BEBASHI
was founded in 1985, in response to the increasing incidence of
HIV/AIDS in the African American community of Philadelphia. At the
time, there were no HIV/AIDS educational programs or services targeting
the African American or other communities of color. The stigma associated
with HIV/AIDS immobilized the usual community response to such a
devastating threat. Understanding that the behaviors which contribute
to the spread of HIV/AIDS also cause the transmission of other sexually
transmitted diseases, as well as unplanned pregnancies, BEBASHI
launched a major community outreach education and service effort
to combat the sexual health concerns of communities of color.
BEBASHI's
original educational efforts focused on street outreach to areas
of the community most in need of prevention information and the
least likely to receive it. Outreach was conducted to active substance
abusers on the street and in shooting galleries, to sex trade workers
(on the street during their working hours), to youth in arcades,
parks and playgrounds, and to gay and bisexual men. Today, BEBASHI
continues to conduct street outreach, but has expanded its prevention
education services to include more structured programs, which are
still based on population specific education designed to provide
fewer individuals with a more complex and interactive approach to
education and HIV risk reduction.
In 1988 BEBASHI
was awarded a five year grant from the Centers for Disease Control's
National Minority Education Program to provide technical assistance
for community based organizations providing, or interested in providing
HIV/AIDS prevention education to African American and Latino communities
in Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey Pennsylvania and Virginia. BEBASHI
was instrumental in providing organizations throughout the five
state region with assistance in organizational and program development
and training.
In 1990, BEBASHI
expanded its services to the community by offering HIV antibody
counseling and testing and case management services for people living
with HIV disease. BEBASHI remains Philadelphia's largest community-based
minority provider of HIV/AIDS education and services for the African
American community and a model for the provision of culturally specific
education and services for other communities of color. BEBASHI has
been instrumental in the development of similar services to the
Latino community through Congresso de Latinos Unidos and Association
Puertoriquenos En Marcha (APM) and to the Asian community through
the Korean Businessmen's Association and the Intercultural Family
Services Center (formerly the Philadelphia Refugee Services Center).