March 28, 2004 - New York Times: Julie Guberman, a deaf Peace Corps volunteer from Chicago who works at the Kibarani School for the Deaf in Kenya

Peace Corps Online: Directory: Kenya: Peace Corps Kenya : The Peace Corps in Kenya: March 28, 2004 - New York Times: Julie Guberman, a deaf Peace Corps volunteer from Chicago who works at the Kibarani School for the Deaf in Kenya

By Admin1 (admin) (pool-151-196-178-137.balt.east.verizon.net - 151.196.178.137) on Wednesday, March 31, 2004 - 7:20 pm: Edit Post

Julie Guberman, a deaf Peace Corps volunteer from Chicago who works at the Kibarani School for the Deaf in Kenya

Julie Guberman, a deaf Peace Corps volunteer from Chicago who works at the Kibarani School for the Deaf in Kenya

Julie Guberman, a deaf Peace Corps volunteer from Chicago who works at the Kibarani School for the Deaf in Kenya

For Africa's Deaf and Blind, AIDS Is an Unknown Language

By MARC LACEY

Published: March 28, 2004

URU BURU, Kenya — To say AIDS in Kenyan Sign Language requires placing the index finger and thumb of both hands close to the face, which is supposed to be a re-creation of the skeletal appearance of a victim on the verge of death.

In other parts of Africa, other signs are used for the disease. AIDS can be conveyed by pretending to pluck clumps of hair out of one's head. Or by forming the letter A with both hands. Or by running one's fingers down the center of one's torso to indicate extreme slenderness.

Certainly most deaf people across Africa know there is an awful disease out there. But their knowledge is very limited. When it comes to education campaigns and prevention efforts, deaf Africans and other disabled people across the continent have been largely forgotten.

"AIDS is talked about so much in your world," Dominic O. Majiwa, a regional director for Africa at the World Federation for the Deaf, said using a sign-language interpreter. "Hearing people know all about it. But we deaf people often don't get the information."

The problem extends beyond Africa, but it is particularly acute here, where the disease is at its worst and where disabled people are still often shunned, hidden away and considered a curse. .

"These are the most marginalized of all people," said Nora E. Groce, a public health professor at Yale who is studying the problem of disabled people being ignored when it comes to AIDS. "The stereotype that many people have of disabled people is that they aren't sexually active. It just hasn't occurred to many people that they get AIDS, too."

The discrimination against disabled people manifests itself in numerous ways. AIDS education seminars are often held in buildings that are not wheelchair accessible. Deaf people, many of whom are literate in neither English nor Swahili, are turned away from AIDS testing centers because nobody knows how to communicate with them. Education campaigns, often on radio or television, do nothing to reach those who cannot see or hear the message.

"Deaf children grow up with the feeling that they're supposed to be quiet and be hidden away," said Julie Guberman, a deaf Peace Corps volunteer from Chicago who works at the Kibarani School for the Deaf. "They see people's mouths moving. But they feel they're not special enough to be involved in that."

The Peace Crops has a special program in Kenya that brings deaf American volunteers to schools for the deaf in remote areas of the country. Ms. Guberman and her husband, Jesse, who can hear but knows sign language, said they were surprised at how little the schoolchildren at Kibarani knew about the disease ravaging their country.

Making matters worse, some research indicates that disabled people, particularly women, are at a heightened risk of becoming infected. The rape of disabled women is a significant problem in parts of Africa, although statistics are scant. Researchers say the situation is aggravated by the mistaken belief that having sex with virgins can rid one of the virus that causes AIDS.

In Uganda, disabled women recently issued a report saying they were being preyed upon and then forgotten. "While the physically disabled women cannot run away from their abusers, the deaf, dumb and blind cannot shout or protect themselves," said the report by the Disabled Women's Network and Resource Organization.

The Ghana Federation of the Disabled found similar problems in a survey it released in January. One of the many grievances it described is that those in wheelchairs cannot gain access to most banks, post offices, government ministries and polling places.

Advocates for the rights of the blind in Malawi have issued a call for more H.I.V.-AIDS awareness messages in Braille.

There are signs of slow progress. Susan Mwikali, 23, appeared recently in a commercial aimed at disabled people in which she urged them to follow her lead and use condoms. Ms. Mwikali, the first runner-up in a beauty pageant organized last year for disabled Kenyan women, laughed heartily at the notion that disabled people do not have sex.

"Anybody can get AIDS, even disabled people," she said in the video in sign language, sitting beside Kenya's first lady, Lucy Kibaki. "The deaf, the blind, the crippled, we must all protect ourselves."

The problem is that the commercial has not reached many people. Organizers of the Miss Disability Kenya pageant do not have the $1,000 that television stations are demanding to put it on the air, and the stations have refused to broadcast it as a public service announcement.

