Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, December 26, 2001, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page A4
(Pbsrnirr
December 26, 2001
Opinion
Opinion articles do not necessarily reflect or represent the views
of
rtlanb (0bseruer
AIDS Tragedy Gets Lost in the Headlines
B ernice P owell J ackson
The terrorist attacks o f Sept.
11 and their afterm ath have up­
staged other tragedies in the
w orld’s attention, including the
on-going tragedy of HI V/AIDS
around the world.
Even the m arking o f Dec. 1
as W orld A ID S Day somehow-
got lost in the headlines o f the
grow ing violence in the M iddle
East, the bom bings in A fghani­
stan and the continuing mystery
o f anthrax in A m erica.
A lthough we in the U.S. tend
to think that AID S is a disease
w hich had been eradicated be­
c a u s e o f th e s u c c e s s o f
antiretroviral drugs over the past
decade, nothing could be fur­
th er from the truth.
Indeed, as A m erican public
health officials focus on anthrax
and the possibilities o f smallpox
infection, HIV/AIDS continues
to stalk poor people and people of
color. For exam ple, the African
Am erican com m unity, which is
about 12percentoftheU .S.popu­
lation, accounts for 47 percent of
the U.S. AIDS cases reported in
2000. Y oung women o f color are
particularly vulnerable, with al­
most one-third of new HIV-posi­
tive cases am ong women.
And if H IV /A ID S in the U.S.
has dropped o ff the radar screen
o f m ost A m ericans, one can be
sure that we have very little
understanding o f the im pact of
this disease around the world.
M ost o f us, for instance, have
no idea that there are 40 m illion
people in the w orld living w ith
HIV/AIDS, including 2.7 million
children. In this y ear alone, 5
million new people were infected
w ith the d isease and 3 m illion,
including m ore than h a lf a m il­
lion children, have died from it.
In Africa HIV/AIDS has taken
on a whole new meaning. Indeed,
a whole generation o f Africans
has been nearly wiped out. More
by
^Hortlanh
(Dbscruer
USPS 9 5 9 - 6 8 0
Established 1970
STAFF
E d it o r
in
C h ie f ,
P u b l is h e r
Charles H. Washington
E d i t o r
Larry J. Jackson, Sr.
B u s in e s s
M anager
Gary Ann Taylor
A sst . P ublisher
Michael Leighton
C opy
E d it o r
Joy Ramos
C r e a t iv e
D ir e c t o r
Paul Neufeldt
4 7 4 7 NE Martin Luther King. Jr. Blvd.
Portland, OR 97211
503-288-0033
Fax 503-288-0015
e-mail
w hom the poor nations o f A f­
rica rely on for public m anage­
m ent and core social services.
But the im pact o f the A ID S
epidem ic in A frica is not only
on those w ho are dying.
There are the m illions o f o r­
phans in a society, which in the
past alw ays cared for orphaned
children within the extended fam­
ily, but now finds no family left.
Too many people in the
world are living with their
heads in the sand when it
comes to HIV/AIDS.
- Bernice Pow ell Jackson, executive m inister.
U nited C hurch o f C hrist
than two-thirds of those who died
from AIDS this year were A fri­
cans. M illions more have died in
the past decade.
That m eans that 7 m illion A f­
rican farm ers have died since
1985, w ith another 16 m illion
expected to die, w hich tra n s­
lates to w idespread food sh o rt­
ages and very real hunger for
m illions o f people. T hat m eans
that m illions of school children
have lost their teachers to AIDS,
with hundreds of schools forced
to close. T hat m eans that large
num bers o f doctors and health
care w orkers are dying, as are
m any o f the sm all num ber of
highly skilled civil servants upon
How will these children be fed
and clothed and cared for by a
social service system that too
often finds its funds diverted to
pay o ff national debts still car­
ried by some developing nations?
How will these poor nations
get the estim ated 15 percent o f
their national budget needed to
im prove their health care when
their young adult generation has
been decimated? And what about
the tens of thousands of children
in A frica w ho are living with
HIV/AIDS and who surely will
die w ithout the necessary and
expensive medications?
H IV /A ID S has becom e the
biggest threat to the continent’s
developm ent in our lifetim e. All
o f w hich m akes even m ore in ­
credible the position of South A f­
rican President Thabo M beki who
still seem s to be in com plete d e ­
nial about h i n a t i o n and A ID S.
Early on in his presidency and
despite years o f scientific evidence,
he refused to acknow ledge that
HIV leads to AIDS and was slow
in getting his national public health
officials working on the crisis.
D esp ite P re sid e n t M b e k i’s
claim that A ID S is not a crisis in
S outh A frica, one in nine South
A fricans is living with AIDS and
a third o f the pregnant w om en in
som e provinces there have tested
positive for the virus. Yet, he still
refuses to m ake available to these
wom en the drug which might pre­
vent the unborn children from
getting the deadly disease.
U nfortunately, like P resident
M beki, too m any people in the
w oild are living w ith their heads
in the sand w hen it com es to
H IV /A ID S. T oo m any people in
the church, too m any people in
the m osque, too m any people in
public positions, too many people
in schools, too m any people in
prisons, too m any people ev ery ­
w here believe that H IV /A ID S
d o esn ’t im pact them .
