When Macarena Aldape cleans a wound or treats a rash, her Banjara patients often ask her why she is helping them.
The Banjara people’s socio-economic status often limits their access to healthcare, education and jobs with decent wages.
“The same God who created you created me and loves us,” Macarena Aldape, a registered nurse, tells her patients. “As a nurse, Christian, woman and mother, I try to show them love and acceptances. It is what God has told us to do – to love our neighbors as ourselves. That’s what I try to do.”
Macarena Aldape and her husband, Eddie, who serve as Cooperative Baptist Fellowship field personnel in India, hold medical camps twice a month in cities across northern India. Often, they conduct a camp for six to seven hours in one location and then conduct another one in the afternoon at another location.
The extreme poverty in which many of the Banjara people live prevents them from seeking the care of a physician. The Aldapes, natives of San Antonio, Texas, provide a variety of medical services – from treating diseases and common illness to providing education about good health practices.
“When a person learns something, that knowledge is power,” Macarena Aldape said. “It makes them feel so good about themselves. It makes a world of difference to them.”
The Aldapes also work to educate people about HIV/AIDS. With limited health education and medical care, many do not know that they are infected. Eddie Aldape said that in one Banjara community it is estimated that approximately half the adults are HIV positive.
In 2006, the Aldapes started a boys’ home to serve families living in extreme poverty that could no longer care for their children. Approximately 100 boys wanted to live in the home, but only 50 could be accepted. Many of these children come from homes where at least one parent is infected with HIV/AIDS. The Aldapes predict that the need for children’s homes will increase in the next few years as more children are orphaned by AIDS.
Rajesh, the oldest of three children, was 5 years old when he came to live at the boys’ home. His parents, who were both HIV positive, did not want to separate their children, but also recognized that they could no longer provide them with adequate care.
“When Rajesh’s father’s health went from bad to worse, he called us over to make a promise to him that we would take good care of Rajesh,” Eddie Aldape said. “He also asked us to take the other two boys once his wife was not able to care for them. He apologized over and over and he had never before seen the love of God. He and his wife accepted Christ as their personal savior and became active members of the local church. He has since gone on to be with the Lord.”
The Aldapes conduct medical clinics at the boys’ home and other children homes. They dream of outfitting a school bus or van with medical equipment and supplies. Such a mobile clinic would give them more flexibility and “go wherever the needs are.”
Charlotte Tubbs writes for CBF communications.