Welcome to AMMSA.COM, the news archive website for our family of Indigenous news publications.

Author aims to educate about AIDS

Article Origin

Author

Pamela Green, Sage Writer, Saskatoon

Volume

2

Issue

10

Year

1998

Page 8

There are more than 28 million people in the world with HIV and AIDS, with one-half of all new infections occurring in young people under the age of 25.

These are statistics that most people don't want to think about.

But for author Darlene Meeds who worked as an environmental health office and spent years watching kids sick and dying in the streets of Vancouver, thinking about helping people cope with AIDS just wasn't enough. With a life-long dream of becoming a writer and wanting to reach out and make a difference, prevention through education became her focus.

Meeds is the author of The Journey Home, which tells the story of Danny, a young First Nation's man dying of AIDS. He wants to come home, back to his Kokum and younger brother, to make the most of the time they have left together.

There's no surprise ending when you're dying of AIDS. Danny has made some bad choices. He is a man with a drug abuse problem who shared dirty needles and had unprotected sex to help support his drug habit. He could have become infected either way .

The Journey Home is the story of a family's tragedy and how one man dealt with that tragedy by promising his grandmother's Creator that he would use the last few months of his life to make a difference to his younger brother Nathan.

Danny is someone given a second chance to make things right by sharing the special ways of his culture before he dies.

And above all, making sure that Nathan would never do drugs.

Part of her goal in writing this book, explained Meeds, was to send out this message. It's a gentle way of saying,, 'Hey, it's everywhere - even a kid can get it.'

The Journey Home is a sensitive and evocative book that gives the straight goods, a real eye opener that is both believable and accessible.

The colorful ink and pencil drawings by Cree artist Gary Natomagan really hit home. The drawings show us what Meeds calls the importance of love and family and how someone dying of AIDS would need all the love and support he could get from his family and friends.

"When I was writing the story, I was looking for an artist with the right feeling for the Native culture, someone who could capture the soul in the eyes of his people and animals, and the pictures that he has created for this book are some amazingly sensitive portraits," said Meeds.