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Christian Bobst Photography

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Christian Bobst Photography

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  • A training course at the TASO training center in Kampala. The TASO training function is ensuring that individual and service providers in different institutions with in and outside Uganda access HIV/AIDS training. Over the years TASO has trained individuals, communities and organizations through participative approaches and direct partnership with people living with HIV/AIDS. Today TASO has trained over 15, 000 individuals both locally and internationally since inception.
    TASO_Aids_Uganda018.jpg
  • An MDD Group is rehersing at the TASO Day Care Center in Kampala. The TASO MDD (Music, Dance and Drama) groups are composed of people living with HIV/AIDS who have decided to go public about their sero-status and freely share their experiences with others. They go to schools, markets and other communities to educate people through personal testimonies and HIV/AIDS message-laden music dance and drama.
    TASO_Aids_Uganda019.jpg
  • The AIDS Support Organization (TASO) was founded in 1987 by Noerine Kaleeba and a group of friends and colleagues some of whom were either directly infected with HIV or implicitly affected because their very close familial associates were infected. Today TASO cares for over 100,000 people annually through HIV counseling, medical care as well as social support.
    TASO_Aids_Uganda020.jpg
  • (2008) "When it is dark enough the ladies are wanted by many people, but during the day in parliament they want to burn them out." says Father Hermann. He notes, prostitutes face an immediate mortal threat of HIV infection - something the government seems unwilling to confront.
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  • In his tiny office, the priest advises women and girls. A recently conducted survey presents a gloomy picture: of 20 women and girls between the ages of 11 and 45 who registered with him one day, all were HIV positive. Sixteen of them sayed that they had been raped multiple times, the youngest at eight years old, with one 12-year-old having already been violated 10 times. All of those interviewed indicated they suffered from depression. Many say that they had attempted suicide more than once.
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  • (2008) At his daycare facility, Father Hermann hands out milk powder to prevent small children from contracting HIV by their mothers from breastfeeding. In 2008, when this photo was taken, sex workers who registered with Hermann received a ration of food and second-hand clothing once per week. The bookkeeping of Father Hermann was always meticuluous. He knew exactly who got what and when.
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  • (2008) Whenever possible, Hermann ventured out into the townships to assist with problems or to get a sense of the conditions in which those he cares for were living. The priest talked to women and children on the street about the dangers of AIDS and other STDs. He encouraged them to get tested for AIDS and passed out condoms, even though the Catholic Church forbids it.
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  • (2008) Eunice at the age of 17. At that time, she was already a young mother.
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  • Clients waiting at the indoor waiting-area of the TASO Service Center  in Kampala. Once clients are registered, all TASO services are free of charge. TASO runs 11 service centers spread in Uganda, with now 22 "mini-TASOs" and Community Based organisations in other parts of the country that are outside TASO's catchment area of 75Km from the nearest service center.
    TASO_Aids_Uganda013.jpg
  • (2008) Most women in the shelter are infected with AIDS or venereal diseases. Sick, weak and ostracized as whores, they have almost no chance of finding normal work. "We give them food once a week and a bible. This is just to keep their hopes alive." Klein-Hitpass says,
    Namibia_Father_hermann_009.jpg
  • (2008) The bookkeeping of father Hermann is meticuluous. He knows exactly who got what and when from him. Every day of the week, about 300 of the registered women and girls are entitled to collect some food and cloth and to stay at the centre from morning to evening.
    Namibia_Father_hermann_007.jpg
  • (2008) A woman exits Father Hermanns car in Havanna, a district of Katutura. Sometimes Father Hermann drives  some women from the townships to his daycare or back. But most of them have to walk ten kilometers and more to get to his daycare.
    Namibia_Father_hermann_004.jpg
  • For single women, life in the rough ghettos around Katatura is very difficult, particularly for those with small children. Because there are few jobs, prostitution is often the only route to survival. Many become infected with diseases. Sick, weak and ostracized as whores, they have almost no chance of finding normal work and become trapped in a vicious circle.
    Namibia_Father_hermann_003.jpg
  • (2008) For single women, life in the rough ghettos is very difficult, particularly for those with small children. Because there are few jobs, prostitution is often the only route to survival. Many become infected with diseases. Sick, weak and ostracized as whores, they have almost no chance of finding normal work and become trapped in a vicious circle.
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  • (2008) This image shows the "kitchen" of Winnies home. Winnie has to share the six square meters sized shack with two other girls to be able to pay the rent.
    Namibia_Father_hermann_017.jpg
  • Sixteen-year-old Winnie stands in the entrance of the hut that she and two roommates have rented. Often, the girls are sought out and sexually assaulted by unknown men in the hut, particularly when they are drunk and defenseless. They can't protect themselves because the door has no hinge and no lock.
    Namibia_Father_hermann_016.jpg
  • (2008) A portrait of Irène at the age of eleven. Two years later she became pregnant and ran away from home. Irène tried to abort the baby with illegal pills, lost consciousness, was raped by a young man, and passed away.
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  • (2008) Father Hermann talks to a streetwalker who is looking for clients at the Ausspannplatz, a street-walkers patch in the city center of Windhoeck. This area is not safe for the women, especially not at nighttime. Sex workers can´t expect any protection from the police, because prostitution is illegal in Namibia. „When it‘s dark the ladies are wanted by many people, but during the day in parliament they want to burn them out.“ says Hermann in an interview with a local newspaper.
    Namibia_Father_hermann_011.jpg
  • Father Hermann holds a deeply depressed woman to comfort her. Two weeks previously she had lost her baby and been thrown out by her husband and left her to a life on the street.
    Namibia_Father_hermann_001.jpg
  • (2008) Father Hermann poses with his old Toyota in front of the roman catholic church at Pioneers Park, where his home, a two room apartment, is located. He always has a big key chain with him, because he has to lock everything tp prevent it from getting stolen.
    Namibia_Father_hermann_010.jpg
  • (2008) Father Hermann Klein-Hitpass stood up for the weakest members of society in Namibia´s capital, Windhoek, for many decades. For the past 20 years his special focus has been on girls and women whose poverty forced them into sex work. Most of those women do not call him “Father” only because he is a priest – many say that he is like a real father to them.
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  • (2013) A woman shows her HIV medication. many people who are HIV positive don´t take their medication because it makes them vomit if they don´t have enough food in their stomach.
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  • This young man was abducted and forced to fight with the Lord Resistance Army. He could escape the rebels, but he can´t escape the memorys of the people he had to murder. He says they keep coming to his dreams every night. After he escaped he also found out that he was infected with HIV in those four years.
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  • (2013) Father Hermann looks at a photo which shows a group of under-age children who were misused by an expat from Europe. As a consequence, most of the girls have to deal with psychological problems, many of them got involved in prostitution and have infected themself with HIV.
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  • (2013) Christina (17) talks about her life at Father Hermann´s daycare facility. As soon as she had her menstruation, her mother who was an alcoholic said that she was a big girl now and forced her to make money by selling herself. She dropped out of school at the age of thirteen, ran away from home and continued to sell herself to survive. She says that she is HIV positive and four months pregnant.
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