Portrait

 

Lotti Latrous was born in Dielsdof, near Zurich in Switzerland. She grew up in Regensberg and at the age of sixteen went to Geneva as an au-pair girl to learn French. There she met Aziz from Tunisia and found love of her life, a love which is unique in its generosity and respect for each other.

Due to Aziz Latrous’s work as director of Nestlé the family with the children Sonia, Selim and Sarah came to Abidjan, the economic metropolis of the Ivory Coast after spending times in Jeddah, Nigeria and Cairo.

After two years Lotti Latrous started to work at the hospital called “Mother Teresa”. The misery which she experienced there as a privileged woman with chauffeur, cook and swimming pool inspired her to open an ambulatory in Adjouffou, one of the slums of Abidjan. This she did with the full support of her husband. Hardly the ambulatory was opened Nestlé transferred the family to Cairo.

As Lotti Latrous wanted to carry on taking care of the ambulatory, she made a deal with her family – she spent two months in Cairo and one month in Abidjan. Soon it became clear that the balancing act between the ambulatory in the slum in Adjouffou and the family in Cairo is not possible on a continuous basis and a decision has to be taken. Although the decision taken hit the family and the marriage hard, but it didn’t break them up.

All this happened in 1999. Today Selim, Sonia, Sarah and Aziz, who is now retired, live in Switzerland and Lotti in the slums of Adjouffou. If possible Lotti comes to visit her family four times a year. Her family members also visit her from time to time.

Lotti Latrous received the renowned Adele-Duttweiler Prize of Switzerland in 2002.

The readers of the magazine “Bild” of Germany selected her as the “Lady of the Year” in December 2004.

On 8th January 2005 Swiss public elected her as the “Lady of the Year 2004” at the yearly “Swiss Award” ceremony.

Aids in Africa

Every twenty seconds someone dies of AIDS in Africa. During the next 10 years the immune deficient illness will kill more people in south of Sahara than all the wars of twentieth century. The number of orphans will also rise to an overwhelming proportion, so will the number of new born with AIDS positives. Nowhere in the world is the AIDS virus causing such havoc than in southern Africa. According to the UNAIDS report in 2007 worldwide 2.1 million people died of AIDS, out of which 1.6 million were from black Africa, where only 10 percentage of the world population live. This means 4380 people dying each day from the immune deficient illness. Four thousands three hundred eighty!