The heartbreak of America's failure comes alive through case studies of individuals such as Carolyn, a wild child whose rebellion coincided with the advent of AIDS, and Nita, a young woman searching for love and trapped in an abusive relationship. The results are most visible at the town's segregated burial ground where dozens of young black men and women who have died from AIDS are laid to rest. Not only a call to action and awareness, this is a true story of how persons of faith, enduring love, and limitless forgiveness can inspire others by serving as guides for poor communities facing a public health threat burdened with conflicting moral and social conventions.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781569769577
Publisher: Chicago Review Press, Incorporated
Publication date: 11/01/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Andrew Skerritt is a longtime journalist who has contributed to publications including the St. Petersburg Times, Charlotte NC Observer, and the Tallahassee Democrat. A native of London, England, he grew up on the Caribbean island of Montserrat. He lives in Tallahassee, Florida, where he teaches journalism at Florida A&M University.

Read an Excerpt

Ashamed to Die

Silence, Denial, and the AIDS Epidemic in the South


By Andrew J. Skerritt

Chicago Review Press Incorporated

Copyright © 2011 Andrew J. Skerritt
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-56976-957-7



CHAPTER 1

THE FINAL CALL


The caller's voice sounded familiar, her urgency unmistakable.

"Can you come?" Reverend Patricia Starr asked, her words more summons than request. It was in the middle of the morning, but I immediately rose and walked out of my tiny office in the Rock Hill Herald newsroom. Five minutes later, I pulled my white Ford Taurus station wagon into the Piedmont Medical Center parking lot, walked through the automatic doors into the emergency room, and strode down the crowded hallway to the bank of elevators. As I rode up to the second floor, the gravity of the summons created a knot in my stomach and dryness in my mouth.

Reverend Starr met me at the door to the private room where her baby sister, Carolyn (pronounced KERL-in), lay gravely ill. As she had done for scores of others, Reverend Starr came daily to sit with her sister and comfort her. Her skills were sorely tested that day.

A week earlier, as dawn broke, Carolyn's young son had come running to Reverend Starr's house. His mother had passed out on the floor of her apartment and he couldn't wake her, he sobbed. Reverend Starr rose, pulled on a housecoat, and ran along the dirt path to Carolyn's apartment, where she found her sister frothing at the mouth and unresponsive, her eyes rolled back in her head.

After an ambulance rushed the unconscious Carolyn to the ER, she clung to life as doctors tried to stem the damage of what looked like a drug overdose. Their rescue efforts were frustrated because Carolyn was in no shape to say what illegal narcotic she'd injected. Tricia Ann, as friends called Reverend Starr, was furious. This wasn't Carolyn's first drug overdose. Her sister had spent much of the previous two decades on an endless narcotic binge. But now the stakes were much higher.

Carolyn had full-blown AIDS. She was tired. Did she have the strength to fight one more battle?

As a columnist for the local McClatchy newspaper, I had written about Carolyn's AIDS infection and her sister's mission to prevent others from suffering a similar fate. Tricia Ann invited me to Carolyn's bedside to say good-bye while there was still time. The hospital room was painted Carolina blue, just like the fabric covering the recliner where Tricia Ann sat next to her sister reading and answering questions. As Carolyn drifted between sleep and fitful awakening, Tricia Ann often struggled to determine which was which. Sometimes she'd begin reading aloud from her King James Bible, but Carolyn responded only with gibberish.

Familiar faces haunted the patient's bedside. Carolyn kept seeing her older brother Woody, who had died of complications from diabetes while she was in prison, and her mother, Annie Mae Pegram, whose death in 1979 triggered Carolyn's downward spiral into the world of illicit drugs and sex. In moments of enchanted lucidity, Carolyn chatted excitedly about a golden room. She repeatedly pointed to a man dressed in a purple robe who stood in the corner of her room. Her sister's hallucinations prompted Tricia Ann to begin rereading her old copy of A Divine Revelation of Heaven, Mary Baxter's bestselling book, which purportedly details scenes of a glorious afterlife. Ever curious, Tricia Ann wanted to see if Carolyn's ramblings matched Baxter's spectacular visions.

