
“Give people a fish and they eat for a day, teach them to
fish and they will never go hungry”
The History
of AIDSfreeAFRICA
Also go to Pictures of 2005
trip for recent pictures and results.
AN IDEA IS BORN:
AIDSfreeAFRICA, Inc. was created when I asked myself
two related questions: What is my life for? And what will I do when I’ve
completed my doctorate in Chemistry? I have been inspired by the United Nations
http://www.un.org since the day in 1989 that I first
visited the UN as a tourist. Fourteen years later, I attended a UN conference,
this time as UN representative for Servas, an international peace organization
I had been a member of for 15+ years. It was in that capacity, that on September 8, 2003,
I had the good fortune to attend a speech by Liuz Inacio Lula da Silva,
President of Brazil, in which he laid out his country’s successful strategy to
get a handle on the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Boldly, he ordered Brazil’s
pharmaceutical industry to produce affordable, generic HIV/AIDS drugs, and then
began a crusade to convince the nations of the world that this is an emergency
situation which calls for emergency measures. He challenged his fellow
statesmen to work toward the release of existing patents that prevent the
manufacture of generic and thus more affordable versions of antiretroviral
drugs.
As
of this writing, in 2005, Lula da Silva’s challenge has begun to show results.
A few, crucial HIV/AIDS drugs have been released from patent protection for
generic manufacturing in developing countries.
This
having been said, the fight has only just begun. The politics of AIDS still
manifests in thousands of lost lives, and even with all those who are trying to
make a difference, we are far from turning the tide.
However,
I had found the answer to my questions.
A PROJECT IS BORN:
A year
later in 2004, unsure of how to proceed after my $15 million grant proposal had
been rejected by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, my Servas friend Gary
Sealey gave me a simple, yet valuable piece of advice. He said “you need a
community to pull this off,” and I knew just were to go. The Self Expression
Leadership Program offered by Landmark Education Corporation is I turned to. http://www.LandmarkEducation.com
On Monday August 2, 2004 I submitted AIDSfreeAFRICA,
Inc. to the 75 participants of my Landmark Education seminar as my mandatory
community project. Unexpectedly, it was accepted, and the rest -- as they say
-- is history.
CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE COMMUNITY:
Carolyn
Hoffman, of White Plains NY gave me an article from The Progressive,
entitled “Withholding the Cure,” by N. A. Siegel. It chronicles Bill Haddad’s relentless
quest “to bring inexpensive medication to dying populations in the Third World”
I later found Haddad, now CEO of Biogenerics and still on his mission, right
here in Westchester NY. Our conversations have been immensely inspiring and
supportive.
Marlene Rubins introduced me to Michael Steuerman, a
member of The Hunger Project, http://www.thp.org
, who, in turn, introduced me to Hunger Project Staff member,
Jennifer R. Thomson. Jennifer and I met and she told me about her experiences
setting up a micro loan system in Uganda
as well as HIV/AIDS prevention programs implemented by The Hunger Project. An
experienced traveler to Africa,
she generously shared her knowledge, right down to her favorite kind of malaria
pills and which ones to avoid.
In June of 2004 I visited my friend and long time
mentor Dr. Gunda Georg, Professor for Medicinal Chemistry at the University in Kansas in Lawrence KS. Over lunch, talking about
AIDSfreeAFRICA, Inc. she mentioned that she has a friend who visits Cameroon
three times a year. Knowing only that friends name and phone number, I called
her on August 1 and told her about AIDSfreeAFRICA and that Gunda had referred
her to me because of her knowledge of Cameroon.
She immediately asked me what I needed. I responded that I was looking for a
place in Africa; people that want
to be trained, teachers that can do the training, water, electricity and a
connection to the government. She just kept saying “Yes, we have that.” Today,
Carole McArthur, M.D., Ph.D. is AIDSfreeAFRICA’s vice president and strongest
arm. At that point, I had never even been to Africa.
Carol was the one who made this venture exist in the real world. She created a
possible home for us to start from.
September
9, 2004 was the annual United Nations, Department of Public
Information/ Non-Governmental Organizations conference. There, I met Paul
Hoeffel, head of DPI, Peter McDermott, Chief of the HIV/AIDS program at UNICEF
and Ruth Bamela Engo, who chairs a workshop on HIV/AIDS prevention. When I told
Ruth about AIDSfreeAFRICA’s mission, she gave me a response that still rings in
my ears: “Yes, give our children the job [of providing antiretrovirals].” A
conference participant, Justine Madiesse Miaffo, president of A.F.S.A.F. embraced
me warmly and welcomed AIDSfreeAFRICA to Cameroon.
Ever since that day we have been exchanging e-mails. She, by the way, runs an
orphanage and is desperately looking for sponsorship and advocacy from abroad.
Also in September of 2004, April, a participant in my
Self Expression Leadership Program at Landmark Education, asked her father,
Clair, to speak with me. Clair is a retired Chemist living in California and -- wanting to
stay retired -- wasn’t really interested in anything that looked like work. He
was kind enough, however, to refer me to his friend Bill Szkrybalo, from Nevada, who is a
consultant to the Pharmaceutical Industry and a friend of Dr. Alan Goldhammer.
Bill told Alan about AIDSfreeAFRICA and encouraged me to call him to talk about
our common concerns and interests. In a nutshell, those are concerns regarding
criminal wrongdoings such as the manufacture of fake copies of drugs, or the
re-importation of drugs earmarked for developing countries back into developed
ones. Alan happened to mention that Pharmaceutical Philanthropy may be willing
to support AIDSfreeAFRICA in more ways than I would have imagined.
