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June Cross

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A Pregnant Legacy

Posted: 08/31/2012 7:10 pm

Instead of planning her daughter's high school graduation, she was planning her own funeral. Her name was Chamalla. She was 32 years old, and she was dying of AIDS.

AIDS has become one of the top killers of black women in their childbearing years, particularly in the American South. This grim statistic led me to South Carolina; and, there, I found a family that has several family members living with HIV. They developed the disease in a variety of ways: from being born with it, to having unprotected sex, to intravenous drug use.

While most of the money spent to battle the AIDS pandemic goes abroad or gets spent in urban areas, little attention has focused on women in out of the way places like Bamberg and Barnwell Counties in South Carolina. South Carolina leads the nation for heterosexual transmission of the disease. Rural counties form the epicenter in new HIV transmissions. Most of those now living with the disease are in their twenties, which means they contracted the virus as teenagers, in a state that stresses "abstinence-only" education. That's a legacy of a prison system that locks young men away but avoids educating about safe sex, preaches abstinence over condom distribution, and which criminalizes the disease -- if you have HIV and you do not tell your partner, you can go to prison in South Carolina.

When I met Chamalla at the funeral of another relative who had also died of AIDS, I had one question on my mind: why these strong, take no bullshit black women seemed unable to negotiate condom use with their partners.

She looked like a skeleton: her thin, close-cropped hair crowning a still-young face, her almond eyes protruding behind glasses that had been designed when she had more weight. She sat in a wheelchair, at some distance from the rest of the family. She told me that she had been infected back when she was 17, by the 35-year-old father of her first child. She was on Medicaid, but working with her doctors to adjust the drug cocktail that would keep her alive had proved onerous. Antiretrovirals, the drugs that keep AIDS patients alive, have serious side effects, among them bloating, dizziness, nausea, and disorientation.

"I just don't want to live like this," she said, and told me that she had finally stopped taking her meds and was "just waiting" for the disease to run its course. Her mother stood by her side. I turned from Chamalla to ask her how she could just stand by and watch her daughter commit slow suicide.

"It's her decision," responded in a flat voice. Then, she added something that made my heart drop. She told me that her daughter's father was also her uncle. In other words, Chamalla was the child of incest.

But when Chamalla's mother told her family about the rape, her mother said she had brought it on herself.

Rep. Todd Akin might say it wasn't a "legitmate rape." But whatever you call it, Chamalla's mom was clear about the consequences. She had been depressed for years; and her daughter ran away from home when she learned the truth. Chamalla ended up living with a 35-year-old man who fathered her child -- and gave her AIDS.

"If you're not willing to talk about incest," Chamalla's mother said, "you're never going to get to the real problem with HIV."

After I heard Chamella's story, I went back to other women whose lives I've been following as part of my documentary, mostly advocates working to educate others about HIV prevention. They paused, nodded, then seemed relieved to unburden themselves. An uncle. An older brother. A father. A family friend. Their boyfriends. Raped as children, very often raped again as young women. No wonder they can't negotiate anything behind closed doors. They have been taught that when it comes to sex, there is no negotiation. Here was the answer to my question about why black women couldn't negotiate safe sex.

My heart aches, and I seethe with an underlying rage. Black women are by no means the only victims of incest and rape -- in fact we are only slightly more likely than white women to experience sexual assault. According to the Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network (RAIIN) 52 percent of male rapists are white. But nearly half of all victims are under 18.

For these women, recovery may never arrive. Women who survive sexual assault are more than 26 times more likely to turn to drugs; 13 times more likely to abuse alcohol. That makes them even less likely to demand that their partners practice safe sex.

It is a legacy of pain and pregnancy that travels from generation to generation; and increasingly, a death sentence. AIDS has become one of the top killers of black women in their childbearing years.

Chamalla had already planned her funeral when I met her. She died two weeks later.

It would not take a lot to help women like her who find themselves isolated by their families: a coordinated medical response; a prevention program; a support network; a feeling that a community cared. But that doesn't seem to be happening. Instead, shame, blame, and a politicized conversation about health care costs buries them out of sight.

