Join On The Issues
Receive information and updates via email.
On You Tube
Visit On The Issues Magazine's YouTube ChannelSend us links to your favorite, progressive videos to add to our favorites
Featured Video:

![]() May 2008 |
BOOK REVIEW: AIDS, Women, Africa
|
![]() |
No Place Left to Bury the Dead: Denial, Despair and Hope in the African AIDS Pandemic |
Nicole Itano’s No Place Left to Bury the Dead zeroes in on three communities in Botswana, Lesotho and South Africa and scrutinizes the dynamics that make females vulnerable to the AIDS virus. Her findings are gripping.

Nicole Itano
A professional journalist, Itano spent years with the women she profiles and confesses that she often acted less like a reporter and more like a friend. When a small amount of cash is needed, for example, she doles it out. This in no way tarnishes the book but instead gives readers deep insights into the lives she documents.
The first person Itano introduces is Adeline, a college student in Lesotho who fell in love with a man she later learned was HIV-positive. At first, Adeline blames her exhaustion and illnesses on a grueling schedule that has her juggling work and school with care of an infant son. But after two years of declining health, she finally heeds her doctor’s suggestion and takes an AIDS test.
Adeline’s story moves from despair to activism and showcases the political denial that kept Lesotho’s government from slowing the pandemic. The largely Catholic country, Itano writes, refused to promote condoms and waited until 2003 to open its first no-cost screening center. By that point, she reports, life expectancy had fallen to 36 years and an estimated 25 percent of Lesotho’s population was infected.
The issue of culture is also addressed. Although polygamy is officially banned, in practice most Sotho men have both wives and mistresses. “According to a contemporary saying,” Itano writes, “a man is a pumpkin, with many vines stretching in different directions. A woman, in contrast, is a cabbage; she stays closed up, waiting for her man to come home.”
On top of this, appropriate healthcare is often unavailable. “When Adeline gave birth in 2001,” Itano continues, “no hospital in Lesotho routinely offered HIV tests to pregnant women, much less antiretroviral drugs. The use of antiretrovirals to prevent the transmission of the virus from mother to child was well proven by 2001, but only a tiny number of HIV-positive pregnant women had access to it.”
It’s an enraging, shameful story that extends far beyond Lesotho’s borders.
There’s South Africa, for one, with approximately five million HIV-positive people. Everywhere Itano travels, elders scramble to care for orphaned children and she is once again shocked by governmental inaction and the taint that surrounds the disease. Religious resistance to condom use, alongside rumors that AIDS is an effort to reduce the Black population, compound the crisis by stalling discussions of safer sex practices.
Thankfully, Botswana offers a more enlightened approach. The first African nation to offer free antiretroviral drugs to people with AIDS, government leaders openly encourage testing, discuss condom use, and are respectful of PWAs. Although the program did not begin until 2000—when an estimated 40 percent of adults were infected—it’s progress.
That said, stigma persists and many Botswanans refuse to be evaluated or examined.
The women Itano introduces are rarely model citizens—some drink too much while others fail to follow medical protocols—but they offer an insightful look into the difficulties endemic to challenging societal norms and shifting human behaviors. While the book could have been more political—lambasting pharmaceutical companies and international aid programs that require promotion of abstinence over prophylactics—the personal focus is effective and highlights the links between health, education, poverty, substance abuse and misogyny.
The result is by turns poignant and painful, hopeful and sad—a vivid reminder, should we need it, that the pandemic is far from over.
No Place Left to Bury the Dead: Denial, Despair and Hope in the African AIDS Pandemic (2007) by Nicole Itano (338 pages) is available from Atria Books.Also available as an e-book ($11.99). http://www.simonsays.com/content/book.cfm?tab=1&pid=549082&er=9780743270953
Read excerpts from this book here:
http://www.simonsays.com/content/book.cfm?tab=1&pid=549082&agid=2
Link to Nicole Itano website: http://nicoleitano.com/book.html
Eleanor J. Bader is a teacher, freelance writer and activist from Brooklyn, NY.
The Cafe
Newest titles:
We’re now taking comments!
Enter the Cafe

CURRENT ISSUE
Winter 2012
Realities of The Waiting Room: Constantly Shifting by Lori Adelman
Anti-Abortion Harassment and Violence Still Stifle Access by Eleanor J. Bader
We're Not Sorry. Still. by Jennifer Baumgardner
The Poet's Eye From Poetry Co-Editor Sarah Browning
Calling Black LGBTQ Institutions: Where Are You? Where is Reproductive Justice? by Jasmine Burnett
Privacy at Stake: Patients, Clinics and Electronic Medical Records by Corinne A. Carey
Can We Choose Move Forward on Reproductive Justice? -- And How? by Ayesha Chatterjee and Judy Norsigian
"Love Means Second Chances": Reproductive Freedom in a Novel by Susan Elizabeth Davis
Satirist's View: Same Old Dilemma, or The Virgin Rebirth by Susie Day
As Access Slides, Feminists Need to "Extract" From Our Self-Help Past by Carol Downer
Abortion: On The Issues Magazine - by The Editors
How Anti-Abortion Protesters Got Me: Letter From a Young Activist by Sarah Flint Erdreich
The Grand Folly of Focusing on "Common Ground" by Gloria Feldt
Before "Roe": Legal Battles, Involuntary Servitude, My Mom by Justine Goodman
Next Generation Access: Medical Students Fill A Void by Mary Lou Greenberg
The Power of Theater: "Words of Choice" Touches Hearts by Alexis Greene
Where the Reality of Abortion Resides: Intimate Wars by Merle Hoffman
Gone Too Far? Reproductive Politics in the Time of Obama by Carole Joffe
Lila Rose: A Sweet Face to Accompany Extreme Anti-abortion Claims by Kathryn Joyce
Glorifying the Fetus While Ignoring the Fetal Environment by Margie Kelly
Reframing Compassionate Care: Of Madame Restell and Other Outlaws by Jeannie Ludlow
Helping Bloggers To Help: Tips for Reproductive Health Organizations by Amanda Marcotte
What To Do When They Say Holocaust by Carol Mason
"Silent Choices": African American Women Open Up on Film by Faith Pennick
Fine Thoughts On Fertilized Personhood by Marge Piercy
Heading Toward Menopause, Still Caring about Abortion by Andrea Plaid
Letter to a Young Activist: Don’t Drop the Banner by Barbara Santee
Redefining Chutzpah: More Bad Ideas to Burden Women by Aram A. Schvey
Sharing the Wealth of Knowledge on Abortion by Ria Sen and The Feminist Press
An Abortion Miracle? Let's Try the First Amendment by Priscilla Smith
Related Stories: Bold Discussions of ABORTION in On The Issues Magazine by The Editors
The Art Perspective: Ursula O'Farrell curated by Linda Stein
Student Think Tank


