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Mark S. King of MyFabulousDisease.com published a piece in The Body listing 15 HIV advocates worth watching in 2015. The list includes AVAC's 2014 Fellow Yvette Raphael of South Africa.
In the city of Midrand Gauteng in South Africa, Yvette Raphael stays busy running her catering company. "I do it because I love making people happy and every meal is prepared with love," she says. Love is also something Yvette shares generously with her extended family, including three young girls living with HIV for whom she serves as guardian and mentor.
None of these responsibilities, though, have kept her from becoming an emerging voice for women living with the virus.
Diagnosed with HIV in 2000, Yvette contributes to a number of national and global efforts, including working in support of the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), the Campaign to End AIDS, and serving as a 2014 AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition (AVAC) Fellow associated with Johns Hopkins University. Her influence is growing faster than a baking souffle.
"Yvette is a rare breath of fresh activism in a time in the AIDS movement that needs more advocacy and policy change, not less," said Dazon Dixon Diallo, founder of Sisterlove and one of the preeminent global voices for HIV among women. "She comes to the movement with a fierce brilliance and a fearless voice for women, youth and the African LGBTQ community. Yvette is a young, single mother who works hard to defend and protect the human rights of all, especially young girls. She rocks on all fronts!"
Click here to read about the other 14 advocates!