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We Are All The Same: The Life And Death Of Nkosi Johnson

We Are All The Same: The Life And Death Of Nkosi Johnson

List Price: $29.99
Your Price: $19.79
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Unsurmoutable Courage
Review:
If this book doesn't touch your heart, nothing you ever read-will. It is sad,it is revealing. But beyond the emotions lies a boy that had the most wonderful courage, and a Mother that through great odds gave of her heart completely.

Also recommended: Nightmares Echo, Living To Tell The Tale,I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Compelling
Review: "We Are All the Same" is the compelling account of the life of Xolani Nkosi Johnson, an African child that was bound by the wrath of HIV and AIDS. The book also details the social, environmental, and political environment which allowed this treacherous disease (AIDS) to pollute and emaciate entire populations of citizens: A disease which knows no boundaries; a disease which does not discriminate; a disease that kills all that are infected by its virus.

Wooten is a writer to be revered for his honesty, and applauded for covering what is often regarded as a subject to be discussed in hushed circumstances.

As compelling as "Tuesday's with Morrie," this book will leave the reader in a state of deep thought and introspect. "We Are All the Same" forces the reader to enter an emotional state that opens the heart to the raw brutality of the consequences of AIDS and the unfortunate position that many developed nations take as they turn a blind eye to what is commonly referred to as the "Dark Continent."

Angela, PhD Candidate

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A powerful book about a courageous young boy
Review: By the late 1980s AIDS had become an epidemic. The dreaded disease was particularly devastating to black South Africans, segregated by race, poverty and cruel social stigma. Those afflicted did not know the name of this illness; they called it "the thin disease." They knew only that to contract it was to receive a death sentence.

Veteran news correspondent Jim Wooten had spent much time reporting war, strife and upheaval on the African continent. It is through Jim's eyes, ears and soul that Nkosi Johnson's story is revealed. In February 1989 a tiny, sickly baby boy was born to Daphne, a single teenager living in poverty in a remote village with no name in what had once been Zululand. Daphne contracted AIDS during this second pregnancy, so at birth her baby was already destined to suffer.

While more developed parts of the world were setting up AIDS care centers, shelters and hospices, South Africa remained, medically speaking, in the Stone Age. Public officials refused to deal with the grave situation. President Thabo Mbeki stonewalled efforts to provide information about the disease and any possible treatment for it. In fact, Mbeki went so far as to say that AIDS medications were poison.

Daphne was frightened because her tiny baby was constantly ill and could not gain weight. She crossed social and cultural barriers just to take Nkosi to a clinic in the white part of town where a kindly doctor gave her the dreaded news that both she and Nkosi were afflicted. Daphne was determined to place her son someplace where he would be taken care of when she became too ill to look after him.

Gail Johnson, a middle-class white woman who lived in a suburb of Johannesburg, became an outspoken advocate for AIDS patients after meeting a friend's brother who was dying of AIDS alone and uncared for. She was appalled that AIDS patients were treated like modern-day lepers. Gail set up a shelter for these dying white men, and Daphne showed up on the doorstep of the Guest House in Johannesburg begging the shelter's staff to take her son. Nkosi did move into the shelter and instantly became the darling of both patients and staff. Financial problems soon forced the closing of the Guest House, so Gail and her family took Nkosi into their home to raise as their own. Daphne died when Nkosi was three.

In Gail's home Nkosi received unconditional love, healthy food, hygenic surroundings, and a chance to be a happy child in spite of his illness. Much of the book deals with Gail's efforts to educate people about the need for treatment and compassion for AIDS victims. She had a real fight on her hands just trying to enroll Nkosi in school. Together, Nkosi and foster mother Gail became powerful AIDS spokespersons. Nkosi considered it his duty to speak up to try to soften the hearts of government officials and others who could make a real difference in the war against AIDS.

The title of this extremely powerful book is extracted from a speech Nkosi often gave. Everywhere he went Nkosi reminded folks, "We are all the same." Nkosi and Gail appeared on television broadcasts in America and visited New York to give speeches at worldwide conferences. Though Nkosi was born into poverty and disease in a Third World country, he had become famous long before he died at age twelve. His obituary appeared on the front page of many prominent newspapers. The courageous poster child accomplished his mission.

--- Reviewed by Carole Turner

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A story that had to be told
Review: I tend to go for the universal-stories that cut across time, geography, race, creed, religion, and sex. Stories that have a profound effect on you even though you might be from a different country or time. WE ARE ALL THE SAME is one such book. Others that come to mind are "Middlesex" and "The Children's Corner" by Jackson McCrae. These books have one thing in common: while they're all about different themes, they show us something about ourselves. The real essence of these novels is not what's on the printed page, but how we take it in and digest it, and, in the end, how we feel about ourselves after we're through with that particular journey. This is an extraordinary story, full of hardship, love, and hope.

