Real Stories About PEPFAR

July 16th, 2008 at 12:26 pm | posted by ONE.Partners

By 2010, over 20 million children will have lost a parent to AIDS. The vast majority of these children live in developing countries, with eighty percent in sub-Saharan Africa alone. Less than one in ten of these children receive any form of external support. Without a safety net, these children are more likely to drop out of school, to be malnourished, to lose their homes, to face discrimination and abuse, and to contract HIV themselves.

The President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR in short, offers hope to children orphaned and made vulnerable by HIV and AIDS. By providing key funding, PEPFAR enables its implementation partners to reach needy children and their families with life-saving treatment, prevention, and care.

image001Thanks to such support, Claire and her siblings in Rwanda are on the path to a brighter future. Claire’s parents died of AIDS when she was 17 years old, leaving her to care for her three younger siblings and two cousins. HIV positive herself, Claire was forced to rent their house for income and move her family into the backyard shed. In 2005, FXB International stepped in and provided the family with food, educational support, health care, HIV treatment, and grants to operate a small business. Today, Claire is a student at the Kigali Institute for Science and Technology, where she studies dietary therapy for people living with HIV. FXB continues to send her siblings and cousins to school, so that the children now enjoy a better chance of achieving their full potential.

image003In urban slums in South Africa, students like Nomthandazo are benefiting from HIV prevention and school support programs. In her early teens, Nomthandazo’s father passed away and her mother later died from AIDS. Although Nomthandazo’s aunt helped ensure that her basic needs (food shelter, medicine) were met, Nomthandazo had no one to teach her about sex, AIDS, and other sexually transmitted infections.

Fortunately, Nomthandazo’s teachers recognized her need for guidance and support. Nomthandazo was enrolled in an after-school program operated by FXB International. Through the program, Nomthandazo was able to learn important health and life skills including HIV/AIDS education and received counseling to help her cope with her grief and growing pains. She is now confident that she has the knowledge to make informed and safe choices in life.

Stories such as Claire’s and Nomthandazo’s demonstrate the need for HIV prevention, treatment, and care in resource-poor settings. Success stories like theirs can be repeated on a larger scale with full funding from Congress for PEPFAR, including orphans and vulnerable children programming.

-Kathleen Letchford, FXB USA

*Names and/or photos have been changed to protect privacy.

One Response to “Real Stories About PEPFAR”

  1. Debbie K Says:

    The Senate has just started their consideration of the PEPFAR re-authorization bill (Lantos-Hyde Act). I am sitting at my computer, listening to the debate via the Internet, and I am frozen with concern.

    What happens to the hundreds of thousands of mothers in Africa who have been granted another chance at life with a future if PEPFAR is not re-authorized?

    What can we say to those mothers….and the children that they will leave behind?

    Children just like these young people in this post - REAL CHILDREN, REAL PEOPLE whose lives can either be transformed for the good - or for the worse.

    Thank you for this post and for the stories of these young people’s lives. Thank you for their beautiful, hopeful, smiling faces.

    I hope that we do not let these children and MILLIONS of their contemporaries “down”. I pray that PEPFAR is simply re-authorized.

    When all is said and done, it comes down to this - will we STAND UP FOR LIFE? Will we STAND UP FOR PEPFAR?

    We shall soon see what the Senate does.

    Thank you all AS ONE for putting up a strong defense for PEPFAR. May we always carry each other.~

    ALWAYS FOREVER, ONE - debbie :)
    www.mpwn-uganda.org

Leave a Reply