Robert Rafsky Explained

Robert Rafsky
Birth Name:Robert Alan Rafsky
Birth Date:July 22, 1945
Birth Place:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Death Place:New York University Medical Center
Death Cause:HIV/AIDS
Education:Harvard College (B.A.)
Occupation:Writer, publicist, HIV/AIDS activist
Organization:ACT UP
Treatment Action Group
Known For:HIV/AIDS activism
Children:1
Relatives:Lawrence C. Rafsky (brother)
Othername:Bob Rafsky

Robert Alan Rafsky (July 22, 1945 – February 21, 1993) was an American writer, publicist, and HIV/AIDS activist.

Early life and education

Robert Alan Rafsky was born July 22, 1945, to civil servant William L. Rafsky of Łódź, Poland[1] and Selma Rafsky née Chafets in Philadelphia.[2] His family was politically active. Lawrence C. Rafsky was his brother. He enrolled at Harvard College in the fall of 1963. Rafsky lived in Wigglesworth and volunteered at the Loeb Drama Center. He was expelled for academic reasons but was later readmitted in 1964 and later became the managing editor of The Harvard Crimson.[3] [4] Rafsky graduated Harvard in 1968.

Career

Rafsky worked as a teacher after graduation, but ultimately pursued more lucrative careers.

Rafsky worked in public relations in New York. He worked for the Empire State Development Corporation, Howard Rubenstein & Associates, and Pro-Media.

Rafsky became involved with ACT UP in 1987 after his diagnosis with AIDS. He later became the chief spokesperson of ACT UP, assisting the organization to gain prominent national coverage. Correspondent and organizer Victor Zonana remarked that Rafsky "was articulate, contentious, persuasive, dogged and very often right." David B. Feinberg called Rafsky the "heart and soul of ACT UP."[5] Rafsky was a nationally recognized HIV/AIDS activist.[6] [7] His 1992 confrontation with then-presidential candidate Bill Clinton secured much publicity and made HIV/AIDS a presidential campaign issue. Rafsky said, "I can't calm down. I'm dying of AIDS while you're dying of ambition," to which Clinton eventually responded, "I feel your pain." Rafsky also helped draft an AIDS agenda for the Clinton Administration.[8] Additionally, in 1992 Rafsky delivered a speech titled "Bury Me Furiously" at the funeral of fellow ACT UP member Mark Fisher. Within the speech, Rafsky demanded change and publicly denounced the Bush administration for their negligence of the AIDS epidemic. The impact of both the confrontation with Bill Clinton and "Bury Me Furiously" led to not only increased national awareness for the epidemic, but priority for policy within the Clinton administration.

Rafsky was an active member of the Treatment Action Group. Peter Staley said that Rafsky was "enormously influential" in one-to-one interactions. Rafsky wrote personal essays about AIDS for The New York Times, The Village Voice, New York Daily News, OutWeek, and QW. He was writing a book comprising letters to his daughter at the time of his death.

Personal life

He was married to Babette Krolik and had a daughter named Sara. He came out in 1985 and later divorced his wife, sharing joint custody of their daughter. It was at this time that Rafsky began telling his friends he was gay. Around 1987, he contracted AIDS. He died of AIDS-related complications on February 21, 1993, at the New York University Medical Center.

Legacy

Rafsky's role with ACT UP was a focal part of the 2012 documentary How to Survive a Plague.[9]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: William L. Rafsky -- Civil Servant, 81. 2001-06-29. The New York Times. 2019-01-03. en-US. 0362-4331.
  2. News: Paid Notice: Memorials RAFSKY, ROBERT ALAN. 1998-02-21. The New York Times. 2019-01-03. en-US. 0362-4331.
  3. News: ROBERT RAFSKY, WRITER AND ACTIVIST IN AIDS FIGHT, DIES. Mathews. Jay. February 23, 1993. Washington Post. January 2, 2019.
  4. Web site: Battling AIDS: One Graduate's Story. Mathews. Joe. March 2, 1993. The Harvard Crimson. en. 2019-01-03.
  5. Book: Feinberg, David B.. Queer and Loathing: Rants and Raves of a Raging AIDS Clone. 1995-11-01. Penguin. 9781101161715. en. David B. Feinberg.
  6. Book: Who Can Speak?: Authority and Critical Identity. Roof. Judith. Wiegman. Robyn. 1995. University of Illinois Press. 9780252064876. en.
  7. Book: AIDS and the National Body. Yingling. Thomas E.. Wiegman. Robyn. 1997. Duke University Press. 9780822319771. en.
  8. News: Bob Rafsky; Helped Make AIDS Election Issue. February 27, 1993. Los Angeles Times. 2019-01-03. en-US. 0458-3035.
  9. Web site: 'How to Survive a Plague,' by David France. Baker. Jeff. November 30, 2016. SFGate. 2019-01-03.