For almost a decade, Tricia Ann had kept watch as Carolyn's health ebbed and flowed, but her sister's afterlife visions had finally convinced Tricia Ann that Carolyn's long, dark journey might soon end. After all, as pastor of True Word of God Fire Baptized Holiness Church, Tricia Ann had ministered to countless people in their final days. Her life, it seemed, had always been consumed by concerns of first and last things. It was as if God had ordained her to watch her loved ones breathe their last, long before their time: her mother at age fifty, her brother at age thirty-five. It looked like fate had one final cruel twist: her baby sister at age thirty-five.

On that spring day, Carolyn lay in bed dressed in a plain nightgown. Despite the acne, it was obvious why the men in her hometown found Carolyn's high cheekbones and chocolate-brown face so tragically irresistible. The quietness that governed the room was soon interrupted by the firm, assured footsteps of Dr. Craig Charles. This wasn't the time for his usual early morning rounds. The doctor wore a somber expression, the look of a physician caring for a patient confronting grave odds. He was dressed in a knee-length white coat, white shirt and a tie, and khaki pants.

Dr. Charles had studied infectious diseases at Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center in North Carolina before starting his medical practice in 1996. Five years later he moved to South Carolina, where he met Carolyn at the downtown Christopher Clinic, a center created by the Catawba Care Coalition to serve poor HIV and AIDS patients.

After dozens of visits, doctor and patient knew the routine and the language of AIDS — T cell counts and antiviral loads — that told the tale of AIDS destroying Carolyn's body. But that spring morning, as Dr. Charles sat at the foot of Carolyn's bed, his words were very deliberate. Tricia Ann sat at the other end of the bed, her sister's head cradled in her lap. Tricia Ann could see Carolyn's full round face, her eyes listless, bloodshot, a permanent optical tattoo from her years of abusing crack cocaine and heroin.

"This is the hardest thing for a doctor to do," he said. "Nothing is working. Her disease has progressed too far." As Dr. Charles spoke, Tricia Ann held her breath, afraid of what the physician was about to say. After all, it seemed as if her life, the life of her family, had been wrapped around a succession of grim-faced doctors' visits stretching back two generations. And for the previous six years, Tricia Ann had sat beside Carolyn listening to one doctor after the next give similarly dire predictions. Somehow time had proved them wrong. Carolyn was a fighter; she had beaten the odds before. Could she do it again?

But Dr. Charles' sober words swept away Tricia Ann's waning optimism like a sand castle before the frothy ocean surf. "I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry," Dr. Charles repeated. "As a doctor, I try not to get too emotionally involved with patients. But you guys have been there. It's hard."

His words hung in the air for what seemed like forever until Carolyn spoke up, her voice dry and hoarse, not much louder than a whisper. "What are you saying? I am going to die?" she asked, looking at her older sister, her eyes pleading as if for more time.

Tricia Ann said nothing. Both women stared at the white physician, who let Carolyn's words sit like untouched dinner. As if responding to her own question, Carolyn erupted in a torrent of tears and screams.

"I'm going to die. I'm going to die," she cried. Tricia Ann squeezed her sister's hands. A wave of helplessness engulfed her. This woman, who preached fire and brimstone for two hours on Sundays without notes or respite, could only grasp for words. For this moment, the power of speech failed her. Then the experienced pastor, who usually found the strength to buttress the suffering and dying in their most vulnerable moments, regained her voice, if not her composure.

"How much time do we have?" she asked tersely.

The physician took his time answering, as if bracing himself before he spilled more bad news. "Only God knows what time," Dr. Charles responded. "Given her condition, it won't be long."

The infection had spread throughout Carolyn's body. Her immune system was compromised and the antibiotics no longer worked. Her fever had spiked and her blood pressure had plummeted, he said.

Then Carolyn seemed to summon her last remaining dregs of resolve. "Tricia Ann, I want to go home," she said. Tricia Ann looked at the physician. "Is that possible?" she asked.

"I would let her go home under hospice supervision," Dr. Charles replied.

"Can you make that happen, right away?" she said, her response part request, part demand.

He then walked around Carolyn's hospital bed. He hugged her and then embraced Tricia Ann. For a moment, the enormity of the news seemed to cement the bond between physician and patient, healer and the sick. Dr. Charles looked Tricia Ann straight in the eye and held her gaze.

"The good part is that she has you," he said. "You know how to pray."

