IASONEVOICE: THEN AND NOW SERIES
Gautam Yadav (28) was born in New Delhi, India. As an adolescent from a middle-class family, he was very confused about his sexuality and feels today that if he received more information regarding sexuality, gender, HIV and AIDS, he would likely not be HIV positive. Gautam became an activist at the age of 19, and is now the Programme Officer at the Humsafar Trust, India’s oldest LGBTQ organization. He is also the board member of the UNAIDS Youth Advisory Forum representing the Asia-Pacific region, as well as a board member of Youth Lead Bangkok. This is Gautam’s story…
I never wanted to become an activist. Since I was a teenager, I thought my path would lead to the performing arts, doing musical theatre. But at age 18, I got tested for HIV and it changed my life forever: it was my first and last HIV test. Learning that I was HIV positive was devastating and it sent me into a deep depression.
It took me a couple of years to find my way out of that despair and get back on my feet. That was when I decided to devote myself to HIV activism and LGBTQ advocacy. I realized that I didn’t want to see more people become HIV positive at age 18. This work was and still is desperately needed in India, especially for young people.
I wish I could say that biomedical achievements make me hopeful about a world without HIV. But I still see people dying of AIDS. What’s more, through my work, I also meet young people living with HIV and curable diseases like tuberculosis and even hepatitis C. To me, this means that the approaches to services and care are not working.
A recent case in point involved a transgender person in her 20s who asked me for help. She was living with HIV and also suffering from tuberculosis. Through my connection to a PLHIV support group, I was able to refer her to the hospital for a proper check-up and medication. She recovered in a few weeks. One day, I made a follow-up call to her to ask about her health. Her landlady answered the phone and told me that she had passed away just days before.