 
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Instead of planning her daughter's high school graduation, she was planning her own funeral. Her name was Chamalla. She was 32 years old, and she was dying of AIDS. AIDS has become one of the top ki...
Instead of planning her daughter's high school graduation, she was planning her own funeral. Her name was Chamalla. She was 32 years old, and she was dying of AIDS. AIDS has become one of the top ki...
 
 
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05:18 PM on 09/03/2012
Very sad.....
10:54 AM on 09/03/2012
ms. understood, you're right. Everyone wants to think of black women with AIDS as - "other than." Other than me. Over there. Not in my community does this happen. Well, I think incest happens in every community, and with the latest numbers showing 80% of the new cases in South Carolina being among black women, we have to be concerned. robxdion is right - the revolving doors of incarceration feed this. Any woman who has a man in prison, or recently released, needs to go get tested if intimacy has been unprotected. It takes 30 days for the virus to show up in the blood stream. There's so much we don't know. Be safe.
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robXdion
Because someone has to say it.
11:40 AM on 09/03/2012
Prison in of itself doesn't feed this alone. CHOICES are made for prison to even be a factor. The one thing I left out (and this is so sensitive it's virtual sacrilege to mention it - so it's never touched) is beyond the fact that some BW simply like unsavory men with suspect backgrounds and standards (aka "thugs" and charismatic effeminate guys) they also like unprotected sex (google Pastor Craig Lamar Davis). This gets left out and people like to pretend this disease is transmitted by mere groin contact or something. These men are able to corral several women at once even though they've just got out of prison or may connect on an emotional level to the needy because their antics are so "exciting". Not blaming victims because there are several assumed monogamous relationships were this happens. But MANY of the cases do stem from the aforementioned scenarios. But if certain choices and notions aren't addressed for reasons of pride and discretion it'll only get worse.
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mombabytiger
Looking into the heart of an artichoke.
12:10 AM on 09/02/2012
This is such a sad story on so many levels. Obviously this dear woman lived in a community where early pregnancy, rape and incest are commonplace occurrences. In that environment, AIDS is pretty predictable. I am deeply sorry for this family,
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insanity defense
If your head is in the toilet, Don't blow bubbles
04:38 PM on 09/01/2012
RIP, Chamalla. This sad story brought my dear aunt to mind. She had breast cancer and underwent one series of chemo therapy after another. When she was very thin and bald, she said " Enough."
She was never given a guarantee that these treatments would make her well and decided to go to a Hospice, where she passed 6 weeks later at 50 years old. Sometimes the treatments are worse than the disease. I also wonder why our country is so generous in trying to help other countries fight AIDS, but when it comes to our people, many are left to die for lack of Insurance. I have a big problem with that. What can we citizens do to help? Peace!
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robXdion
Because someone has to say it.
04:05 PM on 09/01/2012
The sickening thing is so many black males being rotated through prisons see nothing wrong with bisexual liaisons in and out of lockup. You have instances where one guy gets out from County and has 3-8+ female partners. No one knows what he's been doing inside, but his 'bad boy' record is so appealing. And then we end up with these stories.
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ms.understood
pro-choice | liberal | womanist
10:38 AM on 09/01/2012
this is so sad all the way around. black women need to take more responsibility for their bodies, period. sex is and should be for both parties, not just for the benefit of one. and i'm saying this as a person who has also been a victim of child molestation.

and this has no comments because black women's lives are not valued within the black community. stories like this are not going to receive the coverage nor the verbal attention that the Trayvon Martin case receives in mass media or in barbershops and salons. nor will it be spoken about in the staples of the black community: the church. until all of this changes, stories like this will continue to have a devastating impact on our lives.
05:24 PM on 09/03/2012
very true, i always wondered though why dont black women take to the streets like white women did in the 60's-present and demand equal treatment, also to remind america they are part of this society and are equals ?
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ms.understood
pro-choice | liberal | womanist
07:13 PM on 09/03/2012
because culturally, they will be accused of being lesbians or man-haters.  black men, for the most part, have a very difficult time taking personal inventory without feeling it's a direct affront to their manhood.  it's silly all the way around.  but if black women find it difficult to negotiate condom use within the confines of a relationship/bedroom, then coming out in the streets for this isn't going to happen...but, it should.