God, AIDS, Africa & HOPE

Reflections / Gedanken

17.10.2010 Travel..

To travel is not easy in our days, and the amount of data given to the travel agent and finally to the airline is much more than one can bargain for. The same applies when one wants to transfer some money from one country into another. Amounts of questions why, to whom, where….. and so on.

An orgy of data collection again and again – it seems that government and institutions which should serve the people rather have decided to rule the people. Sometimes there comes the glimmer of an idea that we are indeed running into an Orwell’s imagination and that we have to take care, that our civil rights, the freedom generations fought for, are not sacrificed on the altar of fear, even state organised fear to justify the control over every individual.

Great Britain is surely an example for observation a la paranoia – in London, one cannot move without being followed by a camera. It is amazing that the context of some men in the mountains of Pakistan are the pretext to scale back freedom of movement and much more. It becomes indeed scary.

All this also contributes to keep the world as it is – to justify that those on the sunny side of life make sure it stays like this while others will never have a chance in life. It denies people at the end human rights, it condemns countries to stay on the not so splendid site of life. It is a welcome reason for keeping people in poverty and dependency and darkness, where all the shiny words of political meetings and summits taste as shallow as they are.

In our global world everything is interconnected – one only never has time to think carefully about it.

Filed under: Reflection, Society and living environment, Uncategorized, ,

POZ Magazine: Therapeutic Vaccine Achieves “Functional Cure” in Monkeys

Therapeutic Vaccine Achieves “Functional Cure” in Monkeys

The monkey version of a therapeutic vaccine by VIRxSYS Corporation achieved a “functional cure”—fully controlling simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) production and halting disease progression in a subset of vaccinated monkeys.
VIRxSYS has been pursuing gene therapy against HIV for several years, but it has been exploring a therapeutic vaccine as well. Its technology involves packaging HIV’s genetic material within a molecular delivery vehicle, commonly known as a vector. The company is using a lentivirus as the vector for its current vaccine, dubbed VRX1273.
As a step before human testing, VIRxSYS scientists gave a simian version of its VRX1273 vaccine or a placebo to several monkeys in their laboratory. After the monkeys were vaccinated, they were infected with a virulent strain of SIV. Gary McGarrity, PhD, executive vice president of scientific and clinical affairs at VIRxSYS, in Gaithersberg, Maryland, reported the results of this experiment at the AIDS Vaccine 2010 conference, which was held September 28 to October 1 in Atlanta.
Two of the five monkeys that received VRX1273 were able to maintain full control of SIV. In the placebo group, several of the monkeys died, providing evidence that VRX1273 both controls SIV reproduction in infected monkeys and provides a survival benefit.
“We and HIV key opinion leaders are very optimistic about these long-term results showing viral suppression, protection of the immune system and survival in this prophylactic study,” McGarrity said. “In addition, the full control of SIV replication following infection of two of our monkeys is a significant milestone in our research to develop effective therapeutic and prophylactic vaccines for HIV.”

Source:  http://www.poz.com/articles/hiv_virxsys_vaccine_761_19211.shtml

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Treatment, Medical and Research, Uncategorized, , ,

10.10.2010 Durban Airport

Durban Airport – waiting for my flight back to Cape Town. Like usual it was a filled Sunday with the service of the German-speaking Catholic Community Durban at 10 am. A full church and a very good atmosphere to pray and to contemplate the gospel of today. It felt simply good to be back after one year. After the service as usual meeting with the people, coffee and cake and lots of chats and exchange. The place in front of the Marimba Hall is packed with people, all in lively chats and discussion. That’s how I imagine communities abroad where the service is also a space to meet and greet and share.

Afterwards then to the Oktoberfest in the German Club – from the Hell Angels to the nuns, all are there, enjoying the Humpa Band and Eisbein and Schnitzel and a good beer in the heat of Durban. Also here lively chatter around every table. It is quiet different from Cape Town, where people come and go while in Durban, most are here for the last 20, 30 years and one knows each other. And in the midst Sr. Agnes, well know to all churchgoers as well as those who have not found the way to church yet. 🙂

Back at the airport time still to answer email and to write this block before Cape Town is calling again and a full week is ahead…

Filed under: Reflection, Society and living environment, Uncategorized, , , ,

03.10.2010 Sunday afternoon

Sunday afternoon – and my last service as a supply priest for Belhar. I must admit that I have enjoyed going there the last Sundays and to experience one of the South African parishes – so different from the once in Germany. The question I have in mind is: how can the church remain relevant for the people in the next 20 years. Eying to Europe one can see how societies and with it churches develop and I am convinced that one can learn to prevent some of the “European developments’ for the local church.

Besides the church work, there will be also a decision on the future of the POZ initiative catering for priests and religious who are themselves HIV positive. After the Southern African Bishop’s Conference can in the moment not see any need to set up a special offer for those infected working in the church, there are consultations to see how one can overcome obstacles and offer a pastoral service, the members of the working group believe is necessary and essential. Turning stigma into a blessing is important and combined with a process of healing and self acceptance it would be an important service the church could offer their own employees. But of course it is a sensitive field and I feel that we have to do more convincing to get those responsible in the church hierarchy on board.

