stigma and discrimination

Kofi Annan, on the stigma of the AIDS virus:

But there is another terrible burden imposed by AIDS, which each and every one of us has the capacity to relieve: the burden of HIV-related stigma. The impact of stigma can be as detrimental as the virus itself. The solitude and lack of support it imposes are deeply wounding to those who suffer it. It should also hurt every one of us, for it is an affront to our commom humanity. Some people with AIDS are being denied basic rights such as food or shelter, and dismissed from jobs they are perfectly fit to perform. They may be shunned by their community, or most tragic of all, by their own family. The fear of stigma leads to silence, and when it comes to fighting AIDS, silence is death. It suppresses public discussion about AIDS, and deters people from finding out whether they are infected. It can cause people – whether a mother breastfeeding her child or a sexual partner reluctant to disclose their HIV status – to risk transmitting HIV rather than attract suspicion that they might be infected.

“silence is death”

here is more about the stigma. important reading.

here are some numbers from the world AIDSday site:

Worldwide, and in 2000 alone, AIDS claimed 3 million people last year. That’s over 8,000 people every day. But the story does not end there: just under 14,000 new cases of HIV infections occur every single day. 95% of all AIDS cases occur in the world’s poorest countries. In several southern African countries, at least one in five adults is HIV positive. In 2000, the HIV prevalence rate among pregnant women in South Africa rose to its highest level ever: 24.5% bringing to 4.7 million the estimated total number of South Africans living with the virus.

42,000,000 people in the world living with AIDS
5,000,000 people newly infected in 2001
13,200,000 children orphaned by AIDS

i wrote the numbers with the zeroes, as looking at ’13.2 million’ doesn’t have quite the effect, at least for me, as all those zeroes. all those people, all those children.

“silence is death”. let’s be anything but silent.

and if you follow only one link in this post, please read this message from a South African, sent to AVERT on 26th November. silence is death.

edited to add:
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538 sites participating at this writing — that’s a lot of non-silence!

13 responses to “stigma and discrimination”

  1. anziblog v3.0

    5 Gifts to Myself: Right Now

    Today is World AIDS Day. Being HIV positive has really taught me how important it is to live today, being present in every moment. No,

  2. Gratuitous Sax and Senseless Violins

    Link and Think

    Go see kd right now, she has a ton of amazing links. I’ll be updating here in a bit…

  3. skits

    I’m so glad I came here, kd-I totally forgot about this.

  4. Full Bleed: Confessions of a Zine Girl

    Some links on privilege and AIDS

    I have thought and rethought about posting these links. In one way, I can certainly respect someone who feels

  5. VASpider's Web

    Do Not Go Gently

    For World Aids Day, I was going to post a poem I’d written about a friend of mine, Christine,

  6. Monkey!

    A beautiful set of entries, kd. Blog on, my sister.

  7. munin

    thank you KD, It feels odd saying that here, but thank you for the links. Having been a child growing up in parts of southern africa the situation there touches me deeply. thank you for speaking, thank you for this “silence is death”. let’s be anything but silent.

  8. Linkmeister

    450 bloggers (at 10:00pm HST last night) taking part in Link and Think today; check the participants page.

  9. NegroPleaseDotCom

    link & think

    “I just want to do my part and leave…Not for what they’re going to remember you for, but for what you believe in as a man.” – Olufela Anikulapo-Kuti Abami Eda

  10. e-schwa

    world AIDS day – the bloggers

    World AIDS Day – the other bloggers I’ve come to know.

  11. e j

    kd, thank you ever so much. the fact that you quoted Kofi, a very good colleague and with a brain the size of mount olympus is very touching. it is this that will inspire others to keep moving forward, not back.

  12. batgrl

    I missed this too. See, this is why I regret it if I don’t read you daily.

  13. { a burst of light }

    WAD Blogs

    Blogs/sites that I read on a regular (or semi-regular) basis that have posted World AIDS Day stories and/or info: Donald

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