Golf Fore Africa


Aids and Orphans

 

Thousands of children will lose a parent today because of AIDS. In 2001, UNICEF estimated that 6,000 children lose a parent to AIDS every day. Each child has a name - and a heart-breaking story. Yet there is hope. Through Golf Fore Africa working with World Vision , you can do something to help those children affected by the AIDS crisis in Africa.

    

The AIDS pandemic's devastation reaches far beyond those who are infected. More than 15 million children worldwide have lost one or both parents to AIDS;that number is expected to reach 25 million by the year 2010. As AIDS is killing people in the prime of their lives, many children will grow up in com­munities with massive shortages of teachers, health care workers, civil servants, and business people. This perpetuates many of the vicious cycles of poverty that further the spread of HIV.

 

  • Maggie's Story: HIV and AIDS

    Maggie's Story: HIV and AIDS - The AIDS crisis in Africa left 7-year-old Maggie with only one relative in the world, her 72-year-old great-grandmother.

  • Hidden Faces of AIDS (intro)

    Hidden Faces of AIDS (intro) - Captures not just statistics of those impacted by HIV and AIDS, but also the real faces of those affected.

  • AIDS Photo Montage

    AIDS Photo Montage - This photo series displays simple yet powerful black-and white images and brief stories of people impacted by AIDS.
  •  

    Understand Global AIDS Excerpted from: A Guide to Acting on AIDS: Understanding the Global AIDS Pandemic and Responding through Faith in Action

    HIV is the most devastating disease of the 21st century. In the 14th century, the infamous bubonic plague took the lives of 35 million people. The Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) estimates that 3.1 million people died of AIDS in 2005, that 40.3 million people were living with HIV at the end of 2005, and that AIDS has killed more than 25 million people since the early 1980s. The 65 million people who either have died or will die due to AIDS since the beginning of the pandemic is greater than the number of people killed by the bubonic plague, or the total number of civilian and military casualties in World War II. The only pandemic to eclipse the death rates of AIDS is the Spanish influenza epidemic of 1918-1919. Experts estimate that influenza killed between 50 million and 100 million people worldwide; that's between 2.8 and 5.6 percent of the global population at that time. (Source: John M. Barry. The Great Influenza: The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague in History (New York, NY: Penguin Group, 2004), 397.)      

     

     

    News & Updates

    Monday, July 12th at the Golf Club of Purchase in Purchase, New York. Come out and play with 6 of the LPGA'S Stars.

    At a ceremony in Nyamagabe, Rwanda on April 14, 2010, Golf Fore Africa founders Betsy King and Debbie Quesada joined 700 local residents, World Vision staff, and Rwandan government officials to dedicate the Uwinkingi Health Clinic.

    Monday, September 20th at Maplewood Country Club, Maplewood, New Jersey

    Please come play and learn from 5 LPGA Tour Professionals. Proceeds from this event will support initiatives from Golf Fore Africa and the National AIDS Fund.

    Golfers come out to Assemble 1000 AIDS Caregiver Kits at the Golf Club Scottsdale