The coming week will see not only trips to Durban and Johannesburg, but also visitors connected to the Romantic Hotel Group in Europe, the farewell for Rainer, who will find his final resting place here in Cape Town, meetings for the HOPE Cape Town Trust and HOPE Cape Town Association and as usual lots for preparation work for all things lying ahead.

Filed under: General, HOPE Cape Town Association & Trust, Reflection, Uncategorized, , , ,

UN: SWAZILAND: A culture that encourages HIV/AIDS

Anecdotal evidence that entrenched cultural beliefs among Swazis actively encourage the spread of HIV/AIDS has been confirmed by a joint government and UN report. The study by UN the Population Fund (UNFPA) and Swaziland’s Ministry of Health and Social Welfare – The State of the Swaziland Population – echoes warnings by local NGOs that “AIDS cannot be stopped unless there is a change in people’s sexual behaviour.” Despite consistent efforts to curtail the most severe AIDS epidemic in the world, it appears to have gained ground. “Swazis are very traditional people, and their sexual behaviour is inbred and totally against safe sexual practices, like condom use and monogamous relationships, that limit the spread of HIV,” Thandi Mngomezulu, an HIV testing counsellor in Manzini, the country’s main commercial city, told IRIN. The report, based on focus groups and surveys, found that maintaining a centuries-old cultural belief in procreation to increase the population size, was having devastating consequences in the age of AIDS.

“It’s helpful to have scientific data to focus our efforts. For instance, the study shows that Swazis believe it is ideal if a Swazi woman has a minimum of five children. We can ask people why this is, and how to counter the belief,” said Mngomezulu. Joseph Dlamini, a pastor and youth guidance counsellor, told researchers that “It all boils down to this: Nothing must stand in the way of procreation. Increase the population at all cost.” However, he noted that this belief had come about when the population was a tenth of its present size of about one million. “All humans have sexual urges, but behaviour is determined by social norms. Swazis still believe that a woman’s role is to bear children continuously, and that a man’s role is to impregnate multiple partners, which is why polygamy is so strong here, both as an institution and in the minds of young men, who may not ever get married but still have many children from multiple girlfriends,” Dlamini said. A survey of nearly 2,000 women attending antenatal clinics in the country’s four regions found that 42 percent tested HIV positive in 2008, up 3 percent from the last survey, in 2006.
If population growth was the social factor prompting sexual behaviour, the report found it ironic that sexual practices intended to boost the population had opened the door to AIDS and decreased life expectancy. In 2000 life expectancy was 61 years; now it is 32 years, according to the Human Development Index of the UN Development Programme.
“In Swazi culture, decision-making has traditionally been a male prerogative. Family-planning decisions, therefore, lie with the man,” the study found.

“Women report that they have been subjected to continuous childbirth by their husbands or in-laws, against their will. Researchers noted that Swazi men strongly defended the practice of “kungena”, or wife inheritance, whereby a widow becomes the wife of the deceased man’s brother, a practice found to spread HIV.
Swazi men defended polygamy as a cultural necessity, but also lamented lapsed cultural practices they said could stop the spread of HIV/AIDS, like “kuhlawula”, in terms of which men or boys who impregnated unmarried women were fined five cows by their community elders, but these laws were no longer enforced.
Another cultural factor was gender preference – often insisted upon by in-laws – that a woman bear a boy. The birth of a birth of a girl is immediately followed by an effort to have a male heir, because in traditional law only a boy can lead a family into its next generation.  Other data followed established patterns in developing countries: where there is urbanization and a more educated populace, birth rates decline. Swaziland is mainly rural, but in the northern Hhohho Region, where the capital, Mbabane, is located, the fertility rate is 3.6 children per female, compared to 4.3 children in the underdeveloped southern Shiselweni Region. The fertility rate among women whose education finished at primary school was 5.1, but only 2.4 – less than half the number of children – among students who advanced to tertiary education. The poorest Swazi women have a fertility rate of 5.5, while the figure among the richest is only 2.6 children. “The rich/poor fertility divide is testament to the lack of a government social safety net – like a good pension scheme for the elderly – so, for those without assets, their only security comes from lots of children, who together can support their parents when they are older,” said Tanya Kunene, a social welfare officer in Manzini Region.
The study found that, like many traditional societies, Swazis lived in isolation and were generally suspicious of other cultures – practices like monogamy, family planning and birth control were considered foreign and suspect.
That may be changing. According to the study, some survey participants “called for the recognition of multiculturalism in Swaziland, which would create tolerance for other cultures co-existing with our own”, and thus make “foreign” practices found to be effective in curbing HIV/AIDS more acceptable.
Source:

http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?Reportid=83937

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, Reflection, Society and living environment, Uncategorized, , , , ,

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