HIV/AIDS organizations and their members have made it their
life’s
mission to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS and to provide
support and care for those who are “sankramit” (or ‘infected’).
It is this commitment and devotion that removes
all barriers of caste, poverty, gender and issues of being positive and
negative.
Tara BK is one young woman who knows how important it is to make
everyone feel accepted and says that all HIV positive people need
continued support, “Our
group has been told to limit ourselves to 14 wards, but for
me where there is a positive person or a person with AIDS,
I will make myself available.” Tara went from
despair at being HIV positive to being made President of the Dip Jyoti Samai
Bikas Group in Western Nepal. Read
more about Tara’s story.
The illiterate are taking care of what is most needed
Support organizations are a new phenomenon in Nepal. All
stakeholders in the chain are learning
by doing. There are many challenges that they face as they
try to fit into a set organizational culture of planning,
budgeting, monitoring, reporting and networking. Kamala says
she wants donor organizations to know how hard they are working: “These
organizations need things on paper, but we
are illiterate and we cannot provide information on time and
as it is required. But we are working hard,” she
says.
Kamala is also concerned about the future of programs. She says there is too much at stake: “You know that with each dose of ART that we miss, our CD4 count will decrease. The people in the community who are not happy with us are saying, “These people will be perky only while they get external help and then, wait and see!” She says they cannot afford to have a break in their effort to help the people. Because that would mean a break in the confidence building and empowerment into which people such as Tara and Kamala have invested their lives. |