A hybrid of Salvation Army and Outward Bound, the
AIDS Ride has shaken up the fundraising world with its well-packaged
personal journey. But will the journey end the AIDS crisis, as advertised?
September 5 - 12, 1996
by Ellen Barry
A scene from last year's Boston-New York AIDS Ride:
as the spent riders flood into Manhattan, a powerful voice, roaring
over the crowd, pledges to end the AIDS crisis. Riders hoist bikes
over their heads in euphoria, a sea of arms waves rhythmically,
and hundreds of people collapse in tears. One young woman, overcome
by emotion, speaks into a camera.
"There's nothing better," she says, weeping
helplessly. "I've never done anything better."
Welcome to the telethon, '90s style. When the second
Boston-New York AIDS Ride winds up on Sunday, there will be no emcee
and no poster children. No one will be laying a guilt trip on anyone,
and, as the riders tend to their exhausted bodies after 300 miles
of hills, the money may actually seem like a secondary issue.
Instead, there will be a mass of people who are very
genuinely moved. They are likely to say things like, "The Ride
is my salvation," or, "the Ride changed my life,"
or, "the Ride . . . is a soul-awakening experience." The
R is always uppercase; you can hear it in their voices.
Every few years, an innovative charity event comes
down the pike and sets a new standard for fundraising. During the
'80s, for instance, Oxfam drove hundreds of thousands of suburban
high schoolers to skip lunch, or eat rice out of bowls, or otherwise
make themselves conscious of hunger. Midway through the '90s came
the AIDS Ride, a physical ordeal that, according to participants
and organizers, leaves many of its alumni psychically transformed.
Borrowing from the '70s self-help movement, the Ride makes a kind
of promise that few fundraisers have ever made, and -- some argue
-- that no fundraiser could ever keep.
It has also trumped every other AIDS fundraiser in
America. In its third year, the Ride has grown into a fundraising
phenomenon, with five different Rides hitting 14 cities. Already
the highest-grossing AIDS fundraiser ever, the AIDS Ride has a projected
1996 gross of $25 million.
By Sunday, 11,000 people will have done the Ride
this year alone. From riders, it demands, up front, an astonishing
degree of commitment -- each person must raise between $1400 and
$2500 just to participate. Then come months of training and a trek
that is, by all accounts, grueling. After expenses are paid off,
the money will be distributed among clinics and services for people
with AIDS.
Much of this success can be attributed to the Ride's
founder, Melrose native Dan Pallotta, who blended business savvy
with his own brand of spiritual leadership, and has suddenly found
himself the leader of an empire.
When Pallotta first conceived of the Ride, its primary
payoff was an emotional one.
"I think the impulse for the Ride came less
from a place of fundraising and more from a place of people expressing
their commitment to friends with AIDS," he says. "I mean,
I want to climb Mount McKinley. I want to swim the Atlantic Ocean.
I want to do something that at some level is equivalent to the meaning
of this disease in my life.
"Somehow, a black-tie dinner is not an adequate
expression of my desire to stop this," adds Pallotta, with
an edge of anger in his voice. "It leaves me wanting big time."
Always drawn to the difficult, Pallotta first attempted
the impossible in 1983, when he led 36 Harvard undergraduates in
a cross-country "Ride for Life" to increase awareness
of world hunger. The Ride for Life fell short of its $250,000 fundraising
goal by about $175,000, according to a New York Times article that
came out at the time.
But all 36 riders made it, and they got on the Today
show, and -- as one participant told the Times -- "we learned
how little people know about the problem."
The AIDS Ride, while grossing millions, is informed
by a similar spirit. According to Pallotta, its lineage runs back
through the Ride for Life to civil-rights heroes like Martin Luther
King Jr., and Bobby and John F. Kennedy, who he says were the first
role models he ever had, growing up in the '60s.
Another hero -- who doesn't show up in the promotional
material, but whose theories surface in some aspects of the AIDS
Ride -- is Werner Erhard.
Erhard was the founder of the human-potential movement,
which began with Erhard Seminar Training, or est, and which continues
into the present as the Forum and the Hunger Project. Est, an intense
self-improvement seminar founded in 1971, became wildly popular
in the mid '70s, attracting 50,000 new clients a year and bringing
in tens of millions of dollars.
By the '80s -- when Pallotta first got into est --
Erhard was widely criticized for his authoritarian style, and est
graduates were filing lawsuits charging that the seminars had prompted
heart attacks and psychotic episodes. A few years later Erhard would
flee the country, owing millions in back taxes and accused of molesting
his daughters.
Erhard's theories were also the basis for the Hunger
Project, which promised to end hunger by the year 2000, not through
relief work but by changing the way people think. When the Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation reported that of $7 million collected,
only a little over $200,000 had gone to relief efforts, Hunger Project
officials responded that the project's chief goal was to raise consciousness
about hunger.
Critics say Erhard's theories, when applied to humanitarian
efforts, can give donors a false impression that they are acting
directly.
"The idea is that you create your own reality.
