Hi everybody, hope this blog post finds you all well. As for me and the others at Toa Nafasi, we are polepole coming to terms with the loss of our beloved Vumi.
There are still days when I simply just cannot believe she's gone, other days when I cry and rage and bemoan her fate, and still other days when I try my best to face the future and brave the bad times.
It helps to know we are all mourning her together. It also helps that Mama T won't let me wallow in sorrow. The slightest quiver on my lips, the tiniest tear in my eyes, she forms her mouth into a thin grim line and with one authoritative index finger raised, decrees, "UJASIRI!" ("BRAVERY!"). Indeed.
At any rate, I've got tons of news to share including the details of my beautiful Kili trek (and triumph!) with my mom last month, but I'm not ready to write a light-hearted entry just yet. Mama T can make her calls for courage all she wants when I'm at school, but on my own time, I'm allowed a little wallow....
That said, this week's piece will be a reprint of an article I found online from the Sudan Vision, an independent daily out of that country. It concerns a photojournalistic look at another type of disability that is common in Tanzania: albinism. It also discusses efforts at inclusion for these heretofore marginalized members of society.
I hope it will be enlightening to those readers outside of TZ who probably aren't aware of just how big a problem bigotry and brutality against albinos is.
(I also hope that next week I'll be more chatty and less wallow-y....)
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Under the Same Sun: The Struggle for Social Inclusion of People with Albinism
Photojournalist Jacquelyn Martin's project is in memoriam to Angel Salvatory, who died
of skin cancer in late 2013 at just 18 years old. She is seen here with
her half-brother Ezebiel and mother Bestida, who she had not seen in the
four years she lived away from home, after her own father led a
group of men to attack her.
They say a picture is worth a thousand words; each one speaks volumes in Martin's work. Through her striking
portraits, Martin gives a powerful account of the daily struggle faced
by people with albinism in Tanzania. But she also gives us hope.
In 2012, Martin visited the Kabanga Protectorate Center in the Tanzanian
city of Kabanga in the hope of creating portraits to put a human face
on the issue. Located in rural Western Tanzania, the center has become a
refuge of sort for children with albinism, who are often unable to
attend school due to discrimination and fear of attacks. Because of the
fairness of their skin, some consider the children "ghosts," and they
have been targeted for ritual killings.
At a roundtable discussion
addressing the socioeconomic challenges faced by people with albinism,
recently hosted by the World Bank, Martin reminded her audience that the
people she interviewed during her three-week stay at the center didn't
want to spend their lives parked in government camps. "They want to be
integrated, be able to marry, have children and have a life," she said.
While albinism is a genetic condition inherited from both parents,
regardless of ethnicity or gender, the phenomenon remains widely
misunderstood. According to data provided by the World Health
Organization, estimates of its incidence vary from one in 5,000 to one
in 15,000 in sub-Saharan Africa. In Tanzania, by some estimates, one in
19 people carry the genes.
Collecting data on people with albinism
remains a challenge, as many with the condition are forced to hide in
fear of the stigma it carries. It's also important to realize that
albinism is not a uniquely African issue but rather a global health
issue. In Europe and North America, one in every 17,000 to 20,000 people
also have some form of albinism.
According to Charlotte McClain-Nhlapo, the World Bank's Global
Disabilities Advisor, who organized the roundtable as well as an exhibit
of Martin's photos along with Marina Galvani, the World Bank's
art curator: "This gave us an
opportunity to raise the issue of extreme exclusion. We are looking at
people who are agents of change, who can contribute to society and, more
importantly, who shouldn't be excluded because they look different."
In the roundtable discussion, participants highlighted results and
solutions. Sajjad Ali Shah, the World Bank country program coordinator
for Tanzania, proposed linking the issue more proactively with ongoing
World Bank programs in the country.
"For example, we have a health
program as well as an education program, both designed to improve the
access and quality of health and education services in Tanzania. We also
have a safety net program," he said. "When we look at an issue like
albinism, we tend to look at it through the lens of our social safeguard
policy and say that there shouldn't be discrimination against people
with albinism. We should do much more than that," he added.
There was also some encouraging news. On June 13th, 2015, the United Nations launched the
first ever International Albinism Awareness Day to honor people with
albinism and raise awareness of their plight.
Shortly after the event,
roundtable participant Ikponwosa Ero, a lawyer and advocacy officer at
the Canadian NGO Under the Same Sun, was appointed by the Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights as the first-ever "independent expert on the enjoyment of human rights by persons with
albinism."
Ero noted that on November 28th, 2015, the first Pan-African
Albinism Conference will take place in Dar Es Salaam with 28 African
countries represented, calling it "the largest gathering of this kind." It is another encouraging sign that the rights of people with albinism are
slowly being recognized.
Jon Beale, managing director of Standing Voice, a British NGO working to
stop human rights violations against marginalized groups, spoke about
his association's work in Tanzania, where, according to estimates, 98% of people with albinism die before the age of 35 due to skin
cancer.
Beale also had some good news to share. Standing Voice and
partner organizations has been distributing sunscreen,
protective clothing, wide-brimmed hats, and vital information about skin
cancer risks and prevention to people with albinism. In some regions of
Tanzania targeted by this program, incidence of skin cancer has dropped
by 83%.
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