1. People & Relationships

AIDS Activist Dennis deLeon

AIDS Activist Dennis deLeon
© Vic DeLucia/The New York Times
Former New York City human rights commissioner and AIDS activist Dennis deLeon (born in Los Angeles on July 16, 1948) was one of the first city officials to publicly announce that he had AIDS and went on to found one of the most influential advocacy groups for Latinos with AIDS, the Latino Commission on AIDS.

deLeon disclosed his HIV-positive status in a 1993 New York Times op-ed piece, "My Hopes, My Fears, My Disease" at a time when persons with AIDS were heavily stigmatized.

"I have been concerned about what the words 'person with H.I.V.' would do to my self-image. But I now know that I will not let a phrase control my potential," deLeon wrote. deLeon later became the president of the Latino Commission on AIDS. Dennis deLeon died of heart failure on Monday, December 14, 2009 at age 61, longtime partner Bruce Kiernan announced.

©2012 About.com. All rights reserved.

A part of The New York Times Company.