Some grant money, however, is beginning to flow. Mr. Majiwa of the World Federation of the Deaf said he and other advocates in Kenya were turned down for years as they sought money from the government for AIDS prevention efforts aimed at the deaf. They knew deaf people with the disease. They also knew there was great ignorance among the deaf about how it was spread. But their proposals got nowhere.

Last year, however, there was a breakthrough. The government AIDS council gave them enough money to hold AIDS seminars for disabled people and to begin producing printed brochures featuring sign language.

The advocates, with financial support from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, have also set up an H.I.V. testing center specifically for deaf people in Kenya, one of the first in Africa. Since it opened its doors last fall, 500 people, most of them deaf, have come in for testing and information. Nobody is turned away.

"Many deaf people have died of AIDS," said Boniface Inyanya, chairman of the Kenya National Deaf H.I.V.-AIDS Education Program, using an interpreter. "Many of them are H.I.V. positive. Even more do not know enough to protect themselves."

Just as at other testing centers, patients line up to have their blood analyzed and wait nervously with a counselor for the results. But at the clinic in Buru Buru, on the outskirts of Nairobi, the results and information about how to deal with them are communicated in sign language.

To say H.I.V. positive, counselors first make the sign for AIDS. Then they shake their right fist up and down, meaning positive. Often, then, the patient begins to cry.




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Story Source: New York Times

This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Kenya; Deaf

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By Anonymous (dhcp-0-204-192-136-188.worldbank.org - 204.192.136.188) on Wednesday, February 07, 2007 - 1:52 am: Edit Post

Kenya National Deaf HIV/AIDS Education Programme is a national NGO registered in 2003. We are a member of Kenya AIDS NGOs Consortium (KANCO), which is a national membership network of NGOs, CBOs and Faith Based Organizations involved or that have interest in HIV & AIDS activities in Kenya. Kenya National Deaf HIV/AIDS Education Programme’s objective is to ensure equality of life opportunities for the hearing impaired through health, employment and education programs in Kenya.

We are the first organization in Kenya to act and ensure that nearly 900,000 deaf adults in the country were not left behind during the HIV/AIDS education and awareness campaigns by our government. We offer deaf-friendly HIV/AIDS prevention programs; care and support of those with HIV; functional Sign Language training and Deaf awareness of nursing staff at public and private hospitals; and general health education and health for Deaf Kenyans. KNDAEP has set up Deaf friendly Voluntary Counseling and Testing (VCT) centres, the first in Kenya and Africa. We are in the process of developing the first deaf friendly Hospice services and AIDS Awareness programs, within the branches in Kisumu, Eldoret and Mombasa.

We operate within a strong community of organizations and people, and our employees are themselves Deaf and part of this community. This has meant that, when it comes to activities such as needs analysis, program design, project implementation, and training activities we are second to none. Among our many achievements are:-

1. We are the first organization to act and ensure that nearly 900,000 deaf adults in Kenya were not left behind during the HIV/AIDS education and awareness campaigns by the Government of Kenya.
2. With Kenya’s First Lady, Mrs. Lucy Kibaki we launched Kenya's first HIV/AIDS Television Commercial in Kenyan Sign Language, with funding from the National Aids Control Council ($100,000).
3. The deputy US Ambassador to Kenya, Leslie Rowe opened our special VCT for the Deaf which was the first of its kind in Kenya and Africa.
4. The World Bank office in Nairobi has graciously allowed us unlimited use of their computers and internet access at their Public Information Centre.
5. We worked with US Peace Corps Volunteers with support from the US President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief (Emergency Plan/PEPFAR) and the US Centre for Disease Control to produce HIV/AIDS Information, Education and Communication (IEC) in Kenyan Sign Language for Deaf adults in Kenya.
6. We are a member of Kenya AIDS NGOs Consortium (KANCO), a national membership network of NGOs, CBOs and Faith Based Organizations involved or that have interest in HIV & AIDS activities in Kenya.
7. We demystified the HIV/AIDS epidemic among the Deaf people of Kenya who now have HIV/AIDS support groups.
8. We established other Voluntary Counseling and Testing (VCT) centres fully equipped for the Deaf and manned by deaf staff in Nairobi, Mombasa and Kisumu.
9. We have trained hundreds of Peer Educators, Counselors and community mobilizes who are Deaf.
10. With National Aids Control Council we have developed our national strategy for combating the HIV/AIDS epidemic among the Deaf community in Kenya.
11. With Kenyan Sign Language Research Project, at the University of Nairobi, we have produced many booklets and pamphlets in Kenyan Sign Language.

We are praised by both local and international press. (Daily Nation and New York Times)More information about our organization is available in the internet (Google) and also from our offices in Kenya.
Yours in Service of the Deaf,

Boniface U. Inyanya
CHAIRMAN


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