A cure for HIV

Is this the answer for so many millions of people suffering from HIV/AIDS? Is this possibly the greatest discovery in our generation? Read this article below from the Huffington Post

On the heels of World AIDS Day comes a stunning medical breakthrough: Doctors believe an HIV-positive man who underwent a stem cell transplant has been cured as a result of the procedure.

Timothy Ray Brown, also known as the "Berlin Patient," received the transplant in 2007 as part of a lengthy treatment course for leukemia. His doctors recently published a report in the journalBlood affirming that the results of extensive testing "strongly suggest that cure of HIV infection has been achieved."

Brown's case paves a path for constructing a permanent cure for HIV through genetically-engineered stem cells.

Last week, Time named another AIDS-related discovery to its list of the Top 10 Medical Breakthroughs of 2010. Recent studies show that healthy individuals who take antiretrovirals, medicine commonly prescribed for treating HIV, can reduce their risk of contracting the disease by up to 73 percent.

While these developments by no means prove a cure for the virus has been found, they can certainly provide hope for the more than 33 million people living with HIV worldwide. Alongside such findings, global efforts to combat the epidemic have accelerated as of late, with new initiatives emerging in the Philippines and South Africa this week.

Emmanuel Jal wants Peace

One of the criticism regarding the genocide in Rwanda is that the people in the west didn't know about it in time to do anything. Another statement made after the 1994 genocide was "never again". Unfortunately it is happening again not too far away in the Darfur region of Sudan. Although Darfur has been in the media in the last few years, it isn't gaining the awareness it deserves and the result is history repeating itself. 

Emmanuel Jal has just released a music video with support from celebrities such as Alicia Keys and George Clooney and cultural heavyweights like Kofi Annan and Richard Branson to create more awareness for this suffering region in Sudan. 

It's time for you to know. If you want to learn more, check out http://www.we-want-peace.com/ 

Invest in Education, One Loan at a Time

This is an excerpt from Beyond Profit Magazine's October issue. 

We are all well acquainted with microfinance 1.0, its successes and failures. What will microfinance 2.0 look like? Probably a lot like VIttana, a new platform that is taking microfinance to the next level, dispersing student loans in the developing world. 

While microfinance has done much to help its borrowers build businesses, give their children new opportunities, their children are now growing up, finishing high school, and thinking about college. The problem: student loans just aren't available in the developing world. Why? A loan to a college student bears no immediate promise of repayment. Vitanna hopes to demonstrate that students are as good a risk as any other microfinance borrower. 

It's no wonder that the Huffington Post named Vittana number one of their top 10 "game changers" in philanthropy! 

Vittana's website is at www.vitanna.org, and this is how it works: When you make a loan to a Vittana student, 100% of your funds go to the student. Using your loan, the student finishes college (or vocational school), gets a degree and then gets a job. When the student repays Vittana, Vittana repays you the full amount of your loan — if you lent $25, you are repaid $25.

This is a great model of microfinance thinking about whats next in a newly educated person. There are great websites such as Kiva that assist entrepreneurs with loans so they can change their lives by becoming financially independent and sustainable. But Vitanna is the next step in the development of these newly sustainable families. 

Egypt's sexual harassment 'cancer'

Below is an article that was published on the BBC website. What is your take on this? I agree with the line "behaviour of the crowd was characteristic of oppressed societies, where the majority identified with the oppressor." A cultural, moral change is needed where women are seen with more respect and behaviour like this is reprimanded. I have never lived in Egypt or in the Middle East so I cannot claim to know or understand everything about the culture but opinions are welcome.

Egypt's sexual harassment 'cancer'

By Magdi Abdelhadi
BBC News, Cairo

SEXUAL HARASSMENT IN EGYPT
Experienced by 98% of foreign women visitors
Experienced by 83% of Egyptian women
62% of Egyptian men admitted harassing women
53% of Egyptian men blame women for 'bringing it on'
Source: Egyptian Centre for Women's Rights

Sexual harassment of women in Egypt is on the increase and observing Islamic dress code is no deterrent, according to a survey published this week.

The Egyptian Centre for Women's Rights (ECWR) describes the problem as a social cancer and calls on the government to introduce legislation to curb it.

The findings contradict the widely held belief in Egypt that unveiled women are more likely to suffer harassment than veiled ones.

Participants in the survey were shown pictures of women wearing different kinds of dress - from the mini skirt to the niqab (full face veil) and asked which were more likely to be harassed. More than 60% - including female respondents - suggested the scantily clad woman was most at risk. But in reality the study concluded the majority of the victims of harassment were modestly dressed women wearing Islamic headscarves.

