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Stigmatisation and discrimination towards people living with HIV and AIDS increases the difficulties they experience, fuels the spread of HIV and increases the harm it causes. Many well-meaning efforts to address HIV and AIDS are insensitive to gender issues. This programme supports communication strategies that are gender sensitive to change stigmatising and discriminatory behaviour that contributes to the spread of HIV and the harm it causes. |
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‘Community Action on HIV and AIDS' This book is designed to help church leaders in dealing with social, cultural and economic issues related to the AIDS epidemic at community level. It covers topics such as the sexual abuse of children, domestic violence, widow inheritance and property grabbing by relatives - issues which have been exacerbated in many African countries by the AIDS epidemic. The book is based on 12 years of experience by the Organization of African Instituted Churches (OAIC), based in Nairobi, Kenya. The author, Nicta Lubaale, is an ordained pastor who has been involved in faith-based and community responses to HIV and AIDS since 1991. Since January 2007 he has been General Secretary of the OAIC. Community Action' includes case studies of the work of several African independent churches which, with the support of the OAIC, have responded in particularly innovative ways to the challenges of the AIDS epidemic. These stories are drawn from OAIC member churches in Kenya and Uganda, but they are relevant to churches throughout sub-Saharan Africa, and beyond. The book contain numerous role plays, discussion guidelines, Biblical references, individual case studies and illustrations by African artists. |
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'Pastoral Action on HIV and AIDS' This book contains guidelines for training pastors and lay church leaders in addressing the pastoral challenges of the AIDS epidemic. These challenges affect churches in their teachings about sickness and healing, their forms of worship and their pastoral ministries. The book is based on 12 years of experience by the Organisation of African Instituted Churches (OAIC), based in Nairobi, Kenya. The author, Nicta Lubaale, is an ordained pastor who has been involved in faith-based and community responses to HIV and AIDS since 1991. Since January 2007 he has been General Secretary of the OAIC. 'Pastoral Action' includes case studies of the work of several African independent churches which, with the support of the OAIC, have responded in particularly innovative ways to the challenges of the AIDS epidemic. These stories are drawn from OAIC member churches in Kenya and Uganda, but they are relevant to churches throughout sub-Saharan Africa, and beyond. The book also contains numerous role plays, discussion guidelines, Biblical references, individual case studies and illustrations by African artists. |
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To order copies: Organisations in Kenya, please contact: OAIC, Junction of Riara/Kingara Roads, PO Box 21736, Nairobi 00505, Kenya. Email: hiv@oaic.org. Tel.: +254 20 387 8419. Website: www.oaic.org. Outside Kenya, please contact: TALC, P.O. Box 49, St Albans AL1 5TX, U.K. Tel.: +44 1727 853869. Email: info@talcuk.org. Website: www.talcuk.org. Glen Williams, Strategies for Hope Trust, 93 Divinity Road, Oxford OX4 1LN, UK. Tel.: +44 1865 723078. Email: sfh@stratshope.org. Website: www.stratshope.org. These two resources can be found on the SFH website: http://www.stratshope.org/b-cc-04-pastoral.htm and http://www.stratshope.org/b-cc-05-community.htm. |
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| People living with HIV & AIDS have an important role to play in addressing stigma and discrimination. |
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Toolkit and Facilitator’s manual
This toolkit is a joint effort of the Council for World Mission and WACC for young peer educators to enable them to take a lead role in their respective churches and communities in generating awareness and understanding of HIV/AIDS and in developing appropriate strategies and using appropriate communication tools to effect behaviour change. This toolkit also aims at clarifying facts and myths about HIV/AIDS and addresses the issues of stigma and discrimination related to HIV/AIDS to make churches “AIDS competent”.
The Code of Good Practice
EAA manual
This resource will help secular organisations, government structures and multi-lateral partners to better understand and value the contributions of faith-based organisations in responding to HIV&AIDS. This will lead to building more effective and strategic alliances and partnerships.
Communication strategies
These are examples of HIV/AIDS projects designed and implemented in different countries and regions by the John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health/Centre for Communication Programmes (CCP) to help organisations develop and manage projects and programmes in HIV/AIDS and reproductive health using communication strategies.
Links:
ICASO - International Council of AIDS Service Organizations
Moundou, Chad - As the deadly HIV and AIDS pandemic continues to rampage Africa and the world at large, activists in Chad, one of Africa's war-torn countries, recently held awareness rallies in the streets of Moundou. Clad in T-shirts emblazoned with the message : “Protégeons-nous, protégeons les autres contre le SIDA” (Let us protect ourselves by protecting others against AIDS), the activists conducted open sessions where Chadians across the city freely discussed the scourge with doctors, social workers and other experts.
By Julienne Munyaneza
La version française suit.
A group of more than 50 Christian and Muslim Rwandan women have met in Kigali, Rwanda to discuss the responsibility of women and families in the fight to eradicate AIDS. The series of workshops, which ran from January 15-18, 2007, was organized by the Centre for Training and Documentation (CFD) in partnership with WACC. This initiative is of high importance given that women are in the majority in Rwanda and more than half are either genocide or AIDS widows.