You can uncreate hunger," says Steven Hassan, founder of the
Freedom of Mind Resource Center, who researched the Hunger Project
for his book, Combatting Cult Mind Control. "If you visualize
a world with everyone eating, then it will go away. When they say,
`We are ending world hunger,' it has no connection with physical
reality. It's a wishful-thinking system."
Pallotta says he is no longer active in the Forum,
and his company Pallotta & Associates denies that there is any
relationship between the Forum and the AIDS Ride. But although they
"don't encourage anyone to do it . . . [or] pressure anyone
to do it . . . [or] even recommend that anyone do it," Pallotta
& Associates regularly contributes $100 toward Forum tuition
for those employees who elect to take the seminars, Pallotta says.
One former staffer, who asked not to be identified,
said the language of the Forum "is definitely passed through
management. People approach you about it. It's like a Tupperware-salesman
type thing." Another said, "They were definitely open
about [the Forum]. It was a whole mindset, and it was basically
shared by everyone who worked there."
Pallotta himself freely says that the Forum's techniques
are useful for staff members. "The Forum is so much about possibility,
and the AIDS Ride is so much about possibility," he says. The
crucial difference, he adds, is that in the Forum, personal transformation
is an end in itself: "The Forum is specifically dedicated to
a specific technology around personal transformation, whereas the
AIDS Ride is dedicated first to reaching out to people with AIDS."
The language of self-help has found an important
place in some AIDS Ride pitches. Pallotta's 25-page plan to end
AIDS, which at one point cites Erhard as an inspiration, focuses
almost exclusively on such tenuous goals as "imagin[ing] no
AIDS," and "acknowledg[ing] we don't know" about
the disease, and "communicat[ing] our vision, as rapidly, and
widely, and as effectively as possible."
"AIDS exists for one reason and one reason only,"
reads one segment of Pallotta's paper:
It exists because we haven't ended it. It doesn't
exist because there isn't enough government funding, or because
we don't know enough about immunology, or because HIV doesn't really
cause AIDS, or for any other `reason.' It exists because we haven't
taken it upon ourselves to end it.
Another section reads:
Let's begin envisioning it being over. No more premature
memorial services. Shut down the doors of all the AIDS service organizations.
No more AIDS Walks. No more red ribbons. Turn the AIDS Ride into
a fund-raiser for the homeless. Friends who were HIV positive will
live into their eighties. . . . The end of AIDS in the next five
years is a world that exists, if we are willing to uncover it.
To several riders interviewed -- who were otherwise
enthusiastic about the event -- the pledge to end AIDS in five years
sounded unrealistic.
"What was kind of interesting to me is it was
almost as if they thought the money was going specifically to research
-- and it's not," says Peter Barros, a participant in last
year's Boston-New York Ride. In fact, money raised by the Ride mainly
goes not to research but to clinics and outreach services for people
with AIDS.
"Some of my friends felt they were being misled,
because there was no real practical plan coming out of it,"
says Michael Marsico, a gay activist who took part in the Philadelphia-DC
Ride. "They would say stuff like, `The AIDS Ride will end the
AIDS crisis.' I just thought, `Save it,' but a lot of people were
offended by it. There are some people who felt [Pallotta] was trying
to come off as a messianic figure."
In the end, of course, the AIDS Ride may not cure
AIDS, but it does supply money for sick people, and in many communities
it supplies a lot of it. Unlike Philadelphia (see "Taken by
the Ride," this page), Boston has welcomed the Ride with open
arms. The Fenway Community Health Center, Boston's only beneficiary
for the second year in a row, expects to take in 50,000 donations
amounting to $3 million this year, and, according to Ken Hurd, the
center's director of development, "We're very satisfied with
what it's allowed us to do." Many of these donations are "new
money" from people with no history of donation to AIDS services,
Hurd says.
Not counting the Boston-New York proceeds, which
are projected at $6 million, the AIDS Ride has already collected
$19.6 million this year. It's also generated a real buzz in every
city it's touched. The Ride's deep appeal lies in its challenge,
in the impression that it is -- in the words of one AIDS Ride official
-- "an eloquent response to the disease," a big response
to something big.
"There's definitely pressure" on other
fundraising organizations to match the AIDS Ride's excitement, says
Carlos Inostroza, who works for AIDS Action and rode in last year's
Boston-New York AIDS Ride. "It's creating a new and exciting
way of raising money. The old charities that have been around for
a long time, it makes them look boring and tired and old. Which
in a way is good."
It's true: reinvigorating the fundraising community
can only benefit people with AIDS. Increase participants' personal
stakes, demand sacrifice, give them a little bit of spiritual payoff,
and you can prompt an extraordinary response.
When you ask Pallotta what has lofted the AIDS Ride
to the position it suddenly occupies, he says it's people's desire
to unleash their own hidden potential. The event's publicity materials
come close to guaranteeing a transforming moment; it's there in
small, official-looking type on the AIDS Ride handbook -- THE AIDS
RIDE WILL BE ONE OF THE MOST INCREDIBLE EXPERIENCES OF YOUR LIFE
-- and in the pamphlet -- THE AIDS RIDE IS . . . A POTENTIALLY LIFE-CHANGING
EXPERIENCE.
