Given
that over 70 percent of the population subscribes to Christian beliefs and over
20 percent to the Islamic faith, with the rest belonging to other religions, the
teachings of religious leaders and organizations are immensely influential.
Such
teachings made communities believe that AIDS only affect the immoral. They also
contributed to widespread misconceptions about HIV/AIDS, with some people
perceiving it to be a curse or bewitchment.
But
as the disease began to decimate their faithful and at the same time turn into a
key hurdle for the country’s socio-economic development, church leaders in the
country awoke from their slumber and changed their attitude.
Such
was the case that Anglican Archbishop Benjamin Nzimbi of Nairobi issued an
apology for inaction and wrong actions by African religious leaders in the fight
against AIDS. This was during an international forum of the African Network of
Religious Leaders Living With or Personally Affected by HIV/AIDS (ANERELA),
convened in Nairobi in the middle of this year.
“We
want to apologize for not doing what we should have done and for doing what we
should not have done. We need to wake up to meet the needs and challenges of the
pandemic,” pointed out Nzimbi.
He
added that faith groups had not adequately assisted people living with AIDS,
leaving them helpless, isolated, and hopeless.
With
countrywide outreach, churches and other religious organizations play a major
role in supplementing the governments’ health care services alongside
non-governmental organizations. Thus, they are a major partner in the
governments’ efforts to eliminate HIV/AIDS.
Archbishop
Nzimbi said that religious leaders urge governments’ to make life-prolonging
drugs affordable, implement policies that recognize persons living with AIDS,
and invest in other programs aimed at fighting the disease.
Change
of Attitude
Addressing
participants during the marking of World AIDS Day in Nairobi recently, Catholic
Archbishop Ndingi Mwana a’Anzeki, whose church is the largest Christian
denomination in the country, said that 26.7 percent of health care institutions
offering health care services to people living with HIV/AIDS are owned by his
church.
The
Archbishop emphasized that AIDS is real and not bewitchment as some might
purport, stating that his church was doing everything possible to fight it. “I
call upon all religious leaders to come together as a community of believers and
do something to complement the efforts of the government in fighting
HIV/AIDS,” he said.
The
Catholic Church plays an important role in responding to the challenges of
HIV/AIDS. It has developed a well-organized network in its 26 dioceses
countrywide and works through organizations such as Catholic Relief Services
(CRS) to educate and mobilize its members to support those affected by the
disease.
According
to Cavin Otieno of the church’s Commission for Health and Family Life HIV/AIDS
project, based at the Kenya Catholic Secretariat in Nairobi, their activities
are aimed at giving hope, peace, and love to those infected or affected by the
disease.
He
said that the church advocates behavior change, premarital chastity among youth,
and fidelity among married couples.
In
collaboration with the National AIDS Control Council (NACC) and UNICEF, the
church intends to establish a microfinance program that will provide women
suffering from HIV/AIDS within all its parishes with money to start business
ventures.
Currently
the church provides home-based care and antiretroviral treatment to the sick
through its 41 hospitals and 94 dispensaries countrywide, and has established
several centers for children orphaned by AIDS. In regards to educating the youth
about the HIV/AIDS scourge, it has developed materials which are disseminated to
the youth in schools and churches.
A
Different Approach
Currently
the church provides home-based care and antiretroviral treatment to the
sick through its 41 hospitals and 94 dispensaries countrywide, and has
established several centers for children orphaned by AIDS |
|
Although
the Catholic Church works in collaboration with the Ministry of Health and the
NACC, whose slogan for prevention of HIV/AIDS is observing the "ABC"
rule (abstaining, being faithful to one’s partner, and using condoms), the
church is strongly opposed to the use of condoms.
According
to a communiqué from Catholic bishops of Africa and Madagascar issued last
year, condoms are not the solution because “they go against human dignity:
they change the beautiful act of love into a grabbing for pleasure, without
accepting responsibility and thus go against the way in which God has created
us.”
In
the communiqué, the bishops stated that HIV/AIDS is not a shameful disease
because it can be contracted in a variety of ways other than sexual promiscuity.
They also added that the disease is not a punishment from God, and that people
should not judge or condemn others, but should rather counsel, pray for them,
and give them hope and love so that their lives can be fruitful. “God does not
reject his people, he is full of tenderness, and always ready to pardon
repentant sinners,” stated the communiqué.
Other
churches too have their views and programs for fighting the disease. Archbishop
Dr. John Ongachi of the World Undenominational Apostolic Church, a church with
adherents countrywide, said that their approach in fighting HIV/AIDS is
multifaceted.
They
are involved in poverty eradication programs and the provision of food and clean
water in areas where water is scarce, as well as primary health care, donation
of drugs, improvement of access to contraceptives, and counseling services to
those infected with or affected by the disease. “These people do not need
prayers alone, they also require assistance to meet their daily basic needs,”
said Ongachi.
