C O M M E N T A R Y Tokens of love I knelt and placed my rose on Hugh s panel. Then I scurried to a chair in a corner and cried. I was not alone in doing this. ’ BY T A D G H O ’ S H I E L D S I want to tell about seeing the Names Project quilt at Moscone Center recently. I did not connect with my brothers. Joel had spent the night in the East Bay. So, after doing chores at home, I figured I would go on my own. I could take it. I was an old pro dealing with AIDS and death. Right? Finally Joel called. He was already there and would wait for me at the entrance. The metro was full o f people heading down­ town for either the quilt or shopping. I stopped on M arket Street and bought a yellow cose to lay on H ugh’s panel. The panel that my brothers and Randy (my lover-in-law) made has “ HUGH RYAN” in yellow cloth letters sewn onto a dark green background. Todd added some sequins to highlight the letters. I was one block from the hall when the emotions hit me. Some Rock o f Gibraltar, Tadgh. By the time I was inside I was a mess. Some panels were hanging in the entrance way. I did not see Joel. Before entering the cavernous, underground hall, I bought a directory and located where H ugh’s panel was. Visualize this: down the escalator into this huge vaulted room. The panels were laid out in grids with walkways intersecting. Soft appro­ priate music was playing. There were more than 2,000 panels. The area covered was the size of two football fields. Thousands o f people were there already, but, due to the size o f the hall, one never felt crowded. Everyone kept to the walkways. The atmosphere was somber. I found Hugh’s panel. The impact o f seeing it was more than expected. I found that I could not directly approach it. I wished I w eren’t alone after all. I wandered around composing myself, looking for Joel. Finally figuring Joel had ex­ perienced the event and probably had gone home, I went and knelt and placed my rose on H ugh’s panel. Then I scurried to a chair in a com er and cried. I was not alone in doing this. This gave me an opportunity to see the crowds. I was gratified at the scope o f the crowd. Obviously there were lots o f gay men, usually in couples or small groups. Many lesbian couples, too. But also many families. Young fathers carrying children. Mothers pushing strollers. As usual four sexes and six races were evident. I wandered around on my own. Then I found Joel. He too was emotionally affected, although he has not experienced a loss due to AIDS — yet. He now knows at least two people with AIDS. We explored the rest o f the panels together. There were monitors, all in white, who would walk around to guide or assist. They had learned to carry packs o f tissues. I saw one woman, possibly the mother of one o f the dead, sobbing loudly before a panel, being comforted by others. Someone else would be kneeling and reaching out to touch a panel. We saw a small Xmas tree placed on one. Some people, like myself, left a flower on their panel. Except for sobbing and the music it was very quiet. Reverent. Some panels were simple backgrounds with names sewn or drawn on. Others were elaborate works o f art with articles o f clothing (jock­ straps, leather jackets, ballgowns, whatever) or feathers or sequins or religous motives sewn on. The most moving panel was dedicated to “ Baby Jessica” and made from a baby blanket with her stuffed toys added. There was one quadrant o f plain canvas panels, with felt-tipped pens available, so people could write the names o f the dead who did not have a panel. I wrote “ P K . — 1985” for my cousin’s lover. He will never speak to me again. He did not want to be known as an AIDS statistic. Clusters o f chairs were placed in the comers o f the hall for those who needed to sit down and cry or just try to absorb the reality o f what the panels meant. As we left, Joel and I stood on a balcony overlooking the hall. With our arms around each other we could see the quilt in its entirety. It is sombering. One gets a feeling o f the enorm ity o f the numbers and o f the individual pain represented in this quilt that one cannot com prehend through news articles alone. We stopped to buy our Xmas tree afterwards. I literally bumped into the mayor-elect. Art Agnos, in the Xmas tree lot. I shook his hand and congratulated him. advising him that I had voted for him. I asked if he had been to Moscone C enter to see the quilt. Having just returned from a post-election Hawaiian vacation the day before, he didn’t know about it. He told me he had seen the quilt in D.C. on the Mall (he attended the Gay March there), but he wanted his kids (two sons) to see it. He hoped his busy Sunday schedule would permit him to see it. My brothers and Randy had gone the day before, and we discussed our feelings later Saturday night as they decorated their tree. Most o f my acquaintances also went; one worked as a monitor. Seeing the quilt and feel­ ing what one felt were the main topics o f discus­ sion in the Castro all weekend. The quilt will now travel. It is scheduled for Portland — the last stop on the tour — in July 1988. O ther cities include Philadelphia, New York and Cincinnati. I think this quilt will awaken the country to the reality of AIDS and more importantly to the fact that it is not “ T hem ” who are dying. It is our brothers, sisters, husbands, children, mothers and fathers who are dying. Each panel was a pure token o f love. 100,000 people experienced the quilt. E d ito r's note: Tadgh O'Shields (not his real name) is a fo rm er resident o f Portland. Joel is his lover; Hugh is a cousin who died o f AIDS. 12-6 Tue-Sat Noon-5 Sunday Enchanted Blue Wave Ltd. CRONE MAGIC • CRYSTALS & GEMS • GODDESS CRAFTS • SPIRITUAL ACCESSORIES 1405 NE Broadway Portland, OR 97232 ( 503 ) 249-0444 CHEF JACK ELMER’S CHOCOLATES V? 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