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EAA - Religious leaders living with HIV share experience, hopes and dreams


From Worldwide Faith News <wfn@igc.org>
Date Mon, 04 Aug 2008 20:36:54 -0700

Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance
For immediate release
4 August 2008

Religious leaders living with HIV share experience, hopes and dreams

Speakers and participants in the Inaugural Summit of Religious Leaders Living with HIV shared stories of their experiences with HIV, and their hopes and dreams for the church and their community.

Held in Mexico City on 3 August, the summit was sponsored by the newly formed International Network of Religious Leaders Living with or Personally Affected by HIV and AIDS (INERELA+). The network was formally launched the day before as part of the faith-based participation at the 17th International AIDS Conference.

At the summit, some 30 participants discussed overcoming stigma and discrimination, living positively with HIV, and mobilizing and empowering faith communities. In a statement, they affirmed their conviction that "religious leaders are uniquely positioned to bring an end to the stigma and discrimination experienced by people living with HIV".

Overcoming stigma

Stigma originates from a cycle in which some people believe that AIDS equals sex, which equals sin, which equals death, said the Rev. J.P. Heath, acting executive director of INERELA+ and its African predecessor, ANERELA+, which has 3,500 members in 23 countries.

According to Heath, who has been living with HIV since 2000, in order to break the stigma, faith communities can deliver messages that HIV is preventable and manageable. Prevention messages include safe sexual practices, abstinence, voluntary testing and empowerment, he said.

"I believe that God can use HIV to heal the church. I also believe that we are the church, the body of the Christ, and together, stigma and discrimination can be something of the past," Heath said.

"We religious leaders have contributed so much to the stigma and discrimination within our places of worship," said Pastor Maxwell Kapachawo, coordinator of ANERELA+ in Zimbabwe. HIV is not a moral issue, it's a virus Kapachawo said, urging participants to believe in themselves, and defeat "self-stigma" so they can work with others who are HIV-positive.

Living positively with HIV and empowering faith communities
The Rev. Paul Mogkethi, from the Metropolitan Community Church in Johannesburg, South Africa, said he learned he was HIV-positive in 1999, about the same time he was ordained.

He began to disclose his status with one-on-one conversations with his family, and finally his congregation. "I found great strength within my own congregation, when I shared my status. I knew they would always stand by me," he said. Religious leaders and people living with HIV can do many things together, said Gracia Violeta Ross Quiroga, chairperson of the Bolivian REDBOL+. She suggested creating spaces for dialogue, reviewing teachings and words about "the other," reducing blame, accepting that AIDS is no one's fault, and recognizing that "AIDS offers an opportunity to bring these principles into reality for a broken world."

ANERELA+ and now, INERELA+, is a "movement" not a network, said the Rev. James M. Matarazzo Jr., acting director of INERELA+. According to him, INERELA+ makes it possible to "empower religious leaders to be instruments of hope and change in their communities," he said. Community members respond to HIV and AIDS in many ways, changing "hearts and minds" when clergy are involved, he said.

For Sally Smith, an advisor to the Civil Society Partnerships Unit of UNAIDS, faith communities can provide HIV and AIDS education and accompaniment through "inreach" to members and leaders. "The credibility of our outreach is measured by our inreach."

Notes for Media

The summit statement is available for downloading at: http://www.e-alliance.ch/media/media-7357.doc Extensive coverage, including photos, news, features, video and audio, of faith-based participation at the International AIDS Conference is available at http://iac.e-alliance.ch/ All material can be reprinted free of charge providing credit is given to the source. Sign up to receive a daily digest of the latest news and features, video and photos, and other media products by sending an email saying "subscribe IAC" to media@e-alliance.ch To set up interviews or for more information contact Sara Speicher, sspeicher@e-alliance.ch , +521 55 1246 6140 (until 9 August)

The Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance is a broad international network of churches and Christian organizations cooperating in advocacy on global trade and HIV and AIDS. The Alliance is based in Geneva, Switzerland. For more information, see http://www.e-alliance.ch/


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