Promise Mthembu was born in 1975 in
Umlazi,
South Africa. She was raised in a strictly religious
Catholic family. She became politically active as a teenager, participating in projects on AIDS awareness. Then, in her first year as a university student in 1995, found out that she was
HIV-positive. A few months after her diagnosis, she joined the National Association of People living with HIV/AIDS (NAPWA) and the National AIDS Convention of South Africa (NACOSA) in
Durban. She publicly disclosed that she had HIV, becoming one of the first women in South Africa to take that step. However, she eventually returned to school and went on to graduate with a bachelor's in political sciences and development studies, and a master's degree in development studies from the
University of KwaZulu-Natal. After she began attending meetings of people living with HIV/AIDS and publicly discussing her positive status, her partner became abusive. Despite the abuse, Mthembu felt pressured to marry him because he had already paid the bride price to her parents. However, she eventually managed to leave him, despite significant social pressure. In 1997, she went to the hospital for treatment of a cervical cyst. There she was found to have another gyeanecological problem. The doctors there would only treat her if she agreed to be
sterilized, forcing her into an unwanted sterilization. After the murder of
Gugu Dlamini, an activist who was stoned and stabbed to death after disclosing that she was HIV-positive, Mthembu founded the Gugu Dlamini Action Group, which evolved into the regional branch of the
Treatment Action Campaign. She went on to work for the Treatment Action Campaign, focusing on mother-child transmission of HIV and serving on its National Executive Committee. In 2004, she established the Young Woman's Dialogue, a forum for HIV-positive women in
Namibia and South Africa. Mthembu has fought for equal treatment access for people living with HIV/AIDS, and against the kind of forced sterilization of HIV-positive women that she experienced. == References ==