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HIV-positive
pastor shouts from the pulpit
IRIN News
October 04, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=74646
Rev Maxwell Kapachawo
is the only known pastor in Zimbabwe who publicly admits to being
HIV-positive; he is also encouraging any of his peers infected and
affected by the disease to speak openly about HIV/AIDS from the
pulpit.
Churches in Zimbabwe
tend to approach HIV/AIDS as a moral issue, Kapachawo told IRIN,
and treat those infected as immoral, but the disease afflicting
one in five Zimbabweans between the ages of 15 and 49 should actually
be addressed as a medical matter.
The irony was that while
many of the country's faith-based organisations were involved in
programmes for HIV/AIDS orphans, the pandemic itself was a taboo
subject in church corridors.
"Our mission as
religious leaders living with or affected by the pandemic is to
break the silence and live positively, end self-stigma, denial and
shame, while at the same time being forces of change in our congregations
and communities," he said.
Kapachawo is the national
coordinator of the Zimbabwe Network of Religious Leaders Living
with or Personally Affected by HIV/AIDS (ZINERELA), which supports
religious leaders living with HIV/AIDS or who have lost loved ones
to it.
In a bid to combat stigmatisation
among religious leaders, he uses radio and television to spread
his message. "Let us make churches channels of hope, acceptance
and love. I am proud to be doing my part," he says in one commercial.
"Religious institutions
are very powerful because in Zimbabwe, for example, the majority
of the population belongs to faith-based organisations, and these
could be used as vehicles for spreading the message in the fight
against HIV/AIDS," Kapachawo told IRIN. "Unfortunately,
in Zimbabwe, the moment anybody talks about HIV/AIDS, questions
of infidelity, promiscuity and sexuality are raised."
Rejected
by the church
Kapachawo tested positive
for HIV/AIDS in 2004, and experienced at first hand the attitude
of the church towards the disease, and the presumption in religious
circles that the disease is a consequence of immorality.
Before he tested positive
for the virus, the bishop of the church suspected that Kapachawo
was suffering from the effects of HIV/AIDS, removed him from his
congregation and sent him home to live with his parents.
"For me, that was
like a death sentence, because as my spiritual father I expected
my bishop to be supportive of me during my time of need. He never
visited me after that," he told IRIN.
For three years Kapachawo
battled opportunistic illnesses, such as fungal infections, before
deciding to attend a workshop on HIV/AIDS. "I was surprised
to see people who looked strong and healthy, who said they were
living positively with the virus. I vowed to go for testing and
decided to go public in order to help fight stigmatisation in religious
institutions."
He said the effects of
stigmatisation by the church were illustrated by the fact that of
ZINERELA's 181 members, he was the only religious leader who had
publicly declared his HIV status.
"As a support group,
we do not demand that members disclose their HIV status, though
from discussions generated during meetings we can tell which of
our members are positive. The problems that we face among members
on the issue of living openly and positively are questions on how
religious leaders will react if we come out in the open about our
HIV status."
Defeating
stigmatisation
Stigmatisation among
HIV-positive religious leaders in Zimbabwe was rife, he commented,
although this was not always the case in other parts of the continent.
"ZINERELA is part
of a regional network in Southern Africa and the whole African continent.
We admire how our colleagues from Uganda and Kenya who are living
with HIV/AIDS are loved by their church leaders and congregations.
Some churches have programmes in place which support them with accessing
ARVs [antiretroviral drugs]," he said.
The formation of a network
of religious leaders living with or affected by the HIV/AIDS was
the brainchild of Gideon Byamugisha, an Anglican priest in Uganda,
believed to be the first religious leader in Africa to publicly
declare his HIV-positive status. Byamugisha has been living with
HIV/AIDS for 15 years.
Although Kapachawo said
his organisation had received some funding from religious groupings,
it was not sufficient to sustain outreach programmes for men and
women of the cloth in remote parts of the country.
"So far, we have
only managed to set up structures in four out of 10 provinces such
as Masvingo, Mashonaland West, Mashonaland East and Manicaland.
We do not have vehicles to visit colleagues and I have had to resort
to public transport, which is unreliable," he said.
"The work of pastors
is a calling which requires them to work 24 hours a day, while it
is not financially rewarding and, as a result, our members cannot
afford the high cost of ARVs."
Kapachawo said the ideal
would be to supply ARVs to all ZINERELA members requiring the medication,
but limited funding made this very difficult. "Currently, HIV-positive
members are being linked to other organisations in the HIV/AIDS
sector for assistance, in terms of accessing medical drugs."
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