featured-image

SAN FRANCISCO ( KRON ) — It may just be the quietest spot in San Francisco. Aside from the ever-present chirping of Golden Gate Park’s many birds and the wind rushing through the towering redwoods above, one of the few sounds you may encounter at the National AIDS Memorial Grove is the sound of head groundskeeper Travis Mathews, tending to the very intentionally landscaped corner of the park. “You move in and out of spaces of darkness and light, you go into the redwoods and it’s a darker space and then you come out into this meadow into the light,” said Mathews.

The National Aids Memorial is a place of meaning to so many, but especially to those in the LGBT community who gather here for remembrance and healing. “I had a partner who died from AIDS in 1993 before the life-saving medications came along,” said Steve Sagaser, senior manager of the National AIDS Memorial. “This job was perfect for me because through my work I’m able to help honor all of those lives that were lost to AIDS and all the lives impacted by AIDS.



” It may be an incredibly beautiful sanctuary, but the story begins during one of the LGBT community’s most painful chapters, the AIDS pandemic, which took the lives of thousands in San Francisco alone. For a community that was oftentimes ostracized, AIDS only added to the stigma that so many faced. “At that time .

.. the gay community and people with HIV and AIDS were being ignored and hated and demonized,” said Sagaser.

The memorial has .

Back to Beauty Page