Sunday, 1 December 2019

World AIDS Day- December 1, 2019

Bracelet of Hope

Mission:  To see the end of AIDS in Lesotho

How we do it?:  With events like the World AIDS Day Gala
Our 8th annual event last night was a smashing success



Who does it?:  The people of Guelph

Members of the Rotary Club of Guelph

Why do we do it?:  For the children of Lesotho

The children of the Larobane foster home


 And for a much better World

I cannot thank you enough!

Wednesday, 20 November 2019

Incredible support towards ending AIDS in our lifetime


I cannot thank you enough.  For fifteen years I have had remarkable support from my community and from the 1,000 people on my contact list who keep giving year after year.  We have supported hundreds of people in Lesotho whose lives have been made so much better because of that support.  We have treated thousands of people affected by HIV.  And now, we are poised to treat thousands more.

I feel your support.   I survive on your encouragement.   You make me understand, beyond a shadow of a doubt that people are, for the most part, kind and generous and concerned for their fellow man and the world as a whole.  It is these virtues combined with our intelligence, wisdom and collective power that will rise to meet the challenges our world faces.  I am convinced of that.

Thank you for helping me raise over $11,000 and all I had to do was cycle.

The Bracelet of Hope organization is an incredible community of courageous, smart and compassionate people.  I invite you to join that community as we strive to tackle international problems, joined together as one force for good.

Our World AIDS Day Gala is on November 30th.  There are only a few tables left.  Purchase tickets at braceletofhope.ca and become a part of a wonderful evening of celebration, inspiration and encouragement as we reach out to assist our family in Lesotho, Africa.




With heartfelt gratitude,

Anne-Maire


Anne-Marie Zajdlik, MD CCFP O.Ont, MSM
Founder of ARCH Clinic Guelph and Waterloo
Founding Director of Bracelet of Hope
Founder of Hope Health Centre

Bracelet of Hope
(226) 326-4673

Sunday, 3 November 2019

The end of AIDS and the FUTURE WE WANT, the future they deserve!






I am one person.  I can see the future we want.  I can also see the future that my children and my grandchildren will end up with if we do not take action.  I can see the effect it has on our children's mental and emotional health when they realize that we are not doing enough to create the future we want and the future they deserve.  

                                             

The United Nations has already put the strategic plan in place to achieve 17 remarkable goals by 2030.   They will give my children and your children the world they deserve.  They are beautiful goals.  There is a 16-year-old from Sweden who has given her life to helping achieve 6 of them:  7,11,12,13,14 and 15 with SDG #13 her main focus:  climate action.  I pray for her protection.


The world has made the most progress in achieving a key part of SDG number 3:  The End Of AIDS

 The incidence of HIV in sub-Saharan Africa (among adults aged 15 to 49) has declined by 37 %


37.9 million people worldwide are living with HIV;
23.3 million (62%) have access to antiretroviral therapy;
In 2,000 only 250,000 had access to treatment
Treatment stops transmission
Treat all 37.9 million and we end AIDS

We've got this!


Butha Buthe Lesotho:  Because of our efforts, he will survive

And meeting this goal will prove that we have all it takes, the intelligence, the tools, the technology and the will to meet every goal.  This is why I do what I do.  This is why I sometimes do crazy things like cycle 50 km with an injured knee and aching joints.  It is my responsibility and yours to give it all we've got to create the future they deserve.

Click here to donate to One Goal, One Hope, One Ride:
And get me to that $12,500 goal!

I am heading out for a bike ride!

Sunday, 27 October 2019

PROTECTION: Rescuing the AIDS Orphans of Africa




Aurelia's Day Orphanage 2009, Picture by Phiip Maher


This picture was taken in 2009.  I remember it well.  I am embracing a young boy who was orphaned by AIDS.  We are sitting in the schoolroom at Aurelia's day orphanage in Eshowe South, Africa.  Aurelia was a remarkable woman, a real leader in her community.  In 2009, we were thirteen years into the use of effective treatment for HIV in North America.  Those treatments were not yet widely available in South Africa and not available at all in rural communities.  (I gloss over this comment as if it is just a statistic but if I pause for just a second, if you pause for just a second, it describes a world that is unjust where the gap between the rich and the poor is obscene and unacceptable.  There are many such statements in this article.  Pause for just a moment to grasp them.)

