#WorldAidsDay: St Francis Care Centre remains a beacon of hope, resilience
The gathering also celebrated the young residents of Rainbow Cottage, some born with HIV, who continue to grow and thrive through specialised medical care and nurturing support.
At St Francis Care Centre, where every corridor holds a story, and every bedside is a testament to resilience, World Aids Day unfolded as a powerful reminder of why the fight against HIV/Aids remains urgent.
Staff, supporters, and partners gathered at the centre to honour lives lost, uplift those still fighting, and recommit to a future defined by dignity and compassion.
In a moving speech, centre manager Relebohile “Lebo” Ntjona highlighted how deeply HIV/Aids shape the centre’s daily work.
He said the commemoration was rooted in honouring the adult patients who arrive at the Centre carrying more than illness-many come burdened by fear, exhaustion, and years of fighting alone.

“Many of them come to us in critical, life-limiting and life-threatening stages. Even when their time with us is short, they bless us with their courage, their stories, and their final hopes.”
Ntjona added that every life lost leaves a lasting mark on the staff, who hold those memories with profound respect.

Children’s resilience brings hope
The gathering also celebrated the young residents of Rainbow Cottage, where children, some born with HIV, continue to grow and thrive through specialised medical care and nurturing support.
Their laughter, Ntjona said, stands as daily proof of the transformative power of love and treatment.
“Their innocence, their laughter, and their resilience remind us every day why this work matters. Every child deserves to grow, to dream, and to live without stigma.”
Transforming the Aids response
This year’s UNAIDS theme, ‘Overcoming disruption, transforming the Aids response’, resonated strongly with the centre’s mission. Ntjona spoke about persistent barriers that continue to threaten vulnerable communities- poverty, stigma, fear, late diagnoses, and limited access to care.
“These disruptions cost lives. Our responsibility is to respond by providing not just medical treatment, but dignity, comfort, and unconditional acceptance,” he said.
A renewed promise
Ntjona said that the purpose of the event was to remember the lives lost, honour those still fighting, and recommit the Centre to its guiding values of love, dignity, inclusion, and service.
He concluded with a message of unity and shared purpose: “May we be reminded that every act of kindness, every gesture of care, and every hour spent at a patient’s bedside contributes to transforming the Aids response-right here, in this very place.”







