2007.09.03: September 3, 2007: Headlines: COS - Malawi: Service: Orphans: AIDS: Service: Democrat & Chronicle: Dr. Kevin Denny writes: Village in Malawi uplifts AIDS orphans
Peace Corps Online:
Directory:
Guinea:
Peace Corps Guinea :
Peace Corps Guinea: Newest Stories:
2007.09.03: September 3, 2007: Headlines: COS - Malawi: Service: Orphans: AIDS: Service: Democrat & Chronicle: Dr. Kevin Denny writes: Village in Malawi uplifts AIDS orphans
Dr. Kevin Denny writes: Village in Malawi uplifts AIDS orphans
Several years ago I returned to Malawi, the land of my Peace Corps experience. The country had changed little. It remains a nation plagued by the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse — war, famine, pestilence and death — with AIDS now wickedly superimposed. I recall being in a village talking with a grandmother, old, frail and in poor health, who was struggling to care for 13 children — the children of her own children who had all fallen to AIDS. In Malawi, a country of 12 million, an estimated 17 percent of the sexually active population is HIV-positive. The estimated number of orphans is 800,000. Meet Mr. Sibale. Years ago, when the severity of AIDS was still underestimated by many, this Malawian vowed to act. He turned to friends, those who had experienced the warmth of his country during their Peace Corps days, and asked for help. From this, a unique partnership was born. His creation, the Malawi Children's Village just celebrated its first decade of caring for children who lost their parents to AIDS. Serving more than 3,200 orphans and vulnerable children in 37 villages, MCV is designed to prove that the traditional extended family is still alive in Malawi. Instead of placing children in orphanages, relatives get the support they need to care for their own. In Africa, many mothers, especially those at the end their battle with AIDS, die in childbirth. Their children, weak and afflicted with HIV in about 30 percent of cases, are extremely vulnerable.
Dr. Kevin Denny writes: Village in Malawi uplifts AIDS orphans
Village in Africa uplifts AIDS orphans
Dr. Kevin Denny
Guest essayist
Post Comment
(September 3, 2007) — I woke up with a gentle breeze and kind thoughts, then I read the morning headlines: "Hollywood Starlet Robbed in SoHo Penthouse, $13,000 Handbag and More Stolen." My mood was instantaneously befouled. Why does anyone need, want or aspire to possess a $13,000 handbag?
It is obscene, nauseating and a clear sign that we are a society approaching the tipping point of excess, after which we will be incapable of redemption.
Several years ago I returned to Malawi, the land of my Peace Corps experience. The country had changed little. It remains a nation plagued by the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse — war, famine, pestilence and death — with AIDS now wickedly superimposed.
I recall being in a village talking with a grandmother, old, frail and in poor health, who was struggling to care for 13 children — the children of her own children who had all fallen to AIDS. In Malawi, a country of 12 million, an estimated 17 percent of the sexually active population is HIV-positive.
The estimated number of orphans is 800,000.
Meet Mr. Sibale. Years ago, when the severity of AIDS was still underestimated by many, this Malawian vowed to act. He turned to friends, those who had experienced the warmth of his country during their Peace Corps days, and asked for help. From this, a unique partnership was born.
His creation, the Malawi Children's Village just celebrated its first decade of caring for children who lost their parents to AIDS.
Serving more than 3,200 orphans and vulnerable children in 37 villages, MCV is designed to prove that the traditional extended family is still alive in Malawi.
Instead of placing children in orphanages, relatives get the support they need to care for their own. In Africa, many mothers, especially those at the end their battle with AIDS, die in childbirth. Their children, weak and afflicted with HIV in about 30 percent of cases, are extremely vulnerable.
Sibale's first step was to open a nutritional rehabilitation center with full-time caretakers, plus food and medicine to restore these children to health and allow them to return to their villages when they're strong enough. To date, more than 200 infants are thriving back in their own extended families.
But, for Sibale's children, mere survival is not sufficient. MCV combines ongoing community AIDS education with a commitment to provide each orphan the education he or she needs to prosper into adult life. Younger children are provided clothes, books and pencils to attend one of Malawi's free primary schools. Upon completing primary school, the program traditionally provided each orphan the tuition to attend a boarding secondary school. Recently, recognizing the deterioration in education resulting from the loss of so many teachers to AIDS, MCV opened its own secondary school, Gracious Academy, providing quality secondary education to more than 400 students.
Sadly, in Africa the reality is that only one child in 10 who starts primary school will make it to secondary school. For the other 90 percent, MCV's vocational training provides orphans training in tailoring, computer technology, building trades, carpentry, irrigation and automobile mechanics.
In addition, income-generating innovations such as maize mills, fish farms and sewing projects have been the route by which MCV has helped villages to protect the well-being of their most vulnerable children.
In the end, one large community in Africa has ceased to view itself as helpless. Villagers there have discovered they can work together. And this is taking place in a setting where half of Sibale's children are Muslims and half are Christians. Equally impressive is that the cost of caring for an orphan at MCV is just below $28 a year. Divide that into the cost of a starlet's purse to see how many orphans it could support.
Denny, of Canandaigua, is a child psychiatrist, former Peace Corps volunteer and past president, Malawi Children's Village.