"I'm doing that," Tricia Ann said. At that moment, she felt overwhelmed by the physician's show of compassion, his sensitivity, his zest for his work. This doctor loves what he does, she thought to herself.

In her lifetime Tricia Ann had been in too many hospitals and known too many doctors to count. But rarely had she encountered a physician like Dr. Charles, who fought for his patients and invested so much in the outcome of their treatment. He didn't act as if he possessed the power of life and death, but he clearly was prepared to do everything he could to save a patient. And when he couldn't, he was the first to admit the limits of his skills and the constraints of modern medicine.

As Dr. Charles walked out of the hospital room, Tricia Ann felt the urge to follow him. She wanted to ask him questions he might have been reluctant to answer. She had mulled over every nuance of Dr. Charles's prognosis, but she felt he was holding something back, as if the news was too devastating for Carolyn's shredded psyche. Tricia Ann desperately needed to hear it, but sibling loyalty anchored her in place. At that moment, she belonged at Carolyn's bedside.

That was the way it was. Carolyn could always count on her big sister, even during the days when she ran the streets and sold Tricia Ann's clothes and food for money to buy drugs.

Before he left the room, Dr. Charles had promised to assign a nurse to bring a sedative to quiet Carolyn, who was crying hysterically. Seconds after the nurse injected her, Carolyn dozed off. As she slipped into a restful sleep, her breathing shallow but even, Tricia Ann tiptoed out of the room in search of Dr. Charles. When she found him, he accompanied her into one of those small hospital conference rooms where physicians and families are brought together by bad news.

"What are we looking at?" she asked.

"Her organs are shutting down; her kidney and liver are shot," he said. "Whatever they laced it with, it messed up her system. We've tried some of the strongest stuff we have, but it isn't working."

"Whoever did this really killed my baby sister," Tricia Ann thought out loud.

Dr. Charles didn't venture that far. "The disease didn't help," he said.

"They poisoned her," Tricia Ann insisted, anger and frustration welling up in her voice. Dr. Charles didn't agree or disagree. He had clearly moved on. The time for recrimination had long passed.

"If she has family, she needs to call them. Let her make her peace," he counseled. "We don't have much time." The physician's words held an air of finality. They sounded like words of benediction for a ritual Tricia Ann had experienced before. It seemed so familiar, yet so new. Over the previous five or six years, she had accompanied dozens of family members — mostly mothers and sisters — to the bedsides of young men and women dying of AIDS. She had tried to find the right words of comfort, to reassure the grieving that death, even the death of a loved one from AIDS, was all part of God's mysterious plan. She believed it, otherwise she would never have said it. But sitting in that same hospital, hearing the end was near, meant something very different when the woman in the bed was her baby sister.

To find solace, Tricia Ann tried to remember the easier conversations she had had in situations like this. There was the time she had accompanied a mother and sister to say good-bye to a thirty-seven-year-old man who was dying of AIDS. That day there wasn't much she could muster: "It's hard, the thought of burying your child. I could only imagine the hurt of hearing the doctors say they have done all they could," she told the woman weakly.

"My child is in God's hands," the mother replied.

Tricia Ann remembered the look on that mother's face as she got up and walked up and down the hospital hallway, as if pacing would make her son better. The woman had stopped and gazed out the window for a while, then started pacing again. By contrast, the dying man's sister, who had been his caregiver, was calm and controlled.

"When you know that you've done your best, it's a different feeling," Tricia Ann said. "You deal with it differently. Even though it hurts."

Part of her knew she had tried to do everything humanly possible to save her sister. Yet on that spring morning she found herself pacing the same hallways and looking out the same window as if searching for answers, the way that grieving mother had done.

She dug deep and came up empty. She wished she could have switched places with Carolyn and given her a chance to do it over again so her baby sister could get it right. She wanted her to experience the joy of knowing God, peace, and even happiness.

That was never Carolyn's fate. Starting from when she was a little girl, she only saw pain, anger, sickness, and betrayal. And long before she became a woman, she began to act in ways that guaranteed the cycle would continue.

Carolyn was too young to remember when her mother, Annie Mae Pegram, was healthy and strong enough to take the children to the grocery store on Saturday afternoons; she was not old enough to remember her father, Samuel Pegram, when he worked three jobs and found time to fuss over his children. The father she knew wasn't a father she could love.

