Aisha Diori

Aisha Diori
Born 8 September
Lagos, Nigeria
Occupation community mobiliser, educator, performer (Women's Face), and "legendary mother" in Ball culture.
Period 1990's ---
Notable works Mother of the House of Iman, an all-women's House, founder of the Kiki Ballroom Scene: an HIV prevention intervention for LGBTQ youth in Ballroom culture, House of Prodigy Godmother, and Overall Mother Latex through GMHC.
Website
aishadiori.blogspot.com

Aisha Diori (born 8 Sep, in Lagos, Nigeria) is a community mobiliser, HIV/AIDS preventionist, educator, performer and named "legendary mother" in Ball culture.[1][2][3] Her father is Abdoulaye Hamani Diori, a Nigerien political leader and businessman and her mother is Betty Graves. Diori holds a Bachelor of Arts in Advertising & Marketing Communications from Fashion Institute of Technology where she graduated Magna Cum Laude. Diori's HIV prevention work with LGBTQ youth in Ball culture, an LGBT subculture, has been influential in the field of public health.[4] She is the founder of the KiKi Ballroom scene[5] and is considered an expert in engaging this historically difficult-to-reach population.[6][7][8][9] Her expertise is requested for grants/program development,[10][11][12] research and curriculum development. She worked at the Hetrick-Martin Institute as Assistant Director of Health & Wellness[13] and is the Mother of the House of Iman, a WBT (women, butch and transgender) people House in New York City.[14] In February 2014, Diori joined the renowned Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem as an employee. Serving as Special Events Manager for the Schomburg, Diori continues to mentor and lend her expertise to anything impacting lgbtq people involved in the House Ball Community.

Early years

While Aisha's father was in exile,[15] he had a relationship with Betty Graves, who gave birth to both Diori and Chris in Nigeria. Betty Graves was a tour operator and moved to America to further her career at New York University. When Diori and her brother, Chris, came to America to visit their mother on vacation when Diori was about 9, they both refused to move back to Africa, and remained in New York City ever since.

Diori was an AmeriCorps VISTA volunteer through the Council of Churches of the City of New York. She developed programming for inner city elderly people.

Career & ballroom expertise

In the summer of 1997, Diori attended the Mooshood Ball and became enamored with the gender nonconformity, queer pageantry. The Ball was not simply a gay dance party, she notes in her biography on her blog,[16] "It was full of safer sex messaging, freedom, pageantry sexiness, beautiful feminine women, strong handsome butch women…"[17] Diori approached Arbert Santana,[18][19] who was then the Mother[20] of the House of Latex and a tireless LGBT and HIV awareness activist. Though unable to make contact at first, Diori connected with fellow Fashion Institute of Technology classmate the Legendary Big Boy Runway Ricky Revlon.[21] Revlon, who later became Diori's "gay father",[22] along with Santana who later became Diori's "gay mother", helped Diori into the House of Latex,[23][24] forever changing her commitment to the LGBTQ community. The House of Latex is a program of Gay Men's Health Crisis (GMHC) that gives life to youth in the House and Ball scene and empowers the community to promote HIV prevention and awareness. House of Latex balls have attracted many celebrity guests, including Janet Jackson[25] Patricia Fields, Estelle, and Jay Alexander from America's Next Top Model.[26]

Diori began working as an outreach worker at the Gay Men's Health Crisis (GMHC), hosting HIV prevention balls to effectively curtail the number of newly HIV infected youth. Diori began participating in "walking" balls. Under the guise of her gay parents, Diori was advised to walk in the Women's Face and Big Girls Runway categories[27] for her first ball, The Black Pride Ball.[28] Diori won the top prize in both categories. Her interests in the Ballroom culture began to shift from active participant to community organiser and intervention specialist. Diori received the title of "house mother"[7] from The House of Latex, due to her commitment to Ballroom culture, a title she held for nearly 5 years.