Links to Related Topics (Tags):
Headlines: September, 2007; Peace Corps Malawi; Directory of Malawi RPCVs; Messages and Announcements for Malawi RPCVs; Service; Orphans; AIDS; Service
When this story was posted in October 2007, this was on the front page of PCOL:




Peace Corps Online The Independent News Forum serving Returned Peace Corps Volunteers 
 | Senator Dodd's Peace Corps Hearings Read PCOL's executive summary of Senator Chris Dodd's hearings on July 25 on the Peace Corps Volunteer Empowerment Act and why Peace Corps Director Ron Tschetter does not believe the bill would contribute to an improved Peace Corps while four other RPCV witnesses do. Highlights of the hearings included Dodd's questioning of Tschetter on political meetings at Peace Corps Headquarters and the Inspector General's testimony on the re-opening of the Walter Poirier III investigation. |
 | What is the greatest threat facing us now? "People will say it's terrorism. But are there any terrorists in the world who can change the American way of life or our political system? No. Can they knock down a building? Yes. Can they kill somebody? Yes. But can they change us? No. Only we can change ourselves. So what is the great threat we are facing? I would approach this differently, in almost Marshall-like terms. What are the great opportunities out there - ones that we can take advantage of?" Read more. |
 | Paul Theroux: Peace Corps Writer Paul Theroux began by writing about the life he knew in Africa as a Peace Corps Volunteer. His first first three novels are set in Africa and two of his later novels recast his Peace Corps tour as fiction. Read about how Theroux involved himself with rebel politicians, was expelled from Malawi, and how the Peace Corps tried to ruin him financially in John Coyne's analysis and appreciation of one of the greatest American writers of his generation (who also happens to be an RPCV). |
 | Dodd issues call for National Service Standing on the steps of the Nashua City Hall where JFK kicked off his campaign in 1960, Presidential Candidate Chris Dodd issued a call for National Service. "Like thousands of others, I heard President Kennedy's words and a short time later joined the Peace Corps." Dodd said his goal is to see 40 million people volunteering in some form or another by 2020. "We have an appetite for service. We like to be asked to roll up our sleeves and make a contribution," he said. "We haven't been asked in a long time." |
 | Public diplomacy rests on sound public policy When President Kennedy spoke of "a long twilight struggle," and challenged the country to "ask not," he signaled that the Cold War was the challenge and framework defining US foreign policy. The current challenge is not a struggle against a totalitarian foe. It is not a battle against an enemy called "Islamofascism." From these false assumptions flow false choices, including the false choice between law enforcement and war. Instead, law enforcement and military force both must be essential instruments, along with diplomacy, including public diplomacy. But public diplomacy rests on policy, and to begin with, the policy must be sound. Read more. |
 | Ambassador revokes clearance for PC Director A post made on PCOL from volunteers in Tanzania alleges that Ambassador Retzer has acted improperly in revoking the country clearance of Country Director Christine Djondo. A statement from Peace Corps' Press Office says that the Peace Corps strongly disagrees with the ambassador’s decision. On June 8 the White House announced that Retzer is being replaced as Ambassador. Latest: Senator Dodd has placed a hold on Mark Green's nomination to be Ambassador to Tanzania. |
 | Peace Corps Funnies A PCV writing home? Our editor hard at work? Take a look at our Peace Corps Funnies and Peace Corps Cartoons and see why Peace Corps Volunteers say that sometimes a touch of levity can be one of the best ways of dealing with frustrations in the field. Read what RPCVs say about the lighter side of life in the Peace Corps and see why irreverent observations can often contain more than a grain of truth. We'll supply the photos. You supply the captions. |
 | PCOL serves half million PCOL's readership for April exceeded 525,000 visitors - a 50% increase over last year. This year also saw the advent of a new web site: Peace Corps News that together with the Peace Corps Library and History of the Peace Corps serve 17,000 RPCVs, Staff, and Friends of the Peace Corps every day. Thanks for making PCOL your source of news for the Peace Corps community. Read more. |
 | Suspect confesses in murder of PCV Search parties in the Philippines discovered the body of Peace Corps Volunteer Julia Campbell near Barangay Batad, Banaue town on April 17. Director Tschetter expressed his sorrow at learning the news. “Julia was a proud member of the Peace Corps family, and she contributed greatly to the lives of Filipino citizens in Donsol, Sorsogon, where she served,” he said. Latest: Suspect Juan Duntugan admits to killing Campbell. Leave your thoughts and condolences . |
 | He served with honor One year ago, Staff Sgt. Robert J. Paul (RPCV Kenya) carried on an ongoing dialog on this website on the military and the peace corps and his role as a member of a Civil Affairs Team in Iraq and Afghanistan. We have just received a report that Sargeant Paul has been killed by a car bomb in Kabul. Words cannot express our feeling of loss for this tremendous injury to the entire RPCV community. Most of us didn't know him personally but we knew him from his words. Our thoughts go out to his family and friends. He was one of ours and he served with honor. |
Read the stories and leave your comments.
Some postings on Peace Corps Online are provided to the individual members of this group without permission of the copyright owner for the non-profit purposes of criticism, comment, education, scholarship, and research under the "Fair Use" provisions of U.S. Government copyright laws and they may not be distributed further without permission of the copyright owner. Peace Corps Online does not vouch for the accuracy of the content of the postings, which is the sole responsibility of the copyright holder.
Story Source: Democrat & Chronicle
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Malawi; Service; Orphans; AIDS; Service
PCOL38928
55