MAPUTO, August 30, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – Alarmed by the high HIV/AIDS
infection in the southern African country, mosques in Mozambique are championing
an undaunted campaign against the killer epidemic and managed to curb its
spiraling rates in the predominantly Muslim north.
"Mosques have been playing a pivotal role in fighting AIDS through raising the
awareness of Muslims about subsequent grave consequences on both individuals and
families," Egyptian preacher Sheikh Mahmoud El-Sebai told IslamOnline.net.
Mozambique is the third world country with high HIV prevalence after neighboring
Swaziland and South Africa.
Official estimates indicate that some 50 percent of Mozambique's 19 million
people are HIV positive, while international figures put the percentage at only
16.
On Friday, Sebai delivered a fiery sermon on AIDS, exhorting Muslims to shield
themselves against it through religion.
"Islam calls for modesty and chastity among all Muslims, married or unmarried,
and strictly prohibited adultery," he told the faithful through an
Arabic-Portuguese interpreter.
After the prayers, Muslim youths started handing out glossy anti-AIDS leaflets
in Portuguese, Mozambique’s official language.
Muslims make up 50 per cent of Mozambique’s 17 million people in the former
Portuguese colony.
Burning Issue
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A sample of the AIDS-combat leaflets distributed outside mosques.
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Sebai said Muslim parents usually ask him to keep the burning issue alive by
tackling it in Friday sermons.
"AIDS is one of the major challenges facing Muslims in Mozambique and we are
keen on addressing the issue over and over again," he said.
Al-Azhar Al-Sharif, the highest seat of learning in the Sunni Muslim world, has
10 preachers in Mozambique in addition to two more dispatched by the Egyptian
Minister of Waqfs (religious endowments).
There is no official estimates about the number of mosques in the country, but
most of them are built by rich Muslims and are concentrated in the north.
The capital Maputo has some 60 mosques.
Lowest Rates
Abdalla Ferari, president of Moussa Bin Bek University in northern Mozambique,
said the predominantly Muslim north has the lowest AIDS rates compared to the
southern and central parts of the country.
"I can say, according to official statistics, that only five percent of people
in northern Mozambique are HIV positive thanks to awareness-raising campaigns by
Muslim preachers," he told IOL.
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The Taqwa mosque in Maputo. |
Already fighting a high HIV prevalence, Mozambique has moved in cooperation with
world bodies to nip the deadly virus in the bud by trying to prevent its
transmission from HIV-positive pregnant mothers to fetuses.
Africa has been hit harder by the HIV virus than any other continent.
More than 17 million Africans have died from AIDS and another 25 million are HIV
positive, approximately 1.9 million of whom are children, according to the Joint
UN Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).
Sub-Saharan Africa is home to more than 60% of people living with HIV worldwide.
HIV is transmitted through sexual intercourse, blood transfusion, the sharing of
contaminated needles in health care settings and through drug injection, in
addition to between mother and infant, during pregnancy, childbirth and
breastfeeding.
The World Health Organization estimated that, worldwide, between 2.8 and 3.5
million people with AIDS died in 2004.
By Hamdy Al-Husseini, IOL Correspondent
Source :
http://www.islamonline.net/English/News/2005-08/30/article06.shtml
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