4.6 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 22 June 2021
⏱️ 34 minutes
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In 1985, Gert McMullin was one of the first San Franciscans to put a stitch on the AIDS Quilt, the quilt that began with one memorial square in honor of a man who had died of AIDS, and that now holds some 95,000 names. Gert never planned it this way, but over the decades she has become the Keeper of the Quilt and has stewarded it, repaired it, tended it, traveled with it and conserved it for some 33 years. Gert knows the power of sewing.
In 2020, when COVID-19 hit, Gert was one of the first Bay Area citizens to begin sewing masks—PPE for nurses and health care workers who were lacking proper protection—masks she made from fabric left over from the making of the AIDS Quilt. The comfort, outrage and honoring of an earlier pandemic being used to protect people from a new one.
In January of 2020 The AIDS Memorial Quilt, now part of The National AIDS Memorial, returned home to the Bay Area after 16 years in Atlanta. It took six 52-foot semis to get it there. The over sixty tons of quilt, is made up of about 48,000 panels, each 3 x 6 feet, the size of a grave. The extensive AIDS Archive, which Gert gathered, collected and protected since its earliest days, is now part of The American Folklife Center at The Library of Congress in Washington, DC.
This piece features stories of Gert McMullin and the AIDS Memorial Quilt, the Gay Rights Movement in San Francisco, Harvey Milk and The White Night Riots and more. With interviews with LGBT Rights activist Cleve Jones who worked with Harvey Milk and conceived of the AIDS Memorial Quilt, and John Cunningham, Executive Director of the National AIDS Memorial.
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0:00.0 | Radio Topia, welcome to the kitchen sisters present from PRX. |
0:05.6 | We are the kitchen sisters, Davian Nelson and Nikki Silva. |
0:09.9 | Hi there, this is Nikki of the Kitchen Sisters and I want to tell you about a new series |
0:14.5 | from our fellow radio topia show Radio Diaries. It's called the Unmarked Graveyard. |
0:20.7 | In the waters off New York City there's a narrow strip of land called Heart Island |
0:25.4 | and more than a million people are buried there in mass graves with no headstones. |
0:30.6 | Over the next few weeks the award-winning team at Radio Diaries will be untangling mysteries |
0:36.1 | from America's largest public cemetery. Neil Harris was last seen and in New York on December |
0:42.4 | so many questions man so many questions. You can't help but wonder what her life has been. |
0:47.8 | I never went back and I never looked well again. |
0:51.4 | Subscribe to Radio Diaries wherever you get your podcasts. |
1:00.7 | A year ago this time we were smack in the middle of it. |
1:04.2 | COVID running wild people in the streets of fraught election looming on the horizon. |
1:10.6 | A year ago this time we told the story of Gert McMullen. |
1:14.9 | A lot can change in a year and a lot doesn't. |
1:19.0 | Today in the midst of Pride 2021 we reprise Gert's story. |
1:28.8 | It's June 2020, a month that will live in infamy. |
1:33.2 | Where does this pandemic stand in the United States? |
1:35.5 | Divisions abound between the federal government and a number of states over the nation's response |
1:40.0 | to the US's coronavirus outbreak. COVID-19 continues its relentless crawl. |
1:44.7 | We are still very much under threat from the coronavirus. |
1:53.6 | The Black Lives Matter movement has sparked a reckoning about racial and social injustice |
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