For South African activist and gospel singer, Musa Njoko, it was first stop Guyana, next stop Barbados, as she brought her powerful testimony to the Caribbean as the first Zulu gospel singer to ever minister in the region.
Njoko, who is also known as Musa "Queen" Njoko, is an influential HIV activist who is one of the first women to publicly disclose her HIV-positive status in South Africa. She is a well established entrepreneur as she avidly takes on the roles of a gospel singer, fashion designer, counsellor, educator and more to lead a successful business and ministry.
"Since her diagnosis as HIV-positive in late 1993, Njoko has made a strong come back and has inspired so many through her struggle against discrimination and certain death," Bishop Gerald A Seale, Secretary General and CEO of the Evangelical Association of the Caribbean based in Barbados, who worked with her on the Barbados part of her tour, told the ASSIST News Service (ANS).
"Over ten years later, Njoko's ministry brought her to the beautiful Caribbean, where she first visited Guyana for the EDGE Youth Conference, Every Day God Experience."
Bishop Seale said that Njoko was a special guest speaker in lieu of the conference's theme for this year, "Don't judge me, you don't know me."
"On Sunday, July 18th, 2010, Njoko blessed hundreds of people with her golden, gospel voice at Central Assembly of God, in Georgetown, Guyana," he went on to say.
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SOURCE: Assist News - Danielle Miskell
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