Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Stew Albert 1939 - 2006


Berkley 1968 - Portland 2002

Stew Albert a prominent anti-Vietnam war activist, an early supporter of the Black Panthers and a founder of the Yippie radical protest group, died Monday at age 66 in Portland, Oregon.

Initially diagnosed with Hepatitis C, he spent a whole year enduring grueling chemotherapy. He spoke openly about it on his website, documenting each day and each weekly shot. He was finally declared free of the disease only to be diagnosed with liver cancer this past December. The ultimate Fuck You. (My sister passed away this past Thanksgiving also from liver cancer from Hep C.) We spoke thru email about Hep C, how it sucked and how the treatment felt worse than the disease. I was always inspired by his spirit. From 1968 in Chicago throughout his life. People with true 60s ideals are a rare breed. Tom Robbins said, Disbelief in magic can force a poor soul into believing in government and business. Stew certainly believed in magic.

On his website...from Judy
"Stew will be buried tomorrow (Wednesday) in Jones Pioneer Cemetery in Portland. He will be wrapped in a tallis (Jewish prayer shaw), holding a stuffed flower from the Haight and wearing his kick-ass Frye boots and our wedding ring."

There are beautiful sentiments expressed on his website, Bay Area Indymedia, Infoshop News, SFGate, and on Counterpunch.


More On Hepatitis C
Allen Ginsberg died from complications of it. Phil Lesh of the Grateful Dead, and David Crosby of Crosby, Stills, & Nash, both had liver transplants and still suffer from it. Ken Kesey, author of “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest”, suffered from it and died of liver cancer in 2001. Penny Arcade, the 55-year-old performance artist for the East Village avant-garde art scene since Andy Warhol roamed the city, also suffers from it.

Miles Keaton Andrew, a 52-year-old author who contracted it when he experimented with intravenous drugs as a teenager, has kept a blog, www.mkandrew.com, since 2001 about his experiences battling H.C.V. His blog has received a million hits in the past year. “I understand the whole stigma thing,” he told The Villager. "There are a lot of people like me who might have experimented with drugs. Some of us got sick from it and it isn’t anything to be ashamed about."

Hep C Life After Interferon is another blogger who documents his experience with it.

4 comments:

Karen Wed Feb 01, 10:21:00 AM EST  

May he rest in peace...

*HUGS*

Shirl Thu Feb 02, 11:07:00 PM EST  

my dear brother-in-law has HEPC also. They've just recently had a scare with the liver enzymes going nuts, and the reality of life kind of hit home. He's on a maintenance program now (the interferon treatment didn't work for him) and we hope and pray for more advances, as I'm sure you and your family do. Robin was such a gutsy gal. {{{hugs}}}

Anonymous Sat Feb 04, 08:45:00 PM EST  

My steppapa died from pancreatic cancer as a complication of Hep C. His first wife died from complications of it too. they were both NYC bohemians and likely got it from needles. there is nothing sadder than the effect of youth on our elder years. -- dolly

Sudeaux Lux Mon Feb 06, 11:15:00 AM EST  

Dolly-- I'm so sorry for your loss. You get the point totally. Youthful indisgressions with later consequences are so unfair.

THE WEBSITE NAME

THE WEBSITE NAME
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ABOUT EBC

It wasn't long after 9/11, September 11, 2001, that I began this website. I felt compelled to connect with other people around the globe. I had recently heard about "weblogs" or "blogs" and I dove right into Blogger.com. I searched for others to connect with online and I found Ageless. It led to meeting many great friends to discuss events of the day. From then on it snowballed. Most importantly we offered one another support and friendship across the globe; finding that we were just a few keystrokes away.

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