Pubdate: Sun, 24 Sep 2000
Source: Jakarta Post (Indonesia)
Copyright: The Jakarta Post
Contact:  P.O. Box 85 Palmerah Jakarta 11001
Fax: (62) (21) 5492685
Website: http://www.thejakartapost.com
Author: Mehru Jaffer

HIV POSITIVE PEOPLE TELL HOW IT IS FOR THEM

JAKARTA (JP): For his 17th birthday earlier this year, "Zorro" got a 
surprise. Not a nice one, though: he discovered he was infected with the 
Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). It was a double tragedy for his family; 
his brother, a year older then, him is also HIV positive.

"I was devastated for a whole week. My dream of training to be a pilot was 
gone with the wind. I wanted to take a drugs overdose and die.

"My parents were paralyzed with grief. Every time my mother looked at me 
she burst into tears. I was sorry that I had been lying and cheating since 
I was 14 years old. Suddenly I was so sad and full of regret ...," the 
teenager told The Jakarta Post at Wisma Arjuna in Bogor, where 67 
residents, including six women, are undergoing an intensive drug addiction 
recovery program.

Joyce Djaelani Gordon, co-director of Harapan Permata Hati Kita Foundation 
which runs Wisma Arjuna, warns that HIV/AIDS has reached epidemic 
proportions in Indonesia and that the country is not equipped to address 
the challenge. Joyce used to work with the problems of HIV and AIDS, but a 
few years ago she devoted herself to the root cause of it, which she 
insists is drug abuse.

Joyce explained that under the influence of drugs people are more likely to 
have indiscriminate sex, something which causes the spread of HIV/AIDS. 
Addiction costs drug abusers a lot of money, which invariably leads to 
crime and violence.

To wipe out drug abuse would be to wipe out all the other problems that 
emerge as a result of it, she said. She regretted that there remained 
reluctance to acknowledge the connection between HIV/AIDS and drug abuse in 
the country.

Very little is known here of the complex subculture of drug users and 
addicts. Intensive HIV/AIDS programs in Indonesia have so far concentrated 
on commercial sex workers. Little thought has been given to hepatitis C. 
Sex related problems like unwanted pregnancies, sexually transmitted 
diseases as well as HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C are very prevalent within the 
drug abusers community. Drug-related crime and violence is another rapidly 
increasing problem.

Zorro joined the center's drugs recovery program a few months ago. He has 
never had sex in his life and is HIV positive. Benjie, 24, started having 
sex at the age of 14 with his girlfriend, who was 15 years old at the time. 
He strongly suspects that he got hepatitis C, a disease that leads to 
cancer of the liver, because he did not use clean needles when injecting 
drugs. Once he spent Rp 4 million in a month on drugs and alcohol. When he 
ran short of money he sold his television set, CD player and anything else 
of value he could find in the house.

The number of drug abusers and addicts in Indonesia is estimated to be 1.5 
million and continues to increase every day, especially among young people. 
Statistics also show 10 percent of all intravenous drug users are HIV 
positive, while 70 percent are inflicted with the hepatitis C virus.

To get a glimpse into the world of junkies, a study of 57 drug addicts was 
completed last December by residents at Wisma Arjuna. Each addict was asked 
to think about their personal experience of living within the drug community.

The introduction to the study summed up the addicts feelings: "Yes, we live 
in worlds you do not see. We hide from you, lie to you, we cheat and steal 
from you, threaten you, we manipulate you to get what we want and we often 
tell you only what you want to hear. And whenever we attempt to tell you 
the truth you do not listen ..."

The most useful purpose the study served was to make participants realize, 
perhaps for the first time in their lives, that they were not society's 
scum, and that their experience and opinions matter and could help save a 
generation of young people from damage. It is with the same idea -- trying 
to prevent others from making the mistakes -- that more and more people are 
shedding their shame and going public with their personal experiences.

Zorro says that he is not afraid of death anymore. He is prepared to let 
his body perish when ever the time comes. In the meantime, he is working as 
a peer counselor where he gives as much information to as many people as 
possible about the dangers of drug abuse.

Wisnu, 34, is a marketing executive and gay. In 1994 he was told that he 
was HIV positive. Today, he feels happy and healthy and spends his day 
doing what has to be done, one moment at a time. However, initially he 
lacked the confidence to look life in the eye. When he realized he was HIV 
positive he felt it to be the end of the world.

"I went into self-denial. I was disappointed, sad and scared," Wisnu said. 
But after agonizing for a month he was sure that he was not being punished 
for being gay. He said he should have been more careful in the past when he 
was 'intimate' with people. He said that now that his body was ill had to 
treat it just like he would any other disease, he said.

Wisnu considers himself to be a good Muslim. He prays regularly and feels 
close to God. He does not feel that He is angry with him for being gay. 
Once he got his thoughts in order his attitude became positive and he 
stopped suffering. He traces the source of the strength he enjoys today 
back to his family. The third child of six, he realized he was different 
from his brothers and sisters very early in life. He feels that his 
parents, both of whom are dead, knew it too, but they never made him feel 
odd or unloved. This gave him strength to complete his schooling and to 
support himself through university.

"Once people are economically independent I realize that few in society 
dare to push them around," Wisnu said.

But, unlike Wisnu, many other gay and HIV positive people still feel 
reluctant to talk about their problems publicly, especially women, due to a 
host of reasons like guilt, hopelessness, suppressed anger and fear -- all 
of which are negative emotions that play havoc with an already fragile 
immune system.

Immune

HIV is said to be as old as mankind itself. The immune system, which is 
responsible for defending the health of the body, collapses when the blood 
cells protecting it from germs begin to gradually deteriorate. AIDS appears 
when the presence of HIV in the body weakens the body's ability to provide 
immunity against infections attacking it from the outside.

However, treating those afflicted with the virus like outcasts is 
unnecessary as infection can only spread through blood transfusions, 
genital fluids or saliva. A healthy person will need to consume over one 
gallon of infected saliva to get the virus. Many HIV positive people have 
said dying does not bother them so much, but being treated like an 
untouchable while they are still alive does.

"The HIV virus certainly does not mean a death warrant," said Putu Oka 
Sukanta, author of Kerlap-Kerlip Mozaik (Sparkling Mosaic), a recently 
released book on AIDS.

An acupuncturist, Putu has been practicing alternative medicine since 1975 
and is still searching for a cure for the virus.

Chris W. Green, an AIDS activist since 1991 and editor of Wartaids, a 
monthly AIDS support newsletter, knows of patients who have been turned 
away from hospitals and doctors who will not treat those infected by the virus.

He would like to see real changes taking place here at different levels of 
society, including heads of family and government and religious leaders. 
What people like Chris and Joyce, and a growing number of people like them, 
have in common is their refusal to deal with HIV and AIDS as a moral problem.

For they have found that here is a condition that seldom discriminates 
between men, women or children, the god fearing or the atheist or different 
nationalities, and one that needs to be treated with the ruthlessness that 
it deserves.
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