Maidei's
three-year-old daughter gives her mother some water. Maidei's mother
has to help her sit up since Maidei no longer has the strength to
do so. Bongai Mundeta (left), Federation coordinator of HIV/AIDS programmes
at the regional delegation Harare), gives Maidei some words of encouragement
(6327)
Dimbo
Kindman briefs International Federation Secretary General Didier Cherpitel
on the home care programme. Dimbo has been a home care facilitator
since 1996.
(p6330).

Maidei's
father, Warren Arifanti, holding the hand of his grand-daughter, 3-year-old
Hazvinei (right) and one of her friends. He is desperate to get food
and medicine for his daughter.
(p6328.
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A ray of light for AIDS patients
in Zimbabwe
23 March 2001
By Marie-Françoise Borel, in Zvimba
Lying on a simple straw
mat on the floor of her house, her wizened body protected by a blanket,
25-year-old Maidei is dying. When she lost her husband in 1999, and
fell sick that same year, she was rejected by her in-laws, and came
to live with her parents, in Zvimba, near Chihoyi, some 100 kilometres
north west of Harare. Her mother and father are now also caring for
Hazvinei, her three-year-old daughter.
Maidei coughs, has difficulty breathing, and puss is forming in her
ears. She cannot keep down the little food she eats. Her father Warren
desperately would like to be able to afford medicine for Maidei and
good food, like chicken, on a regular basis. In spite of his daughter's
desperate state, he welcomes the visiting Red Cross party into his
house, and describes just how difficult life is. He smiles wearily
as he thanks the visitors for the food basket they have brought.
In the midst of the palpable despair one feels in this household,
there is a ray of hope and comfort when the Red Cross home care facilitator
visits, regularly, bringing some food and basic medical supplies such
as bandages and disinfectant. In this rural area of Zimbabwe, 32 home
care workers - all of them volunteers - visit some 500 people who
are dying of HIV/AIDS and their families. During these visits, which
can last up to three or four hours, depending on the condition of
the "client", as the home care workers call the people they
care for, they teach the families how to care for the ill - this is
why they are called "facilitators". They also fulfill an
essential > counselling role, bringing their clients comfort and support.
In Zvimba alone, there are 70 "clients".
Each group of home care facilitators has a supervisor; in Zvimba,
his name is Dimbo Kindman. Dimbo is exceptional not only in his commitment
to this difficult mission, but he is the first man to become a home
care worker supervisor. In Zvimba, only two men have volunteered and
completed the month-long training course. The Zimbabwe Red Cross is
trying to recruit more men to become home care workers since it is
sometimes easier for a man to talk to another man about the sensitive
issues which concern the transmission of the HIV virus. Prevention
is a key message in the information the home care workers give to
the families they visit. A high proportion of the women who become
home care facilitators are themselves HIV-positive but they continue
to care for those who are most feeble as long as their health permits.
Maidei tries to smile as Dimbo speaks to her softly. In a whisper,
she asks Hazvinei to bring her some water. Since she is too weak to
sit up by herself, her mother helps her. The scene is poignant as
the two women and the little girl, representing three generations,
share a loving gesture. The middle generation is about to disappear.
Begun in 1996, Zvimba is the largest of the ten home care projects
for people living with HIV/AIDS run by the Zimbabwe Red Cross, and
the first one to be set up in a rural area. Nationally, 250 home care
workers are caring for some 3,000 people and their families. Because
the number of AIDS cases is increasing so rapidly, the Zimbabwe Red
Cross is planning to open 14 new home care projects, over the next
few months.
Federation Secretary General Didier Cherpitel travelled to Southern
Africa to discuss the scaling up of activities in the battle against
HIV/AIDS with the National Societies in the region. The Ouagadougou
Declaration, signed by all 53 African Red Cross Red Crescent Societies
in September 2000, recognized AIDS as a "humanitarian disaster."
By mobilizing nearly 2 million volunteers across Africa, such as Dimbo
in Zimbabwe, through the African Red Cross Red Crescent Health Initiative
(ARCHI 2010), the National
Societies hope to make a real difference in the battle against the
HIV/AIDS pandemic.
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