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Novelists fight HIV/Aids
01/12/2004 11:46 - (SA)
United Nations - Nobel prize-winning novelist Nadine Gordimer launched on Tuesday a literary-style Live Aid, in the form of a short-story collection by some of world's most distinguished writers to benefit HIV/Aids treatment.
At a press conference, where she was introduced by Salman Rushdie as "the Bob Geldof of the literary world," Gordimer said she had taken her cue from musicians who had performed benefit concerts for causes like Aids and famine relief.
"I asked myself, what had we writers done?" the South African novelist said. "The answer was nothing. No group effort."
Gordimer wrote to 20 novelists, including four fellow Nobel prize winners - Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Gunter Grass, Jose Saramago and Kenzaburo Oe - asking each to contribute one short story and to waive all royalties.
"And I got wonderful responses from every one of them," she said.
A 21-story collection
The result was a 21-story collection, Telling Tales, which has so far found 13 publishers around the world - all of whom agreed to distribute the book without taking any profit.
"It's a great book. Some of the stories are real classics," said Rushdie, who was also among the invited contributors, along with the likes of John Updike, Margaret Atwood, Woody Allen, Michel Tournier and Arthur Miller.
Specifically, the money generated from the worldwide sales of Telling Tales will finance the work of the Treatment Action Campaign, a South African HIV/Aids treatment and advocacy non-governmental organisation.
"Musicians have contributed their talents to jazz, pop and classical concerts for the benefit of the 40 million men, women and children worldwide infected with HIV/Aids, two-thirds of whom are in Africa," Gordimer, who edited the collection, said in the introduction to the book.
'Writers should contribute'
"We decided that we too should ... give something of our ability, as imaginative writers, to contribute in our way to the fight against this disease from which no country and no individual is safely isolated," she said.
None of the stories take HIV/Aids as their direct subject, but many deal with themes of death, illness and isolation.
Updike, who attended Tuesday's launch, said he had jumped at the chance to join the project.
"Unlike rock stars, writers tend to live small and private lives," he said, adding that it was only right that they "put in a small way, their names on the line."
With all profits from the book going towards Aids treatment, Rushdie acknowledged there was also a crucial campaigning job to be done to dispel "the pervasive misconceptions" that still surround the illness.
"The great enemy here is indifference," agreed Gordimer. "The denial that this can happen to me, the feeling that it belongs to the gay community, or black people or undeveloped countries."
- AFP
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