Jason Robertson

Jason Robertson (August 28, 1980 - September 4, 2003) was an AIDS activist. He became a symbol for the rights of children with AIDS at age 7, when he sued for, and won, the right to attend regular classes at his elementary school.

Biography

Robertson was diagnosed with AIDS, which he contracted through blood products used to treat his hemophilia, in 1986. After the diagnosis, he was initially tutored at home, then in a trailer on the grounds of Prather Elementary School in Granite City, Illinois, where he was taught in isolation.[1] He became lonely and asked to join regular classes. After the school refused, his family filed a lawsuit and a federal court ruled in his favor under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.[2][3] On his first day walking to school after the ruling, Robertson and his mother were surrounded by protesters chanting "back to the trailer"; a group of children from the school responded with chants supporting Jason.[4]

In July 1988, Robertson appeared, along with another young AIDS activist, Ryan White, at a benefit concert by Elton John[5] Robertson's family found that the environment in Granite City remained hostile—on one occasion Robertson's mother was struck in the head by a man unhappy about him returning to school in the fall—and the family decided to move.[6] They relocated to South Roxana, Illinois, where the school district agreed to treat Jason as a regular student,[7][8] and (despite some limited protests[9]) the community reception was more accepting.[10][11]

Robertson died in 2003 at age 23, some time after he had decided to stop taking his medication for HIV because it had begun to worsen his hemophilia. The Associated Press story about his death described him as "a symbol of the fight against AIDS discrimination" who "helped other children with the virus overcome its stigma".[12]

References

  1. Tom Brune, "2 AIDS kids taking different school paths", Chicago Sun-Times, November 22, 1987.
  2. J.A. Lobbia, "Schoolboy With Aids Virus Polarizes Downstate City", Chicago Tribune, May 17, 1988.
  3. Donald T. Dickson, HIV, Aids, and the Law: Legal Issues for Social Work Practice and Policy (Transaction Publishers, 2001), ISBN 978-0202366425, p. 90. Excerpts available at Google Books.
  4. " AIDS Child Joins Students In Regular Classroom Amid Protests", Associated Press, May 5, 1988.
  5. Paul Grein, Elton John Sings--to Benefit Others", Los Angeles Times, July 11, 1988.
  6. "Harassed family of boy with AIDS moves", United Press International in Lodi News-Sentinel, August 16, 1988.
  7. "An 8-year-old boy with AIDS symptoms...", Orlando Sentinel, September 25, 1988.
  8. Paul de la Garza, "Former Home 'Had Become a War Zone'; Callers Played Funeral Music on Phone; Boy With AIDS Virus Finds a Measure of Peace in New Town", Associated Press in Los Angeles Times, February 19, 1989. Also available as "AIDS children shunned and isolated", Associated Press in The Daily News (Kentucky), February 20, 1989.
  9. Paul de la Garza, "AIDS child faces protests in new town", Associated Press in The Telegraph (Nashua, NH), September 20, 1988.
  10. "Music played a big role in Alton High’s student activities", The Telegraph (Alton, Ill.), November 16, 2013.
  11. "South Roxana", St Louis Post-Dispatch, October 27, 2006   via HighBeam Business (subscription required) .
  12. "Young fighter against school's AIDS segregation dies at 23", Associated Press in USA Today, September 10, 2003.

External links

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