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AFRICA: Religious leaders expose damning attitudes towards HIV/AIDS
IRIN News
September 21, 2003
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=36722
Nairobi - African religious leaders admitted on Sunday that their
own institutions were sometimes guilty of spreading the stigma attached
to HIV/AIDS.
Christian and
Muslim leaders attending the 13th International Conference on AIDS
and Sexually Transmitted Infections in Africa, being held on 21-26
September in Nairobi, Kenya, spoke of damning attitudes to the virus
that were spread by their churches and mosques.
Sheikh Al Haj
Yussuf Murigu, Vice-Chair of the Muslim Supreme Council of Kenya,
said HIV was equated with "a curse", and those who lived
with it were viewed as "sinners". Bishop Otsile Osimilwe
said the church tended to point a finger at people living with HIV,
instead of adopting a caring and compassionate response. Father
Peter Lwaminda, a Roman Catholic priest, said it was "a question
of condemnation". "Many religious leaders I have met have
inspired fear into people," he said.
An Anglican
priest living with HIV, Rev Jape Heath, linked the stigma and discrimination
to what he described as his church's double standards when it came
to the concept of 'sin'. Lying and cheating on tax returns were
considered "socially acceptable", he said, while being
HIV positive was equated with being caught in adultery.
"The church
has been exceptionally good at judgmentalism," Heath said.
"The role of the stigma has been to see an increase of the
pandemic" because people were too scared to be tested for HIV.
The Anglican church looked upon those living with HIV as sinners
who could be "written off", he said. "That has been
the church's major contribution to the stigma attached to HIV."
Misogyny and
lack of gender equality had also contributed to the spread of the
virus, the conference heard, by not allowing women to make choices
about their lives. "The church has been quite behind in dealing
with gender injustice," said Dr Musa Dube, a Christian theologian.
"Every culture that is patriarchal exposes women to HIV."
UNAIDS estimates
that 60 percent of HIV-positive women in Africa believed themselves
to be in monogamous relationships and were therefore infected by
unfaithful partners.
Dube said it
was imperative for religious leaders to educate themselves about
HIV/AIDS and for their churches to give them training sessions and
educational materials to do so. Theology also needed to be developed
that could support a compassionate attitude towards people living
with HIV, and it needed to be explained in a language that they
could understand, she added.
"We religious
leaders are part of the problem," Dube said.
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