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Until
death us do part - love, marriage and the virus
IRIN PLUS
News
November
06, 2006
http://www.plusnews.org/AIDSreport.asp?ReportID=6519
BULAWAYO - When
Nomvula Mnkandlha, 29, met Skhumbuzo Muvhinjeva, 39, at a support
group meeting for HIV positive people, in Zimbabwe's second city,
Bulawayo, she was not looking for a romantic relationship.
The soft-spoken,
recently divorced young woman was still coming to grips with her
ex-husband's rejection after she had told him she was living with
the virus. Their two-year-old little girl had fallen ill and her
mother had decided they should both be tested, but it took her another
month to come to terms with her infection and find the courage to
tell her husband.
He accepted her
status on condition that she would not ask him to go for an HIV
test, but a month later he sent her and her daughter back to her
parents' home and began divorce proceedings, claiming that his wife
would also bewitch and infect him. "I felt angry and betrayed,"
she recalled.
Nomvula then began
attending the support group to which Skhumbuzo belonged. When the
two met in 2003, his CD4 count (immune cell count) was dropping
drastically and Nomvula offered him support while he slowly rebuilt
his strength. "He treated me like a younger sister ... and we enjoyed
each other's company," she said.
In a low gentle
voice, Skhumbuzo admitted to having had multiple sexual partners
during his marriage, but it had taken the death of his wife for
him to realise the effect of his behaviour. Two years earlier, after
three positive HIV tests, he was still living in denial and only
started mentally preparing for what he believed was his imminent
death, and what life would be like for his three orphaned children,
after the fourth positive test.
Skhumbuzo, a security
company banking and wage packager, joined a support group, where
"I realised I was not alone ... I could live positively."
Despite Nomvula's
initial reluctance their friendship strengthened and developed into
a deeper relationship. "He said he needed a mother for his children
and a partner for life," she told IRIN/PlusNews with a shy smile.
In June 2005, she and her daughter moved in with Skhumbuzo and his
children.
Their home is
a neat yellow and chocolate-coloured house in Nkulumane, a high-density
suburb of Bulawayo, where large AIDS awareness posters hang on the
walls of the small sitting room. Skhumbuzo revealed his HIV status
to his managers and sometimes teaches colleagues about HIV/AIDS.
The lovers are living openly with their status. "This is not a secret,
Nomvula said. "Why should we hide what we are?"
But the couple
still battle with stigma and discriminatory attitudes. According
to Skhumbuzo, his family is waiting for him to die. "They are counting
the months and days." Nomvula's family still doesn't believe she
has the virus, as she has yet to show a single symptom of illness.
"People still
don't understand this disease," said Duduzile Moyo, a National AIDS
Council (NAC) ward secretary. "They think it's a death sentence,
but there is still so much hope."
Skhumbuzo began
receiving free antiretroviral (ARV) drugs at a state hospital in
October 2004, and Nomvula became his treatment supporter. "This
is important, because I can forget to take my pills and she monitors
and reminds me," he said, patting her hand affectionately.
Nomvula is not
taking ARVs yet, since her CD4 count is 450 - ARV treatment is recommended
for patients with a CD4 count of 200 or less - but she takes a daily
dose of cotrimoxazole, an antibiotic drug that helps keep opportunistic
infections at bay. The couple also practice safe sex, which remains
an important precaution when both partners are HIV positive to avoid
potential infection with an ARV-resistant strain of the virus.
They will be travelling
to each other's rural homes to finalise the traditional marriage
procedures with their families later this year.
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