By the time Carolyn was old enough to understand, Samuel Pegram was staying out all night and weekends, and Annie Mae Pegram was crippled by cancer, gout, and arthritis. Tricia Ann and her older siblings could treasure all their pleasant memories from happy times. Carolyn only saw misery. "I had my dad before he started going wild," Tricia Ann says. "She never remembered any of those things."

And so the little girl who grew up in misery lived every minute of her life pursuing happiness in all the wrong places. Nothing Tricia Ann said or did could stop Carolyn. A drug addiction can overpower a sister's love. Still, as Carolyn lay dying, Tricia Ann felt overwhelmed by a sense of failure, the feeling that she hadn't done enough to save her sister. She had failed Carolyn. She had failed her mother. "Momma wanted me to take care of her, and I let her down," Tricia Ann says.

The sense of powerlessness was palpable in Carolyn's hospital room. As she slept, I squeezed her hands and rose to leave, with Tricia Ann right on my heels. Without success, she tried to figure out the puzzled look on my face.

As I stepped inside the elevator, I saw a woman carrying what looked like a brand-new baby wrapped in pink, the color of the blanket and clothing suggesting she was taking home a daughter. I was immediately struck by the irony of what I had just witnessed, an unmistakable parallel of peril and promise: upstairs someone's baby girl hovered near death, downstairs a smiling mother headed homeward with a newborn baby girl all dressed in pink. Could that joyful mother even imagine what it would be like to watch her daughter suffer and die of AIDS?

Unfortunately, too many southern mothers had confronted that question. Since the first cases of AIDS appeared in 1981, the epidemic had spread way beyond the gay and intravenous drug–using population. Women like Carolyn had become the poster children for HIV/AIDS.

Even as Carolyn lay dying that spring, throughout the states of the Old Confederacy doctors, activists, social workers, public health administrators, and people with HIV/AIDS had begun serious discussions in a belated attempt to slow the spread of the disease in the South. Within a year, representatives from South Carolina, North Carolina, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Kentucky issued the Southern States Manifesto to warn about the government inaction, ignorance, illness, and illicit sex that made the South the front line in the domestic war against AIDS.

Eight of the top ten states in which the highest percentage of African Americans who have AIDS live are in the South, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) statistics. In all of those states, the majority of people who have AIDS are African American. Six of the top ten states in which the highest percentages of women who have AIDS live are in the South, according to the CDC.

The South is home to the highest number of adults and adolescents living with and dying from AIDS in the United States. That trend seemed to have totally ambushed the experts. With AIDS seemingly under control and the threat to heterosexual America apparently abated, the world's focus shifted belatedly to the emerging pathological cyclone decimating the populations of sub-Saharan Africa — in Angola, Botswana, South Africa, and Kenya, thousands of children were being orphaned daily by the deadly virus.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Ashamed to Die by Andrew J. Skerritt. Copyright © 2011 Andrew J. Skerritt. Excerpted by permission of Chicago Review Press Incorporated.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Title Page,
Copyright Page,
Dedication,
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS,
PROLOGUE,
1 - THE FINAL CALL,
2 - CAROLYN,
3 - SOMEBODY ELSE IS WORSE OFF THAN YOU,
4 - I CRIED FOR YOU,
5 - BAD BLOOD,
6 - THE AIDS DOCTOR,
7 - DR. MICHAEL WATSON,
8 - CAROLYN: THE CRAZY '80S,
9 - PEGRAM BABY,
10 - A COMMUNITY RESPONDS TO AIDS,
11 - CHRIS BLANTON,
12 - ARMED AND DANGEROUS,
13 - CLIFF,
14 - LINDA ASHLEY,
15 - AIDS LADY,
16 - SANDY,
17 - NITA,
18 - MOVING ON,
19 - DR. PHIL LACKEY,
20 - DR. CRAIG CHARLES,
21 - CAROLYN: THE FINAL YEARS,
22 - TRACY,
23 - A CALL TO ACTION,
24 - ROBBIE,
25 - GIRARD,
EPILOGUE,
APPENDIX - AIDS ORGANIZATIONS IN THE SOUTH,
SOURCES,
INDEX,

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