An open heart and a home for HIV orphans

Award-winning documentary Blood Brother chronicles a life transformed by HIV

Blood Brother chronicles a life transformed by love and HIV.

The new documentary Blood Brother tells the story of Rocky Braat, a successful graphic designer who quit his job and journeyed to India in a quest for “authenticity.” When he stumbled upon a home for children who are HIV-positive, his life was transformed. Braat, who dedicated his life to helping the orphans, isn’t your typical saviour; in fact, as he confesses, “I didn’t even like children.”

After winning the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival, as well as the Audience Award at Toronto’s Hot Docs Film Festival, the film begins a week-long run at the Bloor Cinema in Toronto.

Blood Brother was made by Braat’s best friend, filmmaker Steven Hoover. During an interview with Daily Xtra at this year’s Hot Docs, Hoover explained that all the proceeds from the film are being donated “because we wanted to help Rocky and to keep it going, and we saw the good that he was doing . . . We are going to build a half-way house for the kids who have to leave the home so they can better transition into the society.”

Blood Brother screens at Toronto’s Bloor Cinema Dec 13–22.

Keep Reading

NYU Langone Health

Trans youth sue to block Trump admin’s access to private health records

NYU Langone Health was subpoenaed last month for information about minors who received gender-affirming care from 2020 to 2026
Drag queen Pattie Gonia and the outdoor apparel brand Patagonia

Patagonia v. Pattie Gonia: What the heck is going on?

Patagonia alleges that Pattie Gonia’s commercial use of a “near-copy” name poses “long-term threats” to their brand

What you need to know about new B.C. Conservative leader Kerry-Lynne Findlay

The new leader of British Columbia’s official opposition has said she’d ban gender-affirming care for young people if elected premier
A self portrait and collage by revolutionary queer photographer Claude Cahun

The queer photographer who fought fascism

Claude Cahun’s gender-bending self portraits were ahead of their time—and nearly erased from art history
Advertisement