O, The Oprah Magazine Article featuring Mary Fisher and the O bracelet program which has raised money for AIDS medical research, education and advocacy.

In the Media

 

In Rwanda and Zambia, women make bracelets designed by activist Mary Fisher. Program featured in O, the Oprah Magazine.

 
Read the article in the May editon of O, the Oprah Magazine about the O bracelet program designed by Mary Fisher designed to raise money for AIDS medical research, education, and advocacy.MAY 2007 - AIDS-affected women in Africa were earning desperately needed income by handcrafting beaded bracelets, with training from artist-activist Mary Fisher and backing from O, the Oprah Magazine.

The O bracelet was a special project of O, the Oprah Magazine, launched in the Style Section of its May 2007 issue. In Rwanda and Zambia, women who are infected or affected by HIV/AIDS made intricately beaded bracelets, for sale exclusively at Macys.com.

The limited-edition bracelets were designed by Fisher, a United Nations special representative who travels the world advocating for those who share her HIV-positive status, and who is best known for her moving "A Whisper of AIDS" speech given at the 1992 Republican National Convention.

 
Read the article in the December editon of O, the Oprah Magazine about the O bracelet program designed by Mary Fisher used to raise funding for AIDS health research, patient care, and advocacy to fight this disease.The bracelets ­– in three styles called Strength, Hope and Beauty -- were priced from $50 to $135. They were produced through Fair Winds Trading, a company founded by artist and social entrepreneur Willa Shalit to develop markets for the handiwork of artisans worldwide.

All partners in the O Bracelet venture -- Macy's, Fair Winds Trading, Fisher and O, the Oprah Magazine -– were participating without compensation so that 100% of the profits went to the women of Africa.

"These bracelets are a labor of love for me, and a lifeline for women in Rwanda and Zambia who are infected and affected by HIV/AIDS," says Fisher. "Typically, women in these countries live on less than $1 a day. But those who make these bracelets earn up to $19 a day, which not only helps them sustain themselves and their families, but provides a source of pride and a sense of hope."

 

The Mary Fisher CARE Fund fights for HIV/AIDS medical research, patient health care, education, and advocates to fight this deadly worldwide disease.
The Mary Fisher CARE Fund fights for HIV/AIDS medical research, patient health care, education, and advocates to fight this deadly worldwide disease.
The Mary Fisher CARE Fund fights for HIV/AIDS medical research, patient health care, education, and advocates to fight this deadly worldwide disease.

More About the Program - O, the Oprah Magazine teams with Mary Fisher to fight HIV/AIDS in Africa.

 
Through more than 15 years of raising awareness with her speeches, books and art, Mary Fisher developed a particular concern for how HIV/AIDS affects women and girls. "Everywhere I've traveled," she says, "I've seen women struggling to sustain themselves and their families against the huge burdens HIV/AIDS places on them. Too often, these women were powerless to prevent the sexual contact that brought the virus into their lives in the first place: They were raped or sexually abused, or in a relationship where they were faithful but their husband or partner was not. Then, once infected, so many of these women face stigma and ostracism in their communities. They are rejected and even abused by husbands and relatives, and lose all means of support. With no money, they can't send their children to school, or feed them, or take the food they need with their HIV medications."
 
Beaded Bracelets created as part of the O, the Oprah Magazine support program with Mary Fisher.Fisher began exploring ways to give AIDS-affected women a livelihood, and thus a way to provide for themselves and their children. She started in Zambia, where she has long supported the HIV/AIDS research and treatment programs at Lusaka's Center for Infectious Disease Research in Zambia (CIDRZ). She knew, from visiting CIDRZ's teeming clinics and crowded support groups, that there would be no shortage of HIV-positive women eager to work. The key would be finding a product the women could make, with skills they already had or could learn; and a way to sell that product in the United States, with all profits returned to the women.

In June 2006, Fisher ran into her longtime acquaintance Willa Shalit – and learned that Shalit was pursuing the same kind of income-generation projects, for women in Rwanda. A decade after the genocide there, Shalit had founded The Path to Peace, a project in which once-warring Hutu and Tutsi artisans came together to weave baskets, for sale in the United States by Macy's. As Fisher now recalls the fateful conversation, "I said to Willa, 'What about women weaving baskets in Zambia?' And she saw my handmade bracelets on my arm and said, 'What about women in Zambia and Rwanda making those?'"

 
By fall 2006, Fisher was touring Rwanda and Zambia, scouting locations where women could gather and sitting with small groups of them to practice beading. Meanwhile, journalists at O, the Oprah Magazine had been preparing an article on the income generation projects, and the O-shaped bracelets inspired a plan: Why not offer a limited edition, through the magazine, called the O Bracelet? Late January found Fisher in Rwanda, and her colleagues Penny Morgan and Candy Barbag in Zambia, spending 14-hour days teaching women to fashion thread and beads into the three intricate designs the O editors had chosen.
 
Women in Africa who are helped through this program supported by O, the Oprah Magazine and Mary Fisher.Fisher recalls poignant scenes from those days. In one support group, after fashioning strands for the first two bracelets, when the women tried to curve the strands to close the circle, "beads burst all over the place – the women's faces were horrified!" Assuming that the strands snapped because the beading threads had been pulled too tightly, Fisher asked Rwandan friends for "the words to use" and then went from worker to worker, giving gentle guidance in the women's native Kinyarwandan language.

In another support group, when one woman's bracelet came out too long, Fisher realized it was because she could not count, to follow the number and pattern of beads she was told to use. "She was so embarrassed, she insisted on taking it apart and doing it all over," Fisher recalls. "And she said that with the money earned from her bracelets, she would keep her daughters in school so they'd never struggle as she had."

 
An African woman who is part of the O bracelet progam supported by O, the Oprah Magazine, Macys.com, and Mary Fisher Productions.Thanks to the diligence of the Rwandan and Zambian workers, the allotment of 4,500 O Bracelets arrived at the U.S. warehouse with days to spare before they went on sale at Macys.com. Now, the women in several support groups are eagerly working on additional bracelets and samples for Fisher's new designs.

Fisher marvels at how the project has given the women "pride in themselves, and real hope. It also is what community is made of – together, supporting and working with each other." Fisher says the workers told her they're deeply grateful that U.S. women will buy something precisely because it is made by, and will benefit, AIDS-affected women in Africa. "They love that idea... They so appreciate that there are people who care about them and want them to fight."

In the Media

Mary Fisher is an artist, activist, speaker and author who travels the world advocating for those who share her HIV-positive status.
 

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