Minnesota AIDS Project (MAP)

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Svc cpncondom.jpg

An example of the Minnesota AIDS Projects comic, "Captain Condom," who advocated a strict form of safe sex.

Courtesy of the Jean-Nickolaus Tretter Collection.


Many Minnesotans initially felt far-removed from the curious “Gay Cancer” in Los Angeles and New York City, which received a modicum of newspaper attention in 1981. At the time, medical professionals attributed this ailment to 41 men in New York and California. In just one year, the outbreak of HIV/AIDS (then referred to as the Gay-Related Immunodeficiency Disease or GRID) was occurring at a rate of 5 new cases a week.


In its second issue, and on the 11th page, a medical professional working with Equal Time news reported that the “mysterious and potentially lethal medical condition” killed 1/3 of patients in “less than two years.” In 1982, he predicted that “sensationalism and fear are to be expected as long as we have no idea of the cause or how the condition can be prevented.”


The Minnesota AIDS Project (MAP) formed when the Center for Disease Control confirmed two Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome-related deaths in the Twin Cities. At the urging of Councilman Brian Coyle (see: Old Minneapolis Courthouse), the mayors of Minneapolis and St. Paul organized a coalition of community members, government officials, and community representatives in July of 1983. The young organization initially focused on financially supporting AIDS victims who fell through the unequipped health care system—the months progressed and AIDS-related deaths increased exponentially.


MAP began to include safe-sex education campaigns within a year of its founding. Upon learning that HIV/AIDS was transferred through body fluid exchanges, the AIDS Project unsuccessfully advocated alternative forms of sexual activity—including massages, cuddling, and kissing. A condom advocacy campaign replaced the former by 1990, and MAP’s efforts targeted other affected groups—namely, people of color, blood recipients, and intravenous needle users.


Community attention to the AIDS pandemic diminished throughout the late 1990s and 2000s. MAP’s work remains life-saving and essential—in 2009, the infection rate for Minnesotans jumped 13 percent. To date, almost 3,000 Minnesotans have dies from the disease.



This page is still under construction. -SVC

Part of Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN: 100 Queer Places in Minnesota History, (1860-1969), (1969-2010)