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Pernessa Seele
Her Best Weapon Is Faith
Time Magazine
April 2006
By CHRISTINE GORMAN
From the Magazine | Heroes & Pioneers
When Pernessa Seele organized Harlem's first Week of Prayer for
the Healing of AIDS back in 1989,all she was trying to do was get
a few
traditionally African-American churches to acknowledge that the lives
of many of their congregants had been devastated by HIV. "A
lot of people don't understand about prayer," says Seele, who
founded the group Balm in Gilead to disseminate accurate information
about AIDS to black churches across the U.S. "They think it's
all about healing. They don't understand that prayer opens the door.
Once you say the prayer, you can't go back to being ignorant. You
want to get educated."
Since then, her efforts have led to a national movement to address
public-health issues through communities of faith—an approach
that is garnering Seele, 51, high-level notice. In January she
was a guest of President and Mrs. Bush's at the State of the Union
address, in which the President talked about the disproportionate
toll that AIDS is taking on the African-American community. Black
people, for example, account for 51% of new HIV diagnoses in the
U.S.
Seele is leading the fight to get those numbers down. Churches
that Seele has worked with have developed AIDS ministries to visit
the sick, address housing issues and educate teens and adults about
safer sex. "Some pastors tell me, 'We're an abstinence-based
church,'" Seele says. "And I say, 'Fine, but let's teach
abstinence and not just preach abstinence.' You cannot tell people
what's going on if they're not willing to be engaged."
Now Seele is expanding her campaign to include cervical cancer,
which is usually caused by a sexually transmitted virus but can
be detected early if women undergo routine Pap smears and are tested
for a precancerous infection. Of course, cervical cancer doesn't
carry the same stigma as AIDS, but you still need to talk about
sex. And the way Seele sees it, church is as good a place as any
to start having that conversation.
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