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Nobel Prize winner joins AIDS fight


- Rhonda Shafner

(Monday, January 10, 2004)

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"I thought if they (musicians) could get up and sing," to raise money to battle AIDS, "we (writers) could sit down and write."


She is a woman who is used to being in control and is not afraid of expressing her opinions. She has a dignity about her, the aura of the grand dame who has seen a lot of history and has helped make some of it. South African writer Nadine Gordimer, 81, who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1991, is noted for her novels and short stories about the inhumanity of apartheid. Several were once banned in her own country. Gordimer was in New York recently to talk about her latest project, Telling Tales. It is a compilation of 21 short stories "that capture the range of emotions and situations of our human universe," she writes in the book's introduction. The stories are by world-renowned authors - five Nobel prize winners including Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Gunter Grass, and writers who will likely be on the shortlist for future Nobel literature prizes. The story collection, published by Picador Press, was put together to raise money to battle AIDS.

Only a year ago, Gordimer wrote to writer friends and others whom she didn't know but whose stories she admired with the idea of putting together an anthology of short fiction. "I thought if they (musicians) could get up and sing," to raise money to battle AIDS, "we (writers) could sit down and write." Anglo-Indian writer Salman Rushdie tells a quietly horrifying tale in The Firebird's Nest about the men in India who marry for dowries, burn their young brides, and remarry to acquire yet another dowry. John Updike writes in Journey to the Dead about a middle-age man's preoccupation with, and terror of, an acquaintance's impending death from cancer.

Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe, in the humorous story Sugar Baby, portrays a group of friends looking back at their years surviving the Biafran war and how one of them managed to make it bearable. There are other memorable reports on the human condition from Margaret Atwood, Woody Allen, South African writer Njabulo S. Ndebele and Gordimer herself. Along with the anthology's writers, 13 publishers releasing the book in other countries have also agreed to contribute their proceeds to fighting AIDS. Literary agents and at least one translator say they will waive their fees, and the bookstore chain Borders has agreed to make a donation.

Almost 40 million people throughout the world now have the HIV virus. Over 20 million have died since the virus was first diagnosed, in 1981. "The risk of a pandemic which makes those numbers modest is real," said Rushdie, author of Midnight's Children and The Satanic Verses. "The sad thing is we actually now have in our power the tools to arrest the spread of the disease," Rushdie said. "The worst thing we can do is pretend it's not there," said Updike, winner of two Pulitzer prizes for his fiction. "It's very easy to be a well-off American and feel very aloof from it. In the '50s, we didn't think about atomic warfare being possible. In this century, we try not to think about AIDS."

A petite woman with an erect carriage, her silver hair combed back meticulously into bun at the nape of her neck, Gordimer has a businesslike demeanour on this overcast December morning. Gordimer's books include A Sport of Nature, a richly documented chronicle of post-colonialism; My Son's Story, about a married black man who falls in love with a white activist; and Burger's Daughter, banned for three months in South Africa when it was released in 1979, which details the struggles of the daughter of the late South African Communist party leader. South Africa leads the world with the number of HIV/AIDS victims - over five million, according to the United Nations Development Program. Gordimer is particularly aware of the babies. The Salvation Army runs a hospice in Johannesburg for about 30 infants born with HIV and abandoned by their mothers. "They live there and they die there," Gordimer says. "They are found by the police in public toilets, in the streets in bins."

She has designated that all the money raised by Telling Tales be given to the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) in South Africa, an HIV/AIDS activist organization. She is especially impressed with Zackie Achmat, 41, TAC chairman and one of its founders, who has AIDS. Achmat applauded Gordimer and the other writers included in Telling Tales for their inspiring effort. "There's a holocaust happening to poor people particularly in our country, based on a combination of drug company profiteering, bureaucratic neglect and also locally and globally, personal and social complacency," Achmat said in an interview from his office in Cape Town, South Africa. Are there plans to promote the book further?

Gordimer is "a bully," Rushdie said, half-joking. "We all do what she says We're waiting for her to give us her orders."

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