Ongachi
said that according to the Bible, God is the One Who heals the sick and that
disease afflicts those who do not heed His commandments and fail to keep His
precepts.
Involving
Communities
The
Quakers (The Religious Society of Friends) have established an HIV/AIDS
prevention project that has been running for four years in their dioceses.
According to Jethro Lusimba, the project’s coordinator, they were initially
involved in creating awareness among their members. “We selected some of our
members and equipped them with information on HIV/AIDS so that they could train
others.” This, he said was aimed at demystifying AIDS, which he said was a
disease like any other.
The
second step involved identifying people living with AIDS among the communities
they deal with. In this case he notes, patients were selected irrespective of
their religious affiliation.
After
people living with HIV/AIDS were selected, the church started offering them
support and care, which was also extended to their families.
Counseling
services, food, and medicines for curing opportunistic infections were also
given.
Other
forms of support given include paying school fees for the children of the
infected people and empowering communities through the establishment of income-
generating activities by extending soft loans for those who are able to run
micro-enterprises. For those who are too ill to complete repayment, their loans
are written off.
The
church also pays for the funeral expenses of the dead and at the same time runs
feeding centers for orphans. Orphans are also involved in activities, such as
sports, to keep them busy and thus away from immoral behavior.
Lusimba
said that the money used to run all their activities is donated by church
members although they receive some funding from the National AIDS Control
Council. Another important aspect of the church’s war on HIV/AIDS is the
running of clinics that are staffed by volunteer doctors and nurses from among
its members.
Lusimba,
however, stressed that fidelity among married couples is paramount, and for
unmarried couples, abstinence should be strictly observed. “We do not
encourage use of condoms as that will contradict our teachings,” he said.
Openness
Lusimba
believes that the silence surrounding AIDS contributes to stigmatization. Thus
the church encourages its pastors to talk openly about the disease to create
awareness. “As we advocate for respect of human dignity, compassion, mercy,
and support in our church, we must address the cause of the AIDS scourge,”
said Lusimba.
“Why
go to the hospital to pray for a child who has been born, why pray for it when
it falls sick and yet you cannot talk about the cause of its death in your
sermons?” said Lusimba.
He
concluded that since the inception of their HIV/AIDS project, significant
strides have been achieved in bringing about behavior changes among the youth in
their church.
Likewise,
the Baptist Church activities in tackling HIV/AIDS revolve around inculcating
religious values and the development of strategies to address stigmatization in
the community.
Emphasis
is placed on developing values of love, compassion, care, understanding, and
inclusiveness. The church also addresses gender inequality and the role of
nutrition in the war against HIV/AIDS.
Reverend
Amos Mumu, a Nairobi-based clergy member of the church, said that apart from
spiritual nourishment, the church should offer care and love, as well as
counseling to the sick because people suffering from HIV/AIDS are most often
trapped in a state of emptiness and hopelessness.
He
said that his church has started a program dubbed Nutrition, Prevention, and
Care in conjunction with the NACC. “We are emphasizing good nutrition by
offering tips on proper diets, as they are good for the sick and orphans.”
Regarding
the spreading of awareness, Mumu said that the youth are the major target group.
“We endeavor to reach out to many young people especially those in secondary
schools and particularly the girls.”
Emphasis,
he said, is placed on girls because prevalence rates indicate that they are more
affected by HIV/AIDS than boys.
Targeting
the Youth
Mumu
blamed the fast spread of HIV/AIDS among the youth on immorality, which has been
fueled by poverty and the liberal press. He said that his church counsels the
youth about the need to abstain and avoid premarital sex under the slogan
“true love waits.” “Our slogan is a substitute to condom usage which we
prohibit,” affirmed Mumu.
He
stressed that parents need to talk openly with their children about HIV/AIDS and
other sex education issues, instead of leaving them to learn from their peers.
Prevent
the Spread
Unlike
the Baptist Church, the Pentecostal Revival Church, a protestant denomination,
advocates the use of condoms to curb the spread of HIV/AIDS.
Nabert
Juma, a Nairobi-based church HIV/AIDS project coordinator, said that after
realizing the disease was taking a heavy toll on its members, the church
initiated a program that encompassed all methods of preventing the disease’s
spread.
The
project offers home-based care to the sick as well as voluntary testing and
counseling. “Our program has contributed to a decline in number of deaths
among our members and currently there is openness as far as discussing matters
related to the disease is concerned,” said Juma.
As
the church battles out HIV/AIDS, factors that continue to pose challenges to the
struggle are stigmatization, which affects home-based care; socio-cultural
issues such as widow inheritance; and poverty that leads young girls and some
adult women to engage in commercial sex.
Indeed,
the United Nations resident coordinator in Kenya, Paul Andre de la Porte,
pointed out recently during this year’s World AIDS Day that the United
Nations’ concern is that there is little evidence of progress in addressing
deep-rooted gender inequalities that fuel the spread of the epidemic in Kenya.
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