Also highly recommended: THE CHILDREN'S CORNER by J. T. McCrae

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Unsurmoutable Courage
Review: If this book doesn't touch your heart, nothing you ever read-will. It is sad,it is revealing. But beyond the emotions lies a boy that had the most wonderful courage, and a Mother that through great odds gave of her heart completely.

Also recommended: Nightmares Echo, Living To Tell The Tale,I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: achingly lovely
Review: Mr. Wooten has crafted a story of extraordinary elegance and simplicity. I can only imagine what a formidable task it was for him to attempt to convey the strength, purity and valour of this one fragile, brave boy in a sea of pain and despair. One is left with both a sense of unspeakable grief at the cruelty of a cold and uncaring world and the light of hope; if one small child and one determined woman can move the mountains of ignorance then there may redemption for us all. I challenge anyone to read this book and not be profoundly altered.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great book
Review: This book tells a story about a young African boy (NKOSI) born with HIV and made many amazing efforts to be an average child, like going to school defying the rules that many African schools had by not allowing children with HIV/AIDS in their schools.Nkosi helped many HIV/AIDS victims as well as speaking at a National Aids conference. I bought this after seeing the tv speacial that this book is based on and it drove me to read his story and the lady that adopted him. I thought this book is well written and shows the huge HIV/AIDS epidemic that exists in our day in age.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Story Of Young Boy's Extraordinary Courage
Review: This is a moving story about AIDS. In some areas of southern Africa the life expectancy has been cut in half. The hero of this book is a little boy born in South Africa. His growth was stunted by pediatric AIDS. He lived for 12 1/2 years before he passed away. The author met this little boy who had a wonderful sense of humor. The theme of his life is that he was a "normal" boy. He had a huge infectious smile that everyone loved. This little boy fought for the right to go to school and won that right for himself and others.

In Africa AIDS is a heterosexual disease and a childrens disease. This little boy, Nkosi, fought for the rights of all persons with AIDS. Nkosi had tremendous courage and his mantra was to do all he could in the time he had. He was even the keynote speaker at a major AIDS conference in South Africa. He spoke in front of over 20,000 people at this conference.

Nkosi had a wisdom beyond his years. He was a very smart little boy. He had a sense of himself and was sophisticated far beyond his years. He was always willing to talk about persons with AIDS as he believed it was a cause far bigger than just himself.

Nkosi had a classmate in school who became his best buddy. Nkosi's teacher was just marvelous and treated Nkosi without a stigma. Living to 12 1/2 years Nkosi was one of the longest living pediatric aids babies in South Africa. As you read this wonderful book you will learn all about a this boy's courage and his mother's great love for him.



Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Heroes, Angels and Demons?
Review: When I read this poignant book, I wondered as to how some people seem to get it-- in this instance Gail Johnson who crossed class and race lines to care for Nkosi Johnson, the young Zulu boy who died at the age of 12 with AIDS-- and others either cannot or do not want to get it-- here I refer to President Mbeki of South Africa, Mandella's sucessor, who believes that an "omnipotent apparatus" is using AIDS as an instrument of genocide against black Africans. These instruments are pharmaceutical companies, scientists, physicians, medical researchers and Western goverments.

The author of this book, Jim Wooten of ABC News, says that he is writing "about the relationship between a black child who never grew up and a white woman who never gave up. It has neither a happy ending nor even a promising beginning, for the child had no choice and no chance, and the woman knew all along what she was up against." Like the current U. S. deficit, the numbers of AIDS cases in Africa, or anywhere else for that matter, have very little impact on us. They are so large and impersonal. But the story of the courageous young Nkosi puts a face on the pandemic and in a small way brings it home to all of us. As the youngster said so eloquently: "We are all the same."

Both Nkosi and his adopted mother-- she actually did not adopt him legally and, according to Wooten, made every effort to see that he maintained a relationship with his birth family-- were heroes of the first order. (I kept wishing as I read this book in one setting that Wooten had provided the reader with a photograph of Ms. Johnson. I wanted to put a face on Nkosi's adopted "angel" mother.") It is sad to learn that Nelson Mandela, certainly one of the world's heroes, did not speak out against AIDS as he could have while he was president because he was uncomfortable discussing sex. I would nominate the president of Uganda, Yoweri Museveni, as an unusual hero too who did use his position to speak out about AIDS and when faced with opposition by the Catholic archbishop of the use of condoms by Uganda citizens to curb the spread of AIDS simply said to the archbishop: "'Your Eminence, shut up!'" According to the president, that's precisely what the archbishop did. He shut up. Finally Wooten is to be commended for breaking the rules of journalism and becoming emotionally involved as he fell under the spell of this young boy. If you read this fine story-- and certainly this is a great book for this season-- you will not soon forget Mr. Wooten's lying down beside the dying boy to say his own goodbyes.

This remarkable story of courage and love will warm your heart.




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