ADULT: HIV
Posted on Jan 1, 2012
Women often face the dual challenge of caring for children and being the breadwinner for the household in places where formal jobs are hard to come by. Partners In Health helps women find dignified work and the social support they need to be healthy and economically productive.
ADULT SUCCESS STORIES
Jelen's Story: In Peru, a mother survives multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, starts a small business, and saves her family
Lomile's Story (VIDEO): In Lesotho, a mother adopts five orphans after her own children are grown
Dr. Ruth's Story: In Haiti, PIH's breast cancer clinic is now open
Sori's Story: In the U.S., a community health worker accompanies women living with HIV
Elda's Story: In Mexico, a woman controls her epilepsy
Stella's Story: Former sex workers living with HIV start a restaurant in Malawi
Ilrick's Story: In Haiti, a woman living with HIV learns to control her disease while becoming a small business owner
Betania's Story: A mother learns to live with HIV in the Dominican Republic
Family Planning: Recent trainings give health workers new tools to bring family planning services to their communities.
STELLA'S STORY:
A former sex worker finds new employment at a restaurant in Malawi.
Stella's eyes are tired, her face weary and aged beyond its years. She was born in rural Malawi to a poor family of subsistence farmers. At age 11, she went to live with an uncle in hopes that he would support her education. After enduring sexual and psychological abuse, she dropped out of primary school and ran away to Zalewa, a trading center, where she found work as a "waitress" in the Ufulu Night Club and Bottle Shop.* It was there that she began engaging in commercial sex work. She was barely 14 years old at the time. Her life continued to be filled with trauma. Once, she was abandoned in neighboring Mozambique by a truck driver who had hired her for the week. Penniless, alone and terrified, she made her way back to the border, only to be raped by four men in a roadside guesthouse. She ultimately returned to Ufulu—the closest thing to a home that she knew.
Zalewa trading center lies on the edge of rural Neno District. It is situated at the crossroads between Lilongwe and Blantyre, Malawi's two largest cities, and the country's western border with Mozambique. The corridor is a major trucking route for the region and is estimated to house over 1,000 commercial sex workers, the highest concentration in the country. Human trafficking is prevalent both within and beyond national boundaries, and Zimbabwean women now account for nearly half of the commercial sex workers operating in the area.
Poverty and gender inequality are woven into these women's life stories. Few have had the opportunity to pursue an education, which would have given them the skills and means to find other ways to economically support themselves and their families. Nearly all have been bribed or assaulted by the same men who in one moment condemn them and in the next are their regular clients. The language of individual blame and immorality that many, including the women themselves, use to describe those who practice commercial sex work fails to recognize the structural violence that lies at the core of its existence.
The national response to the HIV/AIDS pandemic in Malawi has focused primarily on testing and treatment, with a stated focus on vulnerable populations. However, the needs of this population have been largely neglected—in part a reflection of the stigma attached to the women. Aside from the individual risks of exploitation and violence to which the women themselves are regularly subjected, the public health consequences posed by the commercial sex work industry are dire in a country with one of the highest rates of HIV on the planet.
In 2008, Abwenzi Pa Za Umoyo (APZU), PIH's partner organization in Neno, began a project with a group of commercial sex workers in an effort to strengthen health services and help them find alternative forms of employment. The center hired 15 of the women to work as community health educators in three busy trading centers. The center provided them with ongoing training focused on counseling sex workers and their clients on sexual and reproductive health, making referrals for HIV testing and counseling, and cervical cancer screening. In the first few months after establishing this partnership, HIV testing at the center increased by more than 125 percent. The number of commercial sex workers in the catchment area who have started antiretroviral treatment at PIH-supported sites has also increased substantially. The center also began offering daily adult literacy training and business managment classes to help give the women an opportunity to lift themselves out of poverty. Based on the training, the participants developed a business plan for opening a restaurant cooperative in Zalewa.
“We learned to be self-reliant by learning how to run our own business,” says Stella.
In 2009, Stella and the other women opened the doors to Mtendere (which means "Peace" in the local Chichewa language). With support from APZU, the newly renovated restaurant—complete with chairs, tables, and bright red tablecloths—began serving hot meals and cold drinks to travelers stopping at one of the busiest trucking corridors in southern Africa. The women quickly began turning a profit, and some of its members were able to take their earnings and start their own small businesses.
"There has been a tremendous improvement in my life, because this time I am no longer risking my life," says Stella. "When I was doing commercial sex work, I didn't know what might happen that night. It was always my wish to not to have to do that work, but with such poverty, I was desperate and needed cash." Before she began working with APZU, Stella could not sign or even recognize her own name. Thanks to the Zalewa literacy class, she has finally learned to read and write—as well as scribble down orders as a real waitress.
*Name has been changed.