21 July 2019

Mannie De Saxe
Co-coordinator with Kendall Lovett of:
Sydney Park AIDS Memorial Groves
c/o PO Box 1675
Preston South
Vic 3072
22 July 2019

On 19 July 2019 we received the following information:

“Last week at short notice, WestConnex advised (Sydney City) Council (SCC) they were overriding our (SCC) permissions to force their way into the (Sydney) park to undertake investigation work for tunnelling associated with the project.

“This appears to mean large trucks and drilling rigs digging deep holes in the (Sydney) park, slated to commence this week. It’s outrageous that this project will impact even more on the inner city’s precious parklands. The City (SCC) will continue to fight to ensure Sydney Park is preserved, not trashed for the sake of a toll road.”

Sydney Park is home to Sydney Park AIDS Memorial Groves - SPAIDS, established between 1994 and 2012 to commemorate hundreds of people who died during the worst years of the AIDS crisis – 1985 to 1997 and for some years beyond. There have also been ashes scattered in the area of the SPAIDS Groves, turning the area into a cemetery and it is generally accepted internationally that cemeteries are grounds which are protected to remember people from all walks of life, and areas where people can still quietly and peacefully walk around or sit in quiet contemplation of those they loved or to whom they were close over time.

Details of Sydney Park AIDS Memorial Groves may be found at:

If the New South Wales Government permits this sacrilege then it will be necessary to raise an outcry internationally with the AIDS communities and those who have been involved with them over time in order to stop this disaster from occurring.

The San Francisco AIDS Memorial Garden in Golden Gate Park has been registered as a national AIDS Memorial and the outcry in the United States of America would reverberate internationally if any state or local government tried to tamper with it.

Here is some information about this Memorial:

National AIDS Memorial Grove: National AIDS Memorial Grove

About the National AIDS Memorial

The mission of the National AIDS Memorial Grove is to provide, in perpetuity, a place of remembrance so that the lives of people who died from AIDS are not forgotten and the story is known by future generations.
Main Portal - God Shot
The National AIDS Memorial Grove, located in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park, is a dedicated space in the national landscape where millions of Americans touched directly or indirectly by AIDS can gather to heal, hope, and remember. Its mission is to provide, in perpetuity, a place of remembrance so that the lives of people who died from AIDS are not forgotten and the story is known by future generations. For all the promising prospects on the horizon, AIDS continues to invade our lives, violate our past, and rob us of our comfortable assumptions about the future. The sacred ground of this 10-acre living memorial honors all who have confronted this tragic pandemic; those who have died, and those who have shared their struggle, kept the vigils, and supported each other during the final hours.

Conception

The idea for the National AIDS Memorial was first conceived in 1988 by a small group of San Francisco residents representing a community devastated by the AIDS epidemic, but with no positive way to express their collective grief. They envisioned a serene place where people would come alone or in groups to hold memorial services, to remember among the rhododendrons and redwoods. It was to be a place dedicated to all lives touched by AIDS. Ground Broken Article As news of the AIDS Memorial Grove initiative grew, so did support and interest. The group selected as the site for the Grove the de Laveaga Dell, near the park’s tennis courts, in world-renowned Golden Gate Park. Due to park budget cuts and lack of funding, the Dell had fallen into a state of disrepair. It was overgrown and unusable by the public. A team of prominent architects, landscape architects, and designers volunteered countless hours to create a landscape plan that would be fitting as a timeless living memorial. Site renovation began in September 1991, and is still in progress. The Grove is an award-winning example of civic beautification, combining both public and private sectors in urban-park restoration and promoting AIDS awareness. In 1999, it was bestowed the Rudy Bruner Silver Medal Award for excellence in the urban environment. The Grove’s board of directors obtained a 99-year renewable lease with the City of San Francisco to create and maintain the Grove. Public officials praise the project as the perfect example of a public-private partnership, a model project for like-minded groups throughout the world.

National Status

Nancy Pelosi In October 1996, through the passage of legislation spearheaded by Representative Nancy Pelosi and signed by President Bill Clinton, the ‘AIDS Memorial Grove Act of 1996’ designated the Grove as this nation’s AIDS Memorial. This official designation as the National AIDS Memorial Grove, a status comparable to that of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, the 9/11 Memorial & Museum, and the USS Arizona at Pearl Harbor, proclaims to the world that there is a dedicated space in the national public landscape where anyone who has been touched by AIDS can grieve openly without being stigmatized, can find comfort among others whose lives have been affected by AIDS, and can experience the feelings of renewal and hope inherent in nature. As the AIDS pandemic continues to invade humanity in unprecedented numbers, the establishment of the Grove as the national gathering place for healing, hope and remembrance also serves as an important marker in the history of this dreadful disease.



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When the co-coordinators of SPAIDS tried to obtain heritage status for the AIDS Groves it was rejected by the Heritage Council. The fact is that the Sydney Park AIDS Memorial Groves in Sydney Park is the biggest AIDS Memorial in Australia and should be treated as such by governments in this country.

The equivalent to its desecration would be as if the Field of Mars, Rookwood, Waverley, Macquarie Park, Woronora Memorial Park, Gore Hill and Eastern Suburbs Memorial Park cemeteries, to mention a few, were to have heavy machinery allowed to ride over graves and gravestone areas, and have tunnels dug beneath them without consideration of the history of Australian citizens, as has been done to the original inhabitants of the country without any care and consideration of that portion of the population who inhabited this country for centuries before it was invaded by people from other countries.
National Tree Day is an annual event occurring during the last weekend of July, and if WestConnex continues to be allowed to ride roughshod over the government of New South Wales, there is no knowing where the trees of Australia will be buried.

So much of Sydney has already been demolished and destroyed, and we are about to have one of the few remaining lungs for Sydneysiders to go and breathe some unadulterated air removed from us.

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90 years old, political gay activist, hosting two web sites, one personal: http://www.red-jos.net one shared with my partner, 94-year-old Ken Lovett: http://www.josken.net and also this blog. The blog now has an alphabetical index: http://www.red-jos.net/alpha3.htm

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