Beauty Queen Uses Her HIV Positive Status As A Platform for Change

Source: BlackDoctor.Org

If you’re in need of a little inspiration, look no further than Horcelie Sinda Wa Mbongo, a 22-year-old activist, Fine Arts student, and recently crowned Miss Congo UK 2017.

But, she’s more than just a pretty face. According to BBC Africa, she’s found a way to use her platform to end the stigma around living life with HIV and AIDS.

“I was born in the Congo and I only discovered that I was HIV positive here in the UK,” Mbongo told BBC Africa of receiving her diagnosis at age 11-years-old. “I was one of many children born with HIV who did not have the medication, but somehow the virus is not fighting the body as fast as other people. What that means, is that I lived ten years without any medication at all.”

According to UN AIDS, there are approximately 370,000 people living with HIV in the Democratic Republic of Congo; with 11 percent being children under that age of 14-years-old. In contrast, there are an estimated 1.2 million people in the United States living with HIV, including 156,300 individuals who do not know they’re infected, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports.

“I don’t think there’s anyone to blame at this stage,” Mbongo said in response to whether she blames her parents for being born with the disease.

Adding, “I wasn’t there to blame anyone’s actions. That’s the way life goes. Even with things happening in the world today. Who do you blame? Who is the cause of many things? It goes the same with our personal lives… It’s about taking courage and saying, ‘It’s life, it’s a mistake, it’s part of my life and it’s time to take up the cross instead of wasting time blaming.'”

Horcelie couldn’t control her tears when she was crowned Miss Congo UK 2017 held at the Stratford Town Hall.

“I am happy I have won at least something in my life and my story has warmed people’s hearts and that is the most important thing,” she told the BBC.

AIDS.gov reports that relying on symptoms to tell whether you have HIV is easier said than done. In fact, symptoms of HIV vary, depending on the individual and what stage of the disease you are in: the early stage, the clinical latency stage, or AIDS.

For example, while those in the early stage of HIV may experience fever, chills, rash, muscle aches, extreme fatigue, and mouth ulcers. People progressing to AIDs may face a host of symptoms including: rapid weight loss, recurring fever, profuse night sweats, extreme tiredness, prolonged swelling of the lymph glands in the armpits, groin, or neck, diarrhea that lasts for more than a week, pneumonia and memory loss among other things.

Here in lies the importance of getting tested! The CDC recommends that, “everyone between the ages of 13 and 64 get tested for HIV at least once as part of routine health care. A general rule for those with risk factors is to get tested annually. Additionally, sexually active gay and bisexual men may benefit from getting an HIV test more often, perhaps every 3 to 6 months.”