Promise Mthembu

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Sethembiso Promise Mthembu (born 1975) is a South African human rights activist and researcher, best known for her work on HIV/AIDS and women's rights. One of the first women in South Africa to publicly share that she was living with HIV, Mthembu is a founder of the Gugu Dlamini Action Group, the Young Woman's Dialogue, and the Her Rights Initiative.

Biography[edit]

Promise Mthembu was born in 1975 in Umlazi, South Africa.[1] She was raised in a strictly religious Catholic family.[2]

She became politically active as a teenager, participating in projects on AIDS awareness.[1][2] From 1992 to 1994, she served as president of her high school's Students’ Representative Council.[1]

Mthembu became pregnant at age 16 and gave birth to her daughter, Mbali, who has cerebral palsy.[1][3] Then, in her first year as a university student in 1995, found out that she was HIV-positive.

A few months after her diagnosis, she joined the National Association of People living with HIV/AIDS (NAPWA) and the National AIDS Convention of South Africa (NACOSA) in Durban. She publicly disclosed that she had HIV, becoming one of the first women in South Africa to take that step.[1][2]

Mthembu dropped out of school in the late 1990s; her parents refused to pay her university fees, on the assumption that she was going to die.[4] However, she eventually returned to school and went on to graduate with a bachelor's in political sciences and development studies, and a masters degree in development studies from the University of KwaZulu-Natal.[1] She has subsequently obtained a doctorate at the university.[5]

After she began attending meetings of people living with HIV/AIDS and publicly discussing her positive status, her partner became abusive. Despite the abuse, Mthembu felt pressured to marry him because he had already paid the bride price to her parents. However, she eventually managed to leave him, despite significant social pressure.[1][2][6]

In 1997, she went to the hospital for treatment of a cervical cyst. There she was found to have another gyeanecological problem. The doctors there would only treat her if she agreed to be sterilized, forcing her into an unwanted sterilization.[1][7][8]

After the murder of Gugu Dlamini, an activist who was stoned and stabbed to death after disclosing that she was HIV-positive, Mthembu founded the Gugu Dlamini Action Group, which evolved into the regional branch of the Treatment Action Campaign. She went on to work for the Treatment Action Campaign, focusing on mother-child transmission of HIV and serving on its National Executive Committee.[1][4][9] In 2004, she established the Young Woman's Dialogue, a forum for HIV-positive women in Namibia and South Africa.[7]

After moving to the United Kingdom, she continued this work at the International Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS.[1][10][7] Later, she returned to South Africa and worked at the University of the Witwatersrand's Reproductive Health and HIV Research Unit, and co-founded the Her Rights Initiative in 2008.[1][3][11][12][13]

Mthembu has fought for equal treatment access for people living with HIV/AIDS, and against the kind of forced sterilization of HIV-positive women that she experienced.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Mbali, Mandisa (2012). "Mthembu, Promise". Dictionary of African biography. Emmanuel Kwaku Akyeampong, Henry Louis, Jr. Gates. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-538207-5. OCLC 706025122.
  2. ^ a b c d Mthembu, Promise (1998). "A Positive View". Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity (39): 26–29. ISSN 1013-0950. JSTOR 4548016.
  3. ^ a b My Dream Is to Be Bold: Our Work to End Patriarchy. Feminist Alternatives. Cape Town: Pambazuka Press. 2011. ISBN 978-1-906387-92-1. OCLC 759159884.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  4. ^ a b Richter, Marlise (2001). "Aiding intolerance and fear: The nature and extent of AIDS discrimination in South Africa". Law, Democracy & Development. 5 (2) – via ProQuest.
  5. ^ "When Buyers of Sex Pay the Legal Price, Everyone Wins". AllAfrica. 24 July 2017.
  6. ^ Haddad, Beverley (November 2002). "Gender violence and HIV/AIDS: A deadly silence in the church". Journal of Theology for Southern Africa. 114 – via ProQuest.
  7. ^ a b c Corcoran, Bill (20 July 2020). "Sterile future for women with HIV". Irish Times.
  8. ^ Tallis, Vicci (2012). Feminisms, HIV and AIDS: Subverting power, reducing vulnerability. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-00579-3. OCLC 793007676.
  9. ^ "Status of Women". Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity (46): 89–92. 2000. doi:10.2307/4066285. ISSN 1013-0950. JSTOR 4066285. S2CID 142831717.
  10. ^ Mbali, Mandisa (2004). "A Postcard from Bangkok: Reflections of Gender and Sexuality in Contemporary, Global AIDS Activism". Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity (62): 106–113. ISSN 1013-0950. JSTOR 4066686.
  11. ^ "Women treated for HIV sterilized against their will". New York Beacon. 2 July 2009.
  12. ^ Serrao, Angelique (4 June 2010). "Hospitals said to be sterilising HIV+ women". The Star.
  13. ^ "Women Living With HIV, Still Waiting On Redress After 'Forced Sterilisations'". AllAfrica. 26 November 2020.