Guest guest Posted November 30, 2006 Report Share Posted November 30, 2006 Widow beats stigma to become role model -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- By Harold Ayodo Many rural women mark the World Aids Day with Mrs Celine Agutu as a role model who overcame stigma of the virus. Agutu, who contracted HIV/Aids from a brother-in-law who inherited her after the death of her husband, used farming to overcome discrimination in Siaya district. The mother of two is today happy to preach the gospel that farming and Anti-Retroviral Therapy saved her life. Agutu, 30, whose husband died in 1997 after a long illness is today a role model to the many HIV/Aids infected widows in East Ugenya sub-location. Her insistence on good agricultural practices has benefited widows, grandmothers and orphans infected and affected by the scourge. Her traditional vegetables, bananas, groundnuts and milk from her goat enabled her start a retail shop that serves Inungo Village. Agutu, who knew of her status in 2002 after her 'new' husband married a second wife, embarked on agriculture to survive. " I met Fidelis Wainaina — the founder of Maseno Inter-Christian Child Self-Help Group, a community-based organisation, who taught me how to farm, " she says. Wainaina was the winner of this year's Sh7.5 million African Green Revolution Yara Prize on food security. The Yara Prize was established to implement action in support of the Millennium Development Goals and entrench a Green Revolution in Africa. Agutu's children aged seven and 13 were malnourished before she started making ends meet. Today, however, her health has improved significantly after she started taking Anti-Retrovirals. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 30, 2006 Report Share Posted November 30, 2006 Widow beats stigma to become role model -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- By Harold Ayodo Many rural women mark the World Aids Day with Mrs Celine Agutu as a role model who overcame stigma of the virus. Agutu, who contracted HIV/Aids from a brother-in-law who inherited her after the death of her husband, used farming to overcome discrimination in Siaya district. The mother of two is today happy to preach the gospel that farming and Anti-Retroviral Therapy saved her life. Agutu, 30, whose husband died in 1997 after a long illness is today a role model to the many HIV/Aids infected widows in East Ugenya sub-location. Her insistence on good agricultural practices has benefited widows, grandmothers and orphans infected and affected by the scourge. Her traditional vegetables, bananas, groundnuts and milk from her goat enabled her start a retail shop that serves Inungo Village. Agutu, who knew of her status in 2002 after her 'new' husband married a second wife, embarked on agriculture to survive. " I met Fidelis Wainaina — the founder of Maseno Inter-Christian Child Self-Help Group, a community-based organisation, who taught me how to farm, " she says. Wainaina was the winner of this year's Sh7.5 million African Green Revolution Yara Prize on food security. The Yara Prize was established to implement action in support of the Millennium Development Goals and entrench a Green Revolution in Africa. Agutu's children aged seven and 13 were malnourished before she started making ends meet. Today, however, her health has improved significantly after she started taking Anti-Retrovirals. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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