In late 2007, Diori opened the House of Iman, pairing safer sex and prevention messages that specifically targeted the Women, Butch and Transgender (WBT)[29][30] ballroom scene. Aisha infused progressive safer sex and educational messaging with pageantry. The House of Iman, a name that pays homage to Diori's Nigerian heritage, continues to provide leadership in the WBT community.

Acknowledging youth were not best served in the mainstream Ballroom scene, Diori and Mother Arbert Santana created the KiKi scene: a ballroom-infused HIV prevention intervention and movement focusing on LGBTQ youth ages 12 – 24, where the young people Vogue, hang out with friends and get connected to services, like HIV testing, counselling and connection to healthcare.[31] KiKi Lounge, a drop in group for LGBTQ youth to vogue and connect to services and Vogue Femme Fridays, KiKi balls led by LGBTQ youth infused with prevention messaging,[32] are offered at Hetrick-Martin Institute[33] and are being replicated by other CBO's across the country.[34] Since its inception, the KiKi scene has conducted over many safer-sex/harm reduction functions through different providers including resources for some 20,000+ at-risk LGBTQ youth.[35]

In February 2014, Diori joined the renowned Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem as an employee. Serving as Special Events Manager for the Schomburg, Diori has secured many successful rentals and has brought many exciting and culturally relevant events to the Schomburg. On 9 June 2014, Diori moderated Visually Speaking: LGBTQ Cultures in Photography, a talk curated by Terrence Jennings and featuring photographers Gerard Gaskin and Samantha Box

Professional memberships, consulting, research contributions & evaluation development

Honors & awards

Promotions, communications & event planning work

Diori's[50] social awareness campaigns at Hetrick-Martin Institute and GMHC including the You Are Loved campaign[51][52] and the No Shade campaign, highlighting the importance of self-love and self-efficacy amongst LGBTQ youth surrounding education, sexual health and civic engagement. She also created Crystal Meth Campaigns,[53] Soul Food Programs campaign,[54] Transgender Health and Condom Kit campaigns targeted to specific LGBTQ communities, as well as promotional materials for outreach and program advertising through GMHC. Diori created advertising materials and event planning for Department of Health, Public Health Solutions.

Diori was also a DJ and event planner during her college years. She continues to plan and promote all of her own balls and events for various Houses and programs. She creates graphics and promotional flyers.

Quotes

"Young people know AIDS is still a problem but it's kind of hidden. Too many take a 'see no evil, hear no evil' approach by not taking it seriously. We try to make it serious by continuing our outreach, making testing and information available. We develop relationships with the young people we're serving. We've opened up our doors. We let the kids who might feel forgotten in the gay scene know that we're here for them." Aisha Diori, House of Latex, on reaching youth, a high-risk group.[8]