ECWR head Nihad Abu El-Qoumsan said that even veiled women who were victims of harassment blamed themselves.

Western women who took part in the study demonstrated a strong belief in their entitlement to personal safety and freedom of movement, she says, but this was totally absent among Egyptian respondents.

No-one spoke about freedom of choice, freedom of movement or the right to legal protection. No-one showed any awareness that the harasser was a criminal, regardless of what clothes the victim was wearing.

Shocking attitude

The centre is campaigning for a new law that clearly defines sexual harassment as a crime and makes it easier for women to report it in Egypt - women like Noha Ostath.

The young film-maker told the BBC she was repeatedly groped in broad daylight by a van driver in a Cairo traffic jam as she walked on the pavement. His behaviour made her so angry she ran after the van and held on to the side mirror to force the driver to stop so she could take him to a police station. She was equally shocked by the attitude of other passers-by. Some tried to dissuade her from going to the police - others blamed her for what she was wearing (a baggy sports outfit). In the end, after a tussle with the man that lasted for more than one hour, the strong-willed Ms Ostath dragged the man to the police station.  But even there, police officers refused to open an investigation and insisted on the presence of her father despite the fact that she is not a minor - she is 26.

Impudent allegation

After Noha's story was published in the Badeel daily, editor-in-chief Muhammad El Sayyed Said wrote that the behaviour of the crowd was characteristic of oppressed societies, where the majority identified with the oppressor. He blamed the increase in sexual harassment on what he said were "three decades of incitement against women" from the pulpits of some of Egypt's mosques.

"This verbal incitement is based on the extremely sordid and impudent allegation that our women are not modestly dressed. This was, and still is, a flagrant lie, used to justify violence against women in the name of religion."

The British foreign office says Egypt is one of the countries with the highest number of cases reported to embassy staff regarding sexual offences against visiting women. It warns them to be extra cautious in public places especially when alone because of the risks.

Ms Abou El-Qoumsan says Egyptians need to re-evaluate their value system and school curricula and to ensure that the rule of law prevails and prevents offenders and criminals walking free because of a breakdown of basic notions of right and wrong.

Thanks to surveys like this, one encounters an endless number of newspaper articles reflecting the feeling that Egypt is in the grip of a moral crisis. Perhaps nothing illustrates Egypt's loss of a moral compass than the responses of some men in the ECWR study.

Some said they harassed a woman simply because they were bored. One who abused a woman wearing the niqab said she must be beautiful, or hiding something.

Original Article can be found at: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/7514567.stm

The Girl Effect

The concept of the “Girl Effect” argues that if a girl is properly educated and uses her education to gain employment and a salary, it will effect factors beyond her immediate environment. Not only will it create a sustainable source of income for her and her family, it will raise her status in her family and community. An issue within impoverished communities is the intergenerational link, the challenge of escaping the cycle of poverty. By empowering a young woman and educating her, she can achieve her full potential. Viewing this, her children’s attitudes are affected and a new dynamic for the generational link is created. This girl also sets an example to the community by showing the potential an educated girl can have and motivating others to follow suit. 

If you are blown away by this video or idea or at least slightly impressed, check out the Girl Effect website to see how you can contribute

Personally, I think that by educating one poor girl, you can educate an entire community. Poor girls are seen as the ultra poor of the world, sometimes without access to health care. food, respect and so much less. Read Half the Sky by Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn to see how powerful these girls can really be. It was the best Christmas gift I got. 

about: why a new blog?

This blog has been set up in order to share what i find interesting in terms of social causes. there are three causes that i have an interest in - education, empowerment of women and HIV/AIDS. My interest in these issues was peaked earlier this year when I read two books: Half the Sky by Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn and 28: Stories of AIDS in Africa by Canadian author, Stephanie Nolen. I had always had an interest in social change and social causes in general, but they were just that - an interest. After reading these two books, my interest peaked into a passion. It has led to actually figure out what i want to do with my life - work in the non profit sector. I would ideally like to end up working for one or all of these causes in some sort of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) setting with a company or directly with an NGO or developmental organization to affect the change i think i can make.

However cheesy as all of that sounds, this blog has been started so that i could share with you (whoever you may be) interesting articles, videos, campaigns, ideas and causes that i come across. i firmly believe that inspiration and motivation can come from anything. i just hope that a video or article read her will inspire someone to create a social change in their community.