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Agnes
Wambui's Story
To
the right is Agnes Wambui, a 29 year old mother of two boys, Duncan
Kariuki and Anthony Gitau, age 11. Soon these two boys can become
orphans, too. At the present time, Agnes cannot raise any money
for the children's food and rent. Recently, the landlord locked
the family outside for lack of payment. Only after Wambui's mother
came to plea with the landlord and promised to look for money
were they allowed back into their two rooms. The rent is $15.00,
but they cannot afford it an no money for school fees either.
Twice she went to a trial clinic for AIDS patients organized by
the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) in Nakuru. The clinic
provides patients with 8kg Unimix flour (90% corn & 10% soybeans)
along with vitamins. They are supposed to attend the clinic twice
a month, but Wambui cannot afford to raise $5 for bus fare required
for the trip. "The burden is too heavy for me" says
Wambui's mother. "I have my own 12 year old daughter and
two orphans aged 13 and 15 years from y first born daughter who
also died of AIDS in 1996. I have no steady income, hardly surviving
from casual jobs. How I wish UPENDO village can open its doors
today".
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Agnes
Wambui
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Lydia
Wanjiru's Story
Lydia
Wanjiru, 32, is a mother of two girls, 15 year old Mary Wanjiku
and 7 year old Kesia Nyakiri. Wanjiru lost her husband to AIDS
in 1993 and her second born child in 1995. She has full blown
AIDS and her last born, Nyakiri has all the symptoms of being
HIV positive. The family live on a three acre piece of land left
behind by her husband. When Sr. Florence Muia visited the family,
she found the daughter Mary could not bear the grief as she watches
her mother's health deteriorate. She knows too well what killed
her father and her second born sibling. Mary unable to bear her
mother's health condition, she ran away from home leaving her
7 year old sister to care for their mother. Nyakiri is showing
some signs of being HIV positive but she is strong enough to care
for her mother. Their little home stands in a bush with grass
up to the doorstep. They look out through the door each day for
God's providence, hoping a neighbor or God-send person might come
their way with at least some food. They are God's poor who cannot
afford the cost of medications, even transport to the hospital.
This is just one of so many hundreds of similar stories of women
with children suffering from HIV/AIDS. Your little donation can
make a difference in their lives!
Lydia
has this to say about UPENDO VILLAGE "The services will help
women a great deal. Women are vulnerable and disadvantaged. It
is a blessing from God and will assist many".
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Orphans
Approximately
2.2 million Kenyans are living with HIV infection. More than
1.5 million people have died from AIDS.
Today
Kenya is home to approximately 1 million AIDS orphans. The majority
have dropped out of school to earn a living for themselves and
their younger dependents. Having suffered the tragedy of losing
one or both parents, these orphans are stigmatized, alienated,
shunned, abused and neglected. Current statistics show that 80
-90% of infections are in the 15-49 year age group and 5-10% occur
in children less than five years old, like little Kesia pictured
to the right. In 1999 the former President of Kenya finally acknowledged
that the AIDS pandemic was a threat to the very existence of the
nation and declared it a "national disaster".
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Kesia
7, an orphan and HIV+
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