African Grandmothers Launch Campaign for Rights and Resources
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By Kari Sackney
Stephen Lewis Foundation
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
At the close of the historic first African Grandmothers’ Gathering,
in Manzini Swaziland, 500 grandmothers from 13 countries issued a
clarion call to the world, demanding economic independence, and the
necessary resources to build their own capacity to raise healthy
families in the midst of the AIDS pandemic.
They called for
urgent action to prevent acts of violence against them, to ensure
social security and to enact laws that uphold their rights and those of
their grandchildren.
The Manzini Statement
– the document which issued the call for action emerging from the
gathering – was read at the completion of a march of more than 1,000
grandmothers through the streets of the city.
Describing
themselves as the backbones of their communities, they declared,
‘Africa cannot survive without us.’ In a written statement read on her
behalf, Graça Machel, renowned international advocate for women and
children’s rights, supported their claim saying, ‘All of us in Africa
owe you a huge debt of gratitude.’ Across sub-Saharan Africa,
grandmothers now form the core of family and community-based care,
raising a generation of children orphaned by AIDS.
The
grandmothers gathered in Manzini from May 6–8 to share their experience
as ‘parents’ of orphaned grandchildren, as caregivers and as activists,
and to articulate their priorities for action. They discussed care for
HIV-positive grandchildren, food security and micro-credit financing as
well as social security, violence and inheritance rights.
The
serious tenor of the daytime working sessions was countered each
evening by dancing and singing, which filled the great hall where the
women gathered. At the event’s opening ceremony, the Queen Mother of
Swaziland, who presided over the evening, defied the concerns of her
security contingent as she spontaneously joined in the dancing with the
hundreds of gathered grandmothers.
Organised and hosted by Swaziland Positive Living (SWAPOL),
one of the continent’s leading AIDS advocacy and support organisations,
the event’s weighty discussions, joyous celebration and bold outcome
statement reflected the momentum and strength of the international
grandmothers’ movement just four years after it began on the eve of the
XVI International AIDS Conference in Toronto in August of 2006.
‘We
have demonstrated that grandmothers and their grandchildren are no
longer invisible,’ said Siphiwe Hlope, executive director of SWAPOL.
‘As we return to our own countries, we need to use the strength of our
collective voice to call upon governments in all of Africa to change
their policies and uphold our rights which are currently being violated
in so many ways.’ She promised the assembled women that she would carry
their messages to the XVIII International AIDS Conference in Vienna in
July of this year where she will be speaking.
Standing in solidarity with the African women were 42 Canadian grandmothers from the Grandmothers to Grandmothers Campaign of the Stephen Lewis Foundation.
They promised to return to Canada to amplify the voices and demands of
the African grandmothers, to increase their fundraising efforts, and to
raise awareness with the Canadian government, international
organisations, and the Canadian public to ensure that African
grandmothers and the grandchildren in their care receive the support
they need.
Ilana Landsberg-Lewis, executive director of the
Stephen Lewis Foundation which both funded and partnered with SWAPOL in
organising the event, emphasised the call for international support.
‘Today we have heard the powerful call for action which emanates from
your gathering,’ she said. ‘Tomorrow the governments of the world must
heed and respond to your call for justice!’
Deputy prime
minister of Swaziland, Mr Themba Masuku, who attended the gathering,
was clearly moved by the spirit of the grandmothers and impressed by
the scope of national representation at the event. In heartfelt closing
remarks, he expressed his own commitment to supporting them, declaring
‘I am going to be part of this grandmothers’ movement “till death do us
part”.’
Through holistic programmes providing training, services
and care, Swaziland Positive Living (SWAPOL) is improving the lives of
people infected and affected by HIV and AIDS throughout Swaziland. The
Stephen Lewis Foundation supports community-based organisations in
Africa working to turn the tide of AIDS.
Stephen Lewis Foundation
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