There is no me without you : one woman's odyssey to rescue Africa's children / Melissa Fay Greene.
Material type:
TextPublisher: New York : Bloomsbury, 2006Publisher: New York : Distributed to the trade by Holtzbrinck PublishersEdition: First U.S. editionDescription: 472 pages, [16] pages of plates : color illustrations ; 25 cmContent type: - text
- unmediated
- volume
- General
- 9781596911161
- 9781596911161 (hardcover)
- Teferra, Haregewoin
- Children of AIDS patients -- Ethiopia -- Addis Ababa -- Social conditions
- Orphans -- Ethiopia -- Addis Ababa -- Social conditions
- Children of AIDS patients -- Services for -- Ethiopia -- Addis Ababa
- Orphans -- Services for -- Ethiopia -- Addis Ababa
- Child welfare -- Ethiopia -- Addis Ababa
- 362.73/2 B 22
- HV1344.5.Z8 A334 2006
| Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books
|
John Tomay Memorial Library | ANF | 362.7 GRE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 3GTPL00080133N |
Includes bibliographical references (p. [445]-456) and index.
The horrific numbers behind the AIDS pandemic in Africa, "the most terrible epidemic in human history," have little resonance for most people in the West: "the ridiculous numbers wash over most of us." But this searing account humanizes the statistics through heartbreaking, intimate stories of what it is like for young orphans left alone in Ethiopia. Greene's story focuses on one rescuer, Haregewoin Teferra, who has opened her home and compound in a rickety hillside neighborhood of Addis Ababa and taken in hundreds of the untouchables thrown in the streets and left at her door. She cannot turn them away. Yes, the comparisons with Mother Teresa are there, but this is no hagiography; the middle-aged Teferra is "just an average person with a little more heart." Greene tells the stories in unforgettable vignettes of loss, secrecy, panic, stigma, and, sometimes, hope, even as she documents the big picture of "the human landslide," the history and science of epidemiology and transmission, and expresses her fury at the "crimes against humanity" of the multinational drug companies whose expensive patents have denied millions access to the life-saving medicines. Just as moving are the personal stories of international adoptions in the U. S., including two Ethiopian children taken into Greene's own Atlanta family. The detail of one lost child at a time, who finds love, laughter, comfort, and connection, opens up the universal meaning of family.
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