3 September 2021
How doin’ drugs saved my life
Zambian-born Danish musician Thomas Muchimba Buttenschøn was born HIV-positive in 1985.
After learning of his illness, his parents, who were also HIV positive, emigrated to Denmark to seek treatment. At the tender age of eight, Thomas would lose both his parents to AIDS-related deaths, and he too would have a close brush with death. After fully recovering thanks to taking antiretroviral (ARV) medication, Thomas threw himself into music.
He’s since found success in music, with millions of streams on the likes of Spotify and a stint judging the wildly popular Denmark’s Got Talent. He’s also married the love of his life and has two children, who, like his wife, are HIV negative thanks to his medication.
Engaging with the issues
After connecting with relatives, Thomas’s attention would turn to the alarming HIV/AIDS epidemic back home in Zambia. Statistics from the United Nations AIDS programme (UNAIDS) show that an alarming 1,5 million people out of the country’s 17,8 million population live with HIV.
Shocked by the statistics and determined to make a change back home, Thomas embarked on a lifelong mission to contribute to a better understanding of HIV and lifesaving ARVs, using his music and his own life story as an example. On his journey to make a meaningful change, Thomas formed strong bonds and working relationships with a group of extraordinary Zambian musicians that include B-Flow, Danny Kaya, John Chiti, Maiko & Mwiza Zulu.
To connect with his countrymen and women, Thomas, along with Tyler Q Rosen, director of Doin’ My Drugs, established the Muchimba Music Foundation (MMF), a foundation dedicated to creating change and awareness through music. Through this newly established foundation, Thomas and Tyler created a program for residents of the Zambian capital, Lusaka, to receive free tickets to a concert if they agreed to an HIV test.
MMF has held Test-For-Tickets concerts since 2015 in Lusaka, an effort that proved effective in shattering the stigma around testing and providing treatment to those who test positive.
During MMF’s campaigns, an astounding 10,802 Zambians were tested, and over 1,000 of those tested positive and were all enrolled into HIV counselling and treatment programs. The Test-For-Tickets program is already reshaping the conversation Zambians are having about HIV/AIDS.
Thomas’s objective is to test as many Zambians as possible, enrol those who need care into care, and drive down infection rates countrywide. Within the next several years, Test-For-Tickets will have a significant impact in Zambia, and beyond.
Thomas also released a soundtrack album to the documentary, to assist with funding, entitled Doin’ My Drugs, which is produced by 16-time Grammy Award-winning producer Thom Russo Jr and recorded on three continents: Europe, Africa, and North America. The album has 11 original tracks, including seven featured artists.
Doin’ My Drugs was shot for over 120 days over two and a half years, spanning the three continents of Africa, Europe and North America. It is a project that was completely self-funded by Thomas and Tyler.
The documentary premieres on Showmax on Monday, 6 September 2021. To get more on the story, check out the website or follow @doinmydrugs on social media.
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