At that time, there were 18 million AIDS orphans in sub-Saharan Africa.  There are still 16 million.  Aurelia was an older woman, I would guess in her late sixties.   Her twenty-something daughter had returned home to settle in while the ravages of HIV slowly took her life.  There were hundreds of 'sibling' families in the area; kids who had lost both parents to HIV, the oldest now assuming the role of parent to the younger siblings.  The community made efforts to keep these children in their family homes.  The property was the only thing between them and the streets but life for these kids was hell and for many, it remains so to this day.   These older siblings often had to give up going to school in order to find menial work or scavenge for food.

Aurelia had a brilliant idea.  With the support of a European organization, she built a day school beside the publically funded primary school.  The older kids now walked to school and on the way, dropped their preschool siblings off at Aurelia's day 'orphanage' which included a nursery for toddlers and infants and a kindergarten of sorts.  At the end of the day, the older siblings would join the staff at the orphanage, eat a meal, get help with homework and then walk off into the night, young children in tow, to an empty, parentless shack.

This was the first time I visited Aurelia's school.  I was there with a team of nine from Canada including two brilliant first-year university students who jumped in without hesitation and started throwing gleeful children into the air and onto their backs, rolling in the mud, tickling, giggling.  I could sense it was pure joy but that is not what I felt.

Big smile on my face as I held this now protected child in my arms; protected by an African woman whose innovative idea saved the lives of hundreds of kids, but I did not feel that smile or revel in the boisterous sound of joy flowing in from the playground.  I felt frozen, numb, nothing; my protected emotions buried deep.  I could not look into the camera.  You can fake a smile but eyes will tell all.  By 2009, I had watched too many of these children die of AIDS and I knew there was a good chance that this little guy had AIDS  too.  I am not sure if he was able to jump the massive canyon between being protected and being treated.  I am not sure if he is alive.

Aurelia passed away several years ago.  I heard from a South African friend that her funeral was packed and that many of the children she protected were in attendance.

I am 14 years into this work now.   Fourteen years of trying to make sense of a world that ignores it's most precious human resource, that allows millions of children to struggle to survive, to die alone, to face the world's most daunting challenges on their own.  I will never understand the hunger for wealth and power that drives so many of the world's leaders to recklessly grasp for more wealth and more power despite who is left to die, no murdered, in their path.  Because that is what this is.  The vulnerable, the weak, the marginalized, the children, that are 'disposed' of without a question or a second thought.  I will never understand.

What difference does it make when we raise funds to keep 51 kids alive in foster homes in Lesotho?  What difference does it make when we fund 1 mobile health unit that provides treatment to the most vulnerable?   But not millions just hundreds.  What difference does it make when our efforts fund two units, three units, how about six units?  Well, OK.  Six would allow us to reach 100,000 people.  Does that make a difference?  There are millions more.  Does it really make any difference?

It did to the orphans Aurelia protected and rescued.  It does to each and every one of the 51 orphans we love and care for.  It will to the thousands who will receive care when our next goal is reached.

I can't stand up against the greed, the corruption or the recklessness that has left billions of people on our planet without even the most basic of necessities, the most basic human rights.  I can't make even a tiny dent in the massive issues our world struggles with.  But we can.

Fourteen years into this work and I will continue.  I will carry your torch, Aurelia, and mine too.  I will pass our torches on to others who will pass theirs on too.  We will continue to rise up, to stand, to work for those that need us most.


Dr. Anne-Marie Zajdlik MD CCFP O.Ont. MSM
Founder Bracelet of Hope.

Click here to donate....because we are already working on Mobile Health Unit #2!
https://bit.ly/3305CiK








Saturday, 19 October 2019

Beautiful Lineo



In July of 2006, this newborn in Lesotho changed the focus of my life. The Canadian medical team who opened the first HIV/AIDS clinic in Lesotho, were able to rescue her.  I can still feel that soft, cozy, pink jacket she was nestled in.  I will never forget her sweet face.   As is the custom when orphaned children are abandoned and admitted to hospital,  we named her Lineo after the nurse who admitted her during the night.
Now 14 years later Bracelet of Hope is ready to reach out to and treat 9,000 more children like her.
From one child to 9,000:
That's the power of good people working together.
That's the power of partnerships.
That's the power of taking action because nothing is impossible when we work together.
Let's help put another mobile health unit on the ground in Lesotho!

