Ferd Eggan, longtime leader of the HIV/AIDS, queer and other social justice movements, died in Los Angeles on July 7 at age 60 after a six-month bout with liver cancer, complicated by HIV and hepatitis C infections.
Ferd was an activist since his college days in the 1960s, initially in the southern black civil rights movement and later in anti-war, anti-capitalist, anti-racist, women's and gay liberation and HIV/AIDS struggles. He was a co-founder of ACT UP Chicago and the national ACT UP PISD Caucus (People with Immune System Disorders), before moving to Los Angeles to become executive director of Being Alive: the People With HIV/AIDS Action Coalition of Los Angeles.
While serving as AIDS Coordinator for the City of Los Angeles between 1993 and 2001, Ferd opened doors for the funding of self-organized programs for women with AIDS, city authorization of and funding for needle exchanges, housing for PWAs who might still be active drug users and a landmark study and intervention program for gay men using crystal meth.
"I'm HIV positive and diabetic (as well as have high cholesterol) and some of my meds specify taking them with 'high fat foods' which I have to do twice a day. I've eaten as healthy as possible, but when it comes to high fat foods, I am in a quandary...about what to eat sometimes..."