Relevant external links

References

  1. See also popular Ballroom cultural reference, Paris is Burning.
  2. Ryan Joseph Photography, House and Ballroom Culture Photography.
  3. Marlon Bailey, Constructing home and family: How the Ballroom community supports African American GLBTQ youth in the face of HIV/AIDS. Special Issue on LGBTQ people of color. Journal of Gay and Lesbian Social Services, 21, 171–188.
  4. The Institute For Gay Men's Health, AIDS Project of Los Angeles (APLA) and Gay Men's Health Crisis (GMHC), "What's Safe to you?" Safer Sex can mean different things to people.
  5. See NYC's Ballroom Culture's History.
  6. Suze Myers, "Let's Have a Kiki: Drag Balls Still Thrive in Manhattan.", the eye: the magazine of the columbia daily spectator, 2012.
  7. 1 2 Marcus Brock of GLAAD, 'House Mothers': Motherhood Redefined for LGBT Youth. Ebony.com, 11 May 2012.
  8. 1 2 Ana Oliveira, GMHC 2004 Annual Report.
  9. 1 2 Edgar Rivera Colón, Getting life in two worlds: power and prevention in the New York City House Ball community. Rutgers University, Electronic Theses and Dissertations, 2009.
  10. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Popular Opinion Leader (POL) A Community AIDS/HIV Risk Reduction Program for Gay Men
  11. mPowerment Project, HIV prevention program that has been specifically designed to address the needs of young gay and bisexual men.
  12. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's AIDS Institute Individual- and Group-level HIV Prevention Interventions
  13. Hetrick-Martin Institute Staff, Aisha Diori.
  14. House of Iman past events.
  15. Chronology for Tuareg in Niger. Minorities at Risk Project, UNHCR Refworld, 2004.
  16. Aisha Diori, Blogspot.
  17. Aisha Diori, on Ball culture. Biography. April 2012.
  18. HIV/AIDS Activist Arbert Santana Dies
  19. The Commission's and the community's tireless LGBT advocate Arbert Santana dies
  20. Podhurst, L.; Credle J. (2007-06-10, page 13; Intl. Conference on AIDS. 1998; 12: 913 (abstract no. 43338). NJAETC at UMDNJ, Newark 07107-3000, USA.). "HIV/AIDS risk reduction strategies for Gay youth of color in the "house" community. (Meeting Abstracts)". U.S. National Library of Medicine. Retrieved 20 October 2007.
  21. Monica Roberts, NY Ballroom Hall Of Fame Awards. TransGriot, Feb. 2012.
  22. See Ball Culture's Houses section for more info on "gay fathers" and "gay mothers."
  23. See History of Ball Culture NYC for more info on House of Latex.
  24. Eileen McDermott, Thousands Flock to House of Latex: GMHC’s outreach to gay youth of color hosts its annual spectacular. 4–10 December 2003.
  25. House of Latex Ball
  26. GMHC's Celebrity Guest Appearances.
  27. See Some Categories and their descriptions for more info on Ball Categories.
  28. NYC Black Pride.
  29. See WBT Ballroom Coalition.
  30. Roxi, WBT Ballroom Coalition Week One, GettingYourLife.Blogspot.com – a blog educating, uplifting and empowering the Women, Butch and Transmen Ballroom scene.
  31. Aisha on Kiki Lounge & Kiki scene.
  32. John Polly, Hetrick-Martin's STARS Awards Ball Wurks It Out! NewNowNext: Beyond Trends, Logo Online. 9 December 2008.
  33. Aisha Diori on Voguing at HMI.
  34. KiKi Lounge at The Door, NYC.
  35. Aisha Diori, KiKi Lounge & Stars of CHANGE: LGBTQ Youth Interventions. Presentation Paper. 2012.
  36. Connect to Protect (C2P
  37. Marlon Bailey
  38. Bailey, M. M. Butch/Queens Up in Pumps: Gender, Performance, and Ballroom Culture in Detroit. The University of Michigan Press. Manuscript in progress.
  39. HIV Vaccine Trial Network
  40. REACH LA – First ever National House & Ball Leadership Convening 2011
  41. Reach L.A.
  42. 1 2 TEACH, an initiative of American Public Health Association. A partnership between a large and established community-based organization, and investigators from a school of public health resulted in the implementation of the TEACH Initiative which provided competency-based training to 31 interns from community-based organizations serving MSM of color. The program focused on equipping interns with the tools needed to translate their knowledge of their communities into innovative, evaluation-ready, behavioral science-based HIV prevention interventions. Those who successfully completed all six tracks of study were certified as Community Health Specialist (CHS).
  43. Newark is Burning.
  44. House of Latex Survey Results
  45. Diori, Aisha and Cardwell, Erica. "Effective Youth and Young Adult Prevention Leadership Programming in the Kiki House Ball Scene." US Conference on AIDS 2013.
  46. The 2013 Latex Ball .
  47. NYC Black Pride .
  48. House of Blahnik .
  49. Advertising Women of New York
  50. Heritage of Pride Award, "Best Political Statement," NYC Pride 2011.
  51. You Are Loved: Pride 2011
  52. You are Loved t-shirts, as seen in Andy Bell (singer) of Erasure's video "Give a Little Respect (HMI Redux)"
  53. Gay Men's Health Crisis (GMHC)'s How Obvious Crystal Meth Campaign.
  54. Gay Men's Health Crisis (GMHC)'s Nutrition Programming
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