(Video:
A Child's Poem-AIDs is My Name)
At the age of most of the kids in this video, their biggest worries should be getting their homework done and making the soccer team. Instead, many children their age are orphans, forced to become surrogate parents to their own younger siblings. The Senator and Teresa witnessed this first hand this week on their trip to Africa, as he explains in his letter.
A message from Senator Kerry on World Aids Day:
Dear KV,
I wanted to take a very quick break from my travels not to ask for money and not to talk politics, but just to pass on some thoughts about two big global challenges which need to be on our minds: HIV/AIDS and climate change.
This week, Teresa and I experienced an up close and personal reminder of how far the world has yet to travel to defeat HIV/AIDS. Talking with people in poverty stricken KwaNgcolosi near Hillcrest in Durban, South Africa, we saw both the most inspiring and the most heartbreaking realities of a global struggle to defeat a global scourge.
We met orphaned children left with no choice but to assume adult responsibilities, caring for their young brothers and sisters. We met single mothers scratching out subsistence in mud houses, their husbands lost to a horrific disease. I have to tell you, experiences like this have an impact on you.
I didn't want to wait until I got back to the United States to say something to you, because tomorrow is World AIDS Day - and it needs to be a day of action. Challenge Washington to stop blocking better educational efforts and stop putting ideology before science. Demand that American leadership help convince nations like South Africa not to repeat our shameful denial of HIV/AIDS in the 1980s - and to commit their countries to saving lives not saving face. There is no fixing a problem political leaders refuse to admit exists.
There's something else - and I'll have much more to say about this when I'm back. I'll be leading - with Senator Boxer - a Senate delegation to Bali in December to the global conference where work will start on a new international climate change treaty. We can't wait until we have a new president; we need to get moving now. The world simply can't solve these problems without American participation and leadership. Stay tuned.
Bottom line - these are the huge global issues that demand that America be America again, and that we lead by example - and that we lead now.
Sincerely,
John F. Kerry
World Aids Day is focused around the 2005-2007 message, "Stop Aids, Keep the Promise". Keeping the Promise is a familiar phrase to us here, and the core concept is the same. It's not enough to make a commitment, you have to follow through.
From the World Aids Campaign
website, it's noted that in June 2001 at the UN General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS, 189 countries agreed to the
Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS, which outlines a comprehensive response to the epidemic.
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