
USF sophomore Kristen Dyer photographs children in South Africa. Photo by Brian Braff.
A $5 cell phone text donation to Keep a Child Alive by University of San Francisco sophomore Kristen Dyer won her a week-long trip
to South Africa with best-selling R&B artist Alicia Keys in June.
The trip wasn’t a stop on Keys’ The Element of Freedom tour,
however. It was a chance for Dyer and four other supporters of KCA – a
nonprofit dedicated to providing anti-retroviral drugs, care, and support to
children and families affected by HIV/AIDS in Africa and India by engaging the
public in the fight against AIDS – to visit a number of the nonprofit’s
orphanages and clinics in South Africa.
Shortly after making the donation in March, a text “thank
you” arrived on Dyer’s phone, inviting her to visit the KCA Website and
describe in one word what Africa meant to her to be entered to win the trip.
Dyer chose “strength.”
She made it into the top 100, where contestants were next
asked to create an online profile and describe their life experience and skills
that would make them good advocates for KCA.
“These children in these orphanages will touch my heart and
the truth is I can’t relate to them in all aspects but I can in others,” said
Dyer, who speaks of having to grow up fast and endure things she shouldn’t have
had to while she was young in her online profile.
“Their lives have been thrown to the ground by this disease
that has stolen their families and their opportunities,” said Dyer, an international
studies major. “My life (up until my senior year in high school) had been
thrown around by people who have changed my life indefinitely.”
Dyer has no doubt she was chosen, in part, for her interest
and eye as an aspiring photographer, which
she has put to work fulfilling the contest’s challenge to winners to tap into
their Africa experience to activate others in their home countries to care
about the HIV/AIDS pandemic when they return.
For Dyer, photography is a pastime that has grown into a
potential career path as she tries to put her past life’s bad memories behind
her and create new memories through her camera’s viewfinder.
“I need to take my camera. I need to go to Africa.
And I need to help raise awareness about what is going on and about the AIDS
epidemic,” said Dyer, who wants to establish a USF club or campaign supporting
KCA when she returns in fall.