House of Children’s House of Hope facility needs donations
to continue in Addis Ababa
A few days before Yewoinshet Masresha left Ethiopia for a
fundraising tour in Canada, an HIV-positive girl too weak to walk was brought
to the House of Hope, her arms draped over the people supporting her.
Masresha thought she would die within a couple of days, but
when she checked on the girl the next morning, she was shocked to see her up
and making coffee. The House of Hope staff said she had got out of bed and come
down to dinner the night before. When she asked the girl what had made her walk
down to dinner after being too weak to support herself at lunch, she said that
she was inspired by the happy people around her who had been healed and were
now taking care of other children with the disease.
When Masresha, the founder and executive director of Hope
for Children, established the House of Hope in the Ethiopian capital of Addis
Ababa, it was as a hospice where people with HIV and AIDS could go to die in
relative peace and comfort. But as anti-retroviral therapy became more widely
available and subsidized by the Ethiopian government, it increasingly became a
place of healing and hope. More and more patients are being nursed back to
health and returning to their families.
But the House of Hope is in danger of disappearing, and
Masresha is hoping to save it. Now on a fundraising tour of Western Canada, she
spoke in Vancouver earlier this week.
The House of Hope’s landlord died earlier this year and his
family wants to sell the property, so Masresha is trying to raise $60,000 to
buy it from them. Her organization is funded by the Enderby, B.C.-based charity
Partners in the Horn of Africa and other non-profits in the U.S. and Australia.
The House of Hope is needed, Masresha said, because HIV and
AIDS patients are sometimes neglected by their families, who are uneducated and
have misconceptions about how the disease is spread. Hope for Children workers
try to combat this stigma by conducting home visits and talking directly with
families, hosting coffee gatherings to discuss the issue and teaching teens
about sexual health and HIV transmission.
This is no easy task in a country where sex and AIDS are
both taboo subjects. Families used to send dogs to chase these workers when
they tried to broach the topics, Masresha said.
But things have changed since she founded Hope for Children
in 2000 to care for eight HIV-positive children. Her organization now reaches
13,000 kids in 50 villages through its programs and cares for 1,050 directly.
It exists primarily to care for children whose parents have died of
AIDS-related complications.
As the oldest of 13 children, Masresha has plenty of
experience with caregiving. Her mother had a baby about once a year, and by age
five, Masresha already had four younger siblings. Her parents did not want her
to go to school, but relented after she cried for two days. She finished
elementary school in four years and even went to high school at a time when
sending girls to school at all was still seen as a costly novelty.
Then she went to jail. Masresha spent three years in
solitary confinement, sleeping on a bug-infested mattress in a room too small
to fully extend her legs in and only seeing the sun for five minutes a day. Her
crime? Turning down a marriage proposal from an army officer. But she could
talk to other prisoners through holes in the wall and they were able to teach
each other things, so her mind stayed engaged and she never lost hope.
She became a social counsellor for a Catholic organization
working with HIV and AIDS patients before anti-retroviral therapy became widely
available.
“They were dying, and when they die, they hold my hand and
say ‘Look, I am dying. Could you please take care of my children?’”
It was there that Masresha saw the need for an organization
to care for those being left behind.
She now oversees a group home for 84 such children.
“Now the first two kids are going to university,” she said
proudly. Three more, all girls, will follow in September.
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