On Oct
22, 2004, I met with Rachael Cohen from MSF, Doctors without
Borders, to discuss their experience in Cameroon
delivering and administering antiretroviral drugs to up to 1000 patients every
day. MSF is one of the key organizations in Cameroon
capable of dispensing these drugs.
On Nov 2004, Dena Daglian joined our Board of
Directors representing AIDSfreeAFRICA at Zonta, Int., http://www.zonta.org .
Dena also worked on the design of our web site.
I
met Karen Siegel President of the Queens Chapter of Zonta, Int. at their
Christmas gathering on Dec.
10, 2004. She stated that their club might be willing to make
a financial contribution and assist AIDSfreeAFRICA, Inc. through its worldwide
network of chapters, including one in Cameroon.
Dec
17, 2004, Donna Graham, a participant in my Self Expression
Leadership Program e-mailed me about Tony Tate, who works on children’s rights
in Africa for Human Rights
Watch. Tony and I then met to discuss possible common interests. His
organization had just started thinking about issues surrounding the right to
access life saving medicines, and -- since there are limited amounts of drugs
available -- the very serious questions of who gets the drug, who dies and who
should make those decisions.
Dec
22, 2004, at a Christmas party at one of my fellow graduate
students Elena Ferloni’s place in Queens,
I met Craig Mills. He works for the Ford Foundation http://www.fordfound.org and offered his expertise on preparing a
successful grant application.
In
February of 2005, I received a private donation from Gerlinde Bachmann, who was
my social worker when I was a teenager apprenticing at BASF, a large chemical
company in Germany.
She used to introduce me to people as her “adopted daughter,” and she was my
mother until I met my actual birth mother some five years later behind the
Berlin Wall in Potsdam.
Elliott
Bay,
currently Director of Manufacturing at Emisphere Technologies, Elmsford NY, (where I had once worked in the
research department) joined the board of directors of AIDSfreeAFRICA. I especially
appreciate his leadership and management style. Plus, his generous offer of
trouble shooting and spare parts will be invaluable down the road, as resources
in Africa are few and far between and production will inevitably breakdown from
time to time.
April
19, 2005, I successfully defend my dissertation on “Synthesis
and Characterizations of Dendronized Nanomaterials” and earn my Ph.D. in
Chemistry from City University of New York, Queens College,
mentor Dr. Harry D. Gafney.
On May 15 and 29, 2005, at our shower and then our
wedding, respectively, generous gifts from my mother, my wife Betti, and from
our friends match the donation already received from Gerlinde Bachmann earlier
this year. Their generosity enables AIDSfreeAFRICA to pay operating expenses,
including application fees to incorporate and apply for non-profit status.
June
4, 2005: Nancy Phillips, engineer, offers to come to Cameroon
and install controls once the production laboratory is being build.
June
9, 2005: We submit the first grant proposal to the Lindbergh
Foundation. The grant is endorsed by Carole McArthur and Gary Sealey. As of
today, August 8, 2005,
we made it into round two of the four part review process. The final decision
is expected for April 2006.
June
12, 2005: We launch our web site http://chem.qc.edu/~aidsfree . Dr.
Cherice Evans, Assistant Professor at Queens College,
generously donates web space and expertise on how to get our site up and
running.
Bianca Razzano, who is friend of Carole McArthur and
has lived and worked in Cameroon,
joins AIDSfreeAFRICA, Inc. to build a blood bank in Cameroon.
Right now, people needing blood transfusions get blood that has not been
checked for malaria, HIV or other viruses. Bianca will be buying artwork from
Cameroonian artists to offer them in New York in return for
donations.
In June of 2005, Liz Heinlein, a participant in my
Self Expression Leadership Program, (who can be found under “directors” at http://www.freemarketfilms.com),
arranged a meeting with her producer, Anne Rainey Rokahr. The purpose was to
discuss their offer to come to Cameroon
and shoot a promotional video that can help us raise US$6.1 million for a
prefabricated modular laboratory to produce antiretroviral drugs immediately.
My wife, Betti K. Lewis joins the Board of Directors
as Secretary.
On June
13, 2005, I attended the East Pack Expo at the Jarvis Center in NYC, to look
for a blister packaging machine. I met a very friendly sales woman, Amy Siegel,
who later joined AIDSfreeAFRICA as a volunteer. A month later we met to discuss
her possible contributions in the area of management, fundraising, and
marketing.
Deb Sledgianowski volunteers to write data management
software for AIDSfreeAFRICA.
July 9: Dr. Peter Achu, Bamenda, of Cameroon
joins the Board of Directors. He sends a proposal for a mission statement that
encompasses all that we stand for. Together with Marlene Rubins, we fuse the
old mission statement with Paul’s proposed one to finalize AIDSfreeAFRICA’s
mission statement.
A CORPORATION IS BORN:
July
18: I meet with Board of Directors member Elliott Bay to cosign the articles of
incorporation for submission to the Secretary of the State of New York. The immediate goal is to obtain 501(c)
(3) non-for-profit status from the IRS (Internal Revenue
Service).
If you would like to join the AIDSfreeAFRICA team
or make a donation, please feel free to contact any
of our board of directors’ member at: AIDS_free_AFRICA@yahoo.com