We are are a third of the way toward my fundraising goal of $12,500 for the One Ride Cycle. Let's get to $6,000 and I will throw $1,000 into the pot.
Click here: https://bit.ly/3305CiK to donate.   You are marvelous!


Dr. Anne-Marie Zajdlik
Founder Bracelet of Hope

Sunday, 6 October 2019

One Goal, One Hope, One Ride







Well folks, 

I am at it again.  I am off to a late start this year.  While I had hoped to cycle 100 km for Bracelet of Hope again this summer, a knee injury early in the season has slowed me down considerably. The goal last year was $25,000.  We surpassed that and raised $32,000.  That’s generosity.  This year, my goal is $12,500; asking for less because I will be cycling much less.  I will donate $100 for every $1,000 donated.  Click here to donate:   https://bit.ly/3305CiK



There is something special about this $12,500, however.  It will be the first instalment on our second mobile health unit.  Bracelet of Hope and Solidarmed, a remarkable Swiss organization (solidarmed.ch), are now officially partnered.  Our goal is to have six mobile health units distributing primary care and HIV care to a remote district in our beloved Lesotho in the next three years with the first up and running by January of 2020.  

Together, we will treat 100,000 people in Lesotho. 

Details to follow in the coming weeks.  Suffice it to say that a fleet of these units will effectively end AIDS in Lesotho.  This is why we do what we do; to end AIDS in this beautiful African Kingdom…..because we can!

Click here to learn about Solidarmed:  https://bit.ly/2nLfb5W

Click here to learn about Bracelet of Hope:  braceletofhope.ca

I have my cycling shoes and my winter coat on and ready to go!  Thanks for your undying support.

Anne-Marie

Dr. Anne-Marie Zajdlik MD CCFP O. Ont, MSM
Founding director of Bracelet of Hope


Tuesday, 14 May 2019

The Tall Poppy Syndrome


I am on a purposeful path.  I believe we all are.

I was placed on this path as a child, searching for a God I knew must exist.

I am one of the lucky ones; a passion and purpose burned into my soul before a vocabulary had grown enough in my mind to define it.

It has been there for as long as I can remember.

I did not behave like a normal child or a normal teenager.  I needed to launch, as quickly as possible, into a world that needed thousands, no, millions of us to respond.  And respond we did.




A Foster Home in Rural Lesotho


The destructive power of AIDS will end and in the process prove to the world that humanity has an unlimited capacity for good should we find our moral compass and learn to work together with benevolence and respect for one another.

You under-estimated the power of the Spirit that laid this purpose deep within my soul.  In your mind, the tallest poppy in the group needed to go, be pruned to the point, not of equalization which is damaging in an of itself, but to the point of destruction.  All in order for you to create your own path, become the tallest poppy and bask in the light of your own glory. 

Thankfully, my goal was never to become a 'tall poppy".  My goal was to join the ranks of thousands who have fought and continue to fight for the end of AIDS.  Perhaps you have lost sight of this goal.

I managed your betrayal with every ounce of dignity and respect I could gather; respect for the power of evil, dignity that would protect me from defaulting to behaviours that would see me lash out in rage, and dignity that needed to be preserved for those whose lives would be most gravely affected should I  have chosen not to possess unfathomable restraint.

Your pride, your blind ambition set you on a path that put the lives we promised to protect at risk.  Only an utter lack of wisdom could have led you down this path.  But you have not changed my path or altered my course.  In fact, you have re-defined it, reshaped it into something that is bigger than I had imagined.  You have not distracted me from the focus, the goal, the end game.  You have made my focus more precise.  You have clarified my ambition.

And so, I give you my gratitude, for sharing the same path, for all that was accomplished in the sharing.  I give you my good will and a blessing of sorts because I will not underestimate you and the courage I know you possess, the wisdom you have lost but only briefly, and the dignity you give to others, the most vulnerable, those we fight for.




The Tall Poppy Syndrome