Working Toward an AIDS-free Future for Girls in Africa

Girls outside a DREAMS safe space in Tanzania. DREAMS focuses on women being determined, resilient, empowered, AIDS-free, mentored and safe. (© Sauti)

December 3, 2018//-Ntokozo Zakwe, 26, grew up in a South African community where girls seldom dreamed of a safe, healthy and hopeful future, or a life free of HIV/AIDS.

“There were no mentors or role models. There was poverty, rape and violence,” recalled Zakwe. “All these factors left us vulnerable to HIV.”

Today Zakwe is full of hope as she mentors a new generation of girls in her community to achieve their full potential, teaching them how to avoid pregnancy, get HIV tested and remain HIV free.

DREAMS

Ntokozo Zakwe in front of DREAMS sign (Francesco Rossi/Pivion/Johnson & Johnson)
Ntokozo Zakwe at the International AIDS Conference in 2016 (© Francesco Rossi/Pivion/Johnson & Johnson)

Zakwe is an ambassador for a U.S.-backed initiative known as DREAMS, an acronym for the type of women the program hopes to develop: determined, resilient, empowered, AIDS-free, mentored and safe. The initiative is supported by the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and U.S. and international nongovernmental organizations.

Girls and young women account for 74 percent of new HIV infections among adolescents in sub-Saharan Africa. Since the DREAMS initiative began in 2015, it has helped to reduce HIV infections among adolescent girls and young women by 85 percent in the 10 sub-Saharan African countries where the program operates, new data show.

Helping girls achieve their full potential

Manjolina Wendson, 19, from Tanzania, has convinced 220 adolescent girls, young women and their partners to be tested for HIV in her community. “As a DREAMS ambassador,” she said, “I strive to live as a role model so that other adolescent girls and young women can learn from me … I encourage them to not lose hope, despite many challenges they might be going through.”

While the DREAMS initiative focuses on typical health care issues, like testing for HIV and methods to prevent the spread of HIV, it also targets the indirect causes that contribute to girls’ vulnerability to HIV, including poverty, social isolation, gender-based violence, inadequate schooling and gender bias.

Young woman sitting (PEPFAR/Kenya)
A DREAMS participant in Kenya, one of several sub-Saharan African countries where the program operates (PEPFAR/Kenya)

Wendson credits the entrepreneurship skills she learned through DREAMS for making her financially independent and putting her in a position to support her family. “I am now busy designing dyed clothes, [and] developing liquid and bar soaps, which I sell and get money [for],” she says. Wendson recently organized five DREAMS groups in her community that teach soap-making and textile-dyeing skills to girls and young women.

Agnelia Vasco Figueredo, an 18-year-old DREAMS ambassador from Mozambique, said she emphasizes girls’ rights: “I feel the need to fight for the other girls that have no voice. I know that I am now a source of inspiration for other girls.” She teaches girls how to file legal complaints in cases of gender-based violence.

“My work is quite important because it helps the other girls to make responsible, conscious choices to have a healthy life and have a bright future,” Figueredo said.

This article was originally published on share.america.gov.

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