HIV/AID S is a totally prevent­
able disease, but the first step
must be acknowledgm ent that the
world and our com m unities are in
a crisis and we can do som ething
about it. T hat w ould be a w on­
derful turn o f events in this new
century and this new millennium.
news@portlandobserver. com
subscription@portlandobserver.com
ads@portlandobserver. com
Help Fight Famine in Afghanistan
Interfaith Council of Greater Portland stirs compassion for the suffering with moral obligation to meet human needs
P ostmaster :
Send address changes to
Portland Observer
PO Box 3 1 3 7
Portland, OR 9 7 2 0 8
Periodical Postage
paid in Portland, OR
Subscriptions are
$60.00 per year
D EA D L IN E S
FOR ALL SUBMITTED METERIALS:
ARTICLES:
M onday by 5
A hum anitarian disaster is un­
folding in Afghanistan. The United
N ations estim ates millions of
people are threatened with star­
vation.
W ith the arrival of winter, the
situation is desperate. Thousands
have already perished, and the
w eakest that are most at risk are
the children and the elderly.
Leading international aid orga­
nizations describe a deteriorating
situation.
Food distribution, drastically re­
duced during the bombing, is now
further encum bered by political
instability and general chaos
sweeping the country. Shelter and
supplies are lacking. Banditry, loot­
ing, and factionalism continue to
prevent food delivery, and most
foreign aid workers cannot return
to the country, as their safety
cannot be assured.
As the Interfaith Council of
Greater Portland, we feel compas­
sion for the suffering of innocent
women, men, and children, and see
the moral obligation to meet human
need with adequate resources. The
imminentrisktomillionsofcivilians
must not be treated as incidental to
this conflict.
As leaders of the religious
com m unity, we have a moral
responsibility to address this
em ergency, and we call the
people of faith and o f good con­
science o f this state and o f this
nation to join us immediately in
supporting aid organizations in
their plea for the creation o f an
international security force to
protect aid convoys and aid work­
ers.
The cooperation o f the U.S.
government and their allies with
aid organizations is essential for
To The Editor:
Maranatha Church
Friday by noon
The Portland O bserver welcomes freelance subm is­
Building D ivine U nity in the C om m unity
sions. M anuscripts and photographs should be clearly
labeled and will be returned if accom panied by a self
addressed envelope. All created design display ads
becom e the sole property o f the new spaper and cannot
be used in other publications or personal usage without
the written consent o f the general manager, unless the
client has purchased the com position o f such ad. ©
1996THE PO R TLA N D O B SER VER A L L R IG H T S
RESERV ED , R E PR O D U C T IO N IN W H O L E O R IN
PA R T W IT H O U T PER M ISSIO N LS PRO H IBITED .
P o rtla n d
O b s e r v e r - -O r e g o n ’s O ld e s t
M ulticultural Publication—is a member o f the National
T.Allen & Daphne Bethel
N ew spaper A ssociation-Founded in 1885. and The
National Advertising Representative Amalgamated Pub­
lishers, Inc. N ew York. NY. and The West Coast Black
Publishers Association • Serving Portland and Vancouver.
advertise in
Service Times
u 1,1 |Jortla«h (Dhscvucv
503.288.0033
ads@portlandobserver.com
4
The Interfaith Council of
Greater Portland
p . m .
ADS:
The
relief efforts to be successful.
W e ask governm ent and non­
governmental organizations to pro­
vide sufficient monetary assistance
to independent aid organizations
working in the region, with special
attention given to the external refu­
gee situation in neighboring coun­
tries.
W e m ake these requests in the
spirit of this season's holy days that
the caring and hope they inspire
may also compel us to alleviate the
precarious situation in Afghanistan.
Sunday Morning - 10:30am
Sunday Evening - 6:00pm
(except 4th & 5th Sunday
and Holidays)
Wednesday N ight - 7:00pm
(Activities for the whole family)
All services at:
Maranatha Church
4222 NE 12th Avenue (12th SiSkidmore)
503-288-7241
Dr. T. Allen Bethel, Senior Pastor
Rev. Cynthia Brathwaite, Associate Pastor
I
Workplace Law
Will Save Lives
In ju st a few days, O reg o n ’s new
Sm okefree W orkplace Law goes into
effect.
P assed by the O regon L egislature,
it will protect an additional half-m illion
O regonians from the know n dangers
posed by secondhand tobacco sm oke
in 2002 and beyond.
O regon leads the w ay in the effort to
p ro te c t p e o p le fro m se c o n d h a n d
sm oke. W e jo in W ashington, C alifo r­
nia and M aryland as the only states in
the nation to restrict sm oking in the
w orkplace. W hen it goes into effect
Jan. 1, it is estim ated that 95 percent o f
em ployees across the state w ill be
covered by the new law.
If you are an em ployer in O regon, it
is im portant to learn how easy it is to
com ply. A nd from a larger perspective,
I believe it is an im portant service to
readers to dem onstrate the positive
im pacts on o u r society resulting from
O reg o n ’s new Sm okefree W orkplace
Law.
E lim inating a know n killer, second­
hand tobacco sm oke from the w ork­
place w ill save thousands o f lives and
m illions o f dollars. I appreciate your
help inform ing the public about this
im portant change in state law.
Dr. M el Kohn
Oregon State Epidemiologist