
Joyce, 11 months, is just starting on ARVs. Children are not only at risk of inheriting their mothers' HIV status, but also their hunger, poverty and lack of education. Credit: Caritas/Michelle Hough
By Michelle Hough, communications officer
Thabang Society, Parys, South Africa
Watch a film on the effects of AIDS in Swaziland and South Africa.
Sarah* has the face of a young girl, but at the age of 29 she has already been raped, has lost her husband to suicide and has lived through the deaths of her three young children to AIDS-related diseases. She herself also has HIV.
None of her children survived beyond the age of five. One died at just three months old. Two of her children died on her back as she took them to hospital.
After her first child died, Sarah didn’t want any more children, but her husband was abusive and left her with no choice but to get pregnant again, even though there was a risk the children would have HIV.
“Sometimes I just sleep because I feel so hungry that I don’t know what else to do,” says Sarah when I meet her at the Thabang Society therapy and counselling centre, two hours away from Johannesburg.
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