Volunteers
from the Malawi Red Cross spread the word about HIV/AIDS (p9032)
The
HIV/AIDS pandemic is ravaging the country - in some areas up
to 25 per cent of the adult population are infected (p9031)

Whilst being entertained, the villiagers also receive their
monthly food supplies (p9030)
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Red Cross performs in Malawi
11 February 2003
By Pia Caspersen in Malawi
A big event is taking place
in Mpamanta village today. The most vulnerable families in the area
will receive their monthly food ration – but they will also
be entertained. Local Red Cross volunteers will perform their drama
about AIDS.
More than 500 villagers have already gathered around the shady mango
tree. A group of dancers in colorful dresses are warming up the audience,
while three female drummers take care of the rhythm. Now the Red Cross
actors are getting ready to take the improvised stage.
“We decided to create this drama because we felt that somehow
our fellow youths can learn from us things that they are not able
to talk about with their parents. We can give them information on
AIDS through such dramas,” Imassi Silafi from the Malawi Red
Cross explains.
The sketch is about two men discussing having sex with a woman. The
sensible guy tells the other guy that he must use a condom to stop
the spread of AIDS. Then out of his pocket he takes a little silvery
package – carefully he takes out a condom and shows it to his
friend.
Suddenly the drama intensifies as the actor pretends that he will
actually put on the condom. People start laughing and shouting. Kids
clamber over each other to see what is going to happen.
The actor, Oscar Nkhoma, fumbles with his fly – and pulls out
– not the real thing – but a “lifelike” wooden
stick.
Many of the women shriek with laughter, but the younger Felistas Mlongola
adopts a more serious expression. “Normally people cannot talk
about such things,” she says.
“They feel it is not proper to talk about in front of children.
And especially today when then were demonstrating how to put on a
condom – doing that in front of a lot of people, it’s
a taboo – it is not supposed to happen that way,” she
adds.
The actors continue the sketch – now they are explaining how
to get rid of a condom after use. Even if the spectators are having
a good laugh, the theme is deadly serious. The HIV/AIDS pandemic is
ravaging the country - in some areas up to 25 per cent of the adult
population are infected.
Since 1985 Malawi’s life expectancy has fallen from 46 to 37
years. More than 800,000 people – out of Malawi’s population
of 10 million – are currently living with HIV/AIDS.
The pandemic has been one of the biggest factors in the current food
crisis sweeping across southern Africa, with millions of infected
agricultural workers unable to tend their fields, and an increasing
number of households being headed by the eldest children.
“The situation is really, really bad. In every village you will
see fresh graves,” says Matthews Nyirenda, HIV/AIDS project
officer from Malawi Red Cross.
“There are so many funerals every week – everybody knows
somebody who died from AIDS. There are a lot of sick people in the
villages, and the worst thing is that many of them don’t even
know they are infected,” he says.
More than 60 per cent of the hospital beds are occupied by AIDS patients.
Most new cases occur among young people aged between 15 and 24, with
infection rates among girls six times higher than for boys.
“There has been this trend among older men in their 40s and
50s that very young girls are free from the virus, and having sex
with a virgin might even cure the disease,” Nyirenda explains.
“As a result, girls get more infected than boys of the same
age.”
This demonstrates the huge amount of misinformation surrounding HIV/AIDS.
Furthermore, there is a big gap between knowing how to prevent the
disease and putting this knowledge into practice:
“Young people say they know how to protect themselves, but they
don’t do it. And they cannot just abstain – because sex
is a natural thing,” says 17-year-old Felistas.
Boston George, a 16-year-old boy who just dropped out of school, adds:
“Many boys don’t feel you can be protected by a condom.”
Matthews Nyirenda shrugs and admits that it is one thing is to spread
the message, and quite another to get young people to change their
behaviour. “It is understandable that in remote villages like
this one, they do not get a lot of information. But it is scary that
HIV prevalence in urban areas is extremely high – also among
well-educated people,” he says.
A recent World Bank assessment estimated that, by 2005, at least a
quarter and as many as a half of professionals in urban-based sectors
will die from AIDS if current prevalance rates continue.
There is no doubt that limited use of condoms as well as limited openness
about AIDS are among the main reasons for the spread of the virus.
So the kind of information that the villagers have got today through
the AIDS drama is desperately needed. And at least one spectator has
learnt something. “One thing I have never seen before and I
have never heard about is how to put on a condom. But today I have
learnt how to put it on,” says 18-year-old Charles Banda.
Next week, the Red Cross volunteers will repeat their performance
in another village – trying to get the message across. And hopefully
little by little it will help to break the vicious circle of the HIV/AIDS
pandemic.
Related Links:
Malawi: appeals, updates
and reports
Southern Africa food crisis
HIV/AIDS campaigns
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