Strictly Beza: Dancing in Ethiopia
September 2014 - Today's young people are the first generation that has never known a world without HIV and AIDS. In Ethiopia, half of the population is under the age of 24. Among the older generation, cultural attitudes towards sexual health issues are making it difficult for young people to arm themselves with the knowledge they need to keep themselves safe.
One enterprising group of youngsters in Addis Ababa, the BEZA Anti-AIDS youth group, are determined to use their combined talents for music and dance to get messages about HIV prevention across to the wider public, and in particular to their peers. The youth group members, aged between 15 and 20, have founded a dance troupe called Addis Beza, which means ‘to live for others’. Addis Beza perform regularly in popular public spots around Addis Ababa, using the occasion to hand out leaflets and encourage people to get tested for HIV free of charge. This way, people can know their status and be treated accordingly. The Beza youth group is one of just hundreds across Ethiopia supported by Alliance Linking Organisation, Organization for Social Services for AIDS (OSSA). Its activities are supported by an ambitious multi-country project called Link Up, managed by a consortium of international and national non-governmental organisations led by the Alliance (see below).
We’re going to save ourselves first, and then become a shelter for others who need protection. The mobile testing clinics are organised by OSSA, Ethiopia’s largest NGO working on HIV. The clinics attract up to a thousand people over the course of five days. If somebody is found to be HIV positive, they are referred to a local health facility for access to treatment, care and support. At the youth club centre, members train long hours to familiarise themselves with the complex traditional dance moves. They also take it in turns to offer a drop in counselling service for young people and give out free condoms. Habtegoregies Hailu, better known as Habte, is the club’s chairman. He knows that most of his members have had no sex education at school or at home, and is determined to help them navigate through their teenage years. “We’re going to save ourselves first, and then become a shelter for others who need protection,” he says. “This is the start not the end for us, helping protect young people from HIV.” The club’s regular debate session is always well attended by members and this month’s topic - What is the right age to start having sex? – has drawn quite a crowd. Opinion is fiercely divided but everybody gets the chance to express a view.
“After I joined Addis Beza, I got lots of benefits,” he continues. “That benefit is not financial but a change in my life. Although I joined for the dance I learnt lots of things. I did not have self-awareness until now and it has helped me to teach other people what I have learned. There is a big difference between the old me and the new me.” Samson has seen first hand the tragedy that HIV can hold for young people if they do not have the knowledge they need to understand how to manage the virus. His friend Abel took his own life on discovering that he was positive, too frightened to reveal his diagnosis to his family for fear of being rejected. “If you catch HIV it means that everyone will discriminate against you,” Samson says. People will think that you can’t live with anyone, that it is an alien disease. [Before joining the youth group] the opinion I had is that it’s not even possible to eat together. Our families used to say that it's a punishment from God. I did not have any knowledge and didn't know its methods of transmission, but I have learned how to practice safe sex, when I should start sex, what I need to do after sex if a woman gets pregnant.” Over the course of the next three years, the Link Up project will reach more than one million young people aged 15-24 by implementing tailored HIV and sexual and reproductive health interventions to increase uptake and access to services and reduce unintended pregnancies, new HIV infections and HIV-related maternal mortality. In Ethiopia the initiative aims to reach 140,000 young people to improve their sexual health. With young people aged 15-24 accounting for 40% of new HIV infections globally, Samson and his fellow dancers are playing their part as duty bearing citizens. “I want to make Ethiopian culture known to the world,” he says proudly. “Here we say that we are the light in a big pot; we want to be the light for others.” Link Up runs from January 2013 to January 2016. It is funded by the Government of the Netherlands’ Ministry of Foreign Affairs (BUZA) through its Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights (SRHR) Fund (HIV/AIDS Alliance September 2014). |