Be a Guardian Angel this Holiday
“I had lost hope and was doing nothing but roaming around the village,” said Joyce. The second of three children, Joyce’s mother died from HIV/AIDS when she was 6. After her mother’s death she lived with her father for a while. “He never provided any basic needs for us,” she said, “he was drunk all the time and beat us.” As a result, Joyce and her siblings went to the village to live with their 100-year-old grandmother who had no means to support them.
CAFI found Joyce collecting mangoes to sell for income. Through CAFI’s Smart Girls program, Joyce was given a scholarship to attend vocational school where she learned knitting and tailoring. Upon graduation, she found a job in a nearby town.
“Of the many girls who need help, why me?” she said. “There are many people who want to do this but don’t get the opportunity. I’m now a responsible person. I don’t ask for money from a man. I am working very hard so I can take care of my siblings and my grandmother.”
Joyce is one of thousands of HIV impacted adolescent girls in sub-Saharan Africa.
Just last year more than 80 percent of new HIV infections were in adolescent girls. You can be a Guardian Angel to vulnerable girls like Joyce. Your support will enable them to learn skills that equip them to earn a living for themselves and to help others.
“In the future I want to start up a personal business to give a chance to other vulnerable girls in my village to learn what I have been given a chance to learn,” Joyce said. One of her teachers commented, “Joyce is going to be a great woman of intelligence. Despite her poor family background she is a very dedicated and hopeful girl. She listens to advice and sets goals for herself, which I am sure she will achieve.”
This holiday please become a Guardian Angel and help Joyce and other girls like her.
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Anita M. Smith, President
Children’s AIDS Fund International