"People are drawn to it because . . . they look
at the AIDS Ride and they say, `This is the way my life could matter,'
" Pallotta says. "All of us live our lives at some compromised
level of what we are truly capable of. The AIDS Ride offers a stage
on which you can dance out your full potential."
And, according to participants, he is right. In the
emotional high of the closing ceremonies, and often long after,
many riders say they feel a lasting sense of mission.
"I have definitely carried this with me,"
says Barros, who rode in last year's Boston-New York AIDS Ride.
"I question my job, my career. It's one thing to go to church
on Sunday, or to go to a fundraiser . . . The AIDS Ride is something
I still think about two or three times a week."
Pallotta is the first to say that personal transformation
on its own is not enough, that "the next step needs to be dedicating
ourselves to ending the AIDS epidemic, because that's the big bike
ride." But when it gets down to specifics, his five-year plan
to end AIDS doesn't offer much in the way of practical solutions:
We need to be roaming around the halls of Harvard
Medical School, the Pasteur Institute, the CDC, Burroughs Wellcome,
Congress, libraries, research labs, everywhere and anywhere it will
make a difference. We need to be a presence. An overwhelming presence.
He recommends "organized support meetings, similar
to 12-step meetings, that keep the health of the context of the
volunteers alive."
Dan Pallotta is an instinctive, natural organizer
of people, and has given a lot of attention to what people really
want. People want, for instance, to scare themselves out of their
everyday lives, to feel that they have made a difference, to express
their anger toward the disease. And underlying all these things
is a longing for community, a desire to belong to something larger
than oneself. Pallotta's Ride has set a new standard for AIDS activism
by responding to all these needs -- but he should not mistake them
for the problem or the solution. The good work of the AIDS Ride
is visible at ground level, with the millions going to the care
of sick people. That is the measure of the AIDS Ride's success.
Among those taking a closer look at the AIDS Ride
this summer is the Philadelphia Attorney General's office, which
began reviewing the Philadelphia-DC Ride's finances in July.
It's been a long, ugly summer for the Philadelphia
AIDS Ride, which netted far less than expected in its inaugural
effort this June.
According to final receipts released by the AIDS
Ride last week, the Philadelphia ride raised $1.4 million and netted
$320,000, which will be split equally among its four local beneficiaries.
That means a full 79 percent of the funds raised by Philadelphia
riders went to overhead -- far more than the standard 40 percent
that the AIDS Ride promises.
But even 40 percent going to overhead pushes the
limits of acceptable fundraising costs; generally, it shouldn't
cost more than 30 cents to raise a dollar, according to Dan Langan
of the National Charities Information Bureau.
In Philadelphia's case, administrative expenses alone
ate up 62 percent of the gross revenues. One local beneficiary,
the Greater Philadelphia Urban Affairs Coalition, disappointed at
the $82,500 it netted this year, has withdrawn its support. A year
before the event, each beneficiary is required to pledge $81,250
in seed money in order to participate.
You can "look at it as a fundraiser for people
with AIDS, or as something to give bike riders an enjoyable experience,
or as something to raise money for a promoter," says James
Roberts, executive director of the Minority AIDS Project in Philadelphia,
which is part of the Urban Affairs Coalition. "It's hard to
do all these things at once."
The event has become a hot-button issue in the Philadelphia
AIDS-service community, where "there are people walking around
blind with rage at the Ride, and people blindly defending the Ride,"
says Michael Marsico, a local AIDS activist who participated in
the Ride. "It's certainly tempered the enthusiasm I feel on
the street," says Marsico.
AIDS Ride officials admit that Philadelphia was disappointing,
and have rushed to guarantee Boston-New York riders that their overhead
bill will come to no more than 39 percent of gross revenues, as
it did last year. They point out that the DC end of the Philadelphia-DC
AIDS Ride netted $1.6 million with a similar-size recruiting operation,
and they attribute Philadelphia's weak showing to infighting within
the city's AIDS-service community.
"The story there is not so much the AIDS Ride
as Philadelphia and the AIDS community in Philadelphia," Dan
Pallotta says. "In that city there's a lot of divisiveness.
. . . There's not anything else coming down the pike. If you can't
make the AIDS Ride successful in Philadelphia, you need something
like the AIDS Ride. What else are you going to do?"
But Pallotta's arguments have fallen flat for many
in Philadelphia, and ACT UP/Philadelphia -- charging that the AIDS
Ride caters more to riders than to people with AIDS -- is considering
openly protesting the Ride. When the figures were announced in Philadelphia's
gay press, the riders, who raised $1400 apiece to participate, were
left feeling duped, points out Katie Krauss, an ACT UP member who
did not ride.
"It was really demoralizing for people to realize
they could have stayed home and written a check for $400 and done
more for people with AIDS," says Krauss. "The bottom line
has to be, what is it doing for people with AIDS?"
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