As some of you know, we are fostering a baby for a few
months. It seems a little crazy when I am alone and thinking about our life;
that we have added this little person in as our own children have grown and are
on their way out of our care. I mean, Michael and I are in our 50’s and we have
all the creeping subtle ageing fun signs of it…aches in places we didn’t know
existed, sleepless nights, weird reactions physically to this and that.
Whatever. Having a baby in your home is, as we are now recalling, no small effort.
However, it seemed important and
essential to his well being and we are
certainly glad to do it. It’s funny how early childhood parenting comes back
quickly (although I will admit to not remembering song lyrics very well…humming
is a good skill to have!)
It is amazing to me how easy it is to love a
child that is not our own. Julius is particularly loveable for some reason. Partly
I know it’s because we know he has no one else. It’s also because he has been
sickly since he was left by his family. He is the epitome of “the least of our
brethren” as are all the millions of children left behind in the wake of
various health or debilitating poverty crises. For me, loving and caring for
Julius represents more than just the day to day work of taking care of him and
helping him get better. Given how I sometimes feel facing the situation of
these children, it really feels like the least we can do at this point in time.
Of course, as parents and compassionate people, we are all
moved by the plight of orphans everywhere. There are millions of them, thanks
to the AIDS pandemic and other illnesses or crises often related to extreme
poverty and instability. We see it in the news, at the movies, in books. We get
notices in the mail even, so we really can’t avoid knowing about these
tragedies, if we are at all paying attention. When one actually thinks about
the numbers of young people in these situations it’s almost unbearable.
Like a lot of people, I have, in the past, sponsored kids
through Save the Children, donated money to orphanages, etc. and felt that at
least I was paying attention and was aware of the issues and doing a teeny
little bit to help. I was not at all prepared emotionally for how
hard it would be to be surrounded by children who have been orphaned or
abandoned, or who are living in the streets. For one thing, the abundance is staggering.
For two, their incredibly young age is something which you must really get your head around,
and it does take some time. I know people who come here and completely avoid
kids or orphans because it is so hard to deal with emotionally.
Coming from Middle America we are not often confronted with
the negative effects on children of this sort of extreme poverty. It is there,
but fortunately for us, there are “safety nets’ although they may not be
sufficient. Here are there none to speak of or what there is, is so
overburdened, it is beyond dysfunctional.
My first exposure to this situation was on our first day
here when we were walking around with Michael in town, getting oriented. There were a lot of young boys on the streets
that day. The boys who followed us were “little boys” by my standards. Probably
9 or 10. But man, have they seen a lot. I hate to think of what they have
already been through. I wrote about this
in one of my early blogs thinking it was unusual. However, that first day was not an aberration.
There is a whole population of kids, aged between 4 and 18 probably, living on
the streets, in the park, garbage dumps, etc, and one sees them every time one
goes into town. They are like what I imagine ‘untouchables’ to be in other
cultures. Most people don’t even acknowledge them. We are often approached by
them, barefooted and covered in dirt, begging for shillings or a bite to eat. Michael particularly, is often swarmed. He
takes their glue bottles and buys them something to eat (many are huffing glue
which is also horrifying but keeps them warm and abates hunger). We try to
support the privately funded Tumaini
Drop IN Center hoping to find a way to help them. Going there is startling at first, but the kids, despite
their appearance, are usually friendly and polite. The Drop in Center works to get them back
home, or into school, or at least to decide on something more “normal” to do as
they reach adulthood. The local police jail them for vagrancy. There are few
options for a child who is abandoned, orphaned, or chased from the home due to
extreme poverty. There is no public homeless shelter and the resources for
children in these situations are very strained and underfunded. Fortunately
there are privately and church funded organizations…children’s homes, pediatric centers, youth centers, etc.
Sally Test Pediatric Center is connected to
the local public hospital. It is a day care center basically, a place for
hospitalized kids to come to play and the child life workers go into the wards
to make being hospitalized a bit less insufferable for kids. It’s a fabulous
place, started and funded by AMPATH and the hospital. Abandoned children end up
there. You have to imagine how desperate
and nearly insane one must be to abandon one’s baby or small children.
Although I go regularly to see and hold the babies, I am
always emotionally conflicted when I am there. It makes me happy to see the
children, children whose situations could be so much worse, be loved and well treated by
the caretakers at the center. However, l have this constant sinking feeling about their
futures and that I am not doing enough and that I cannot give enough.
Julius was brought to the hospital by his father along with
his brother. He was severely malnourished and he has had this ongoing lung
infection issue. His mother had abandoned the family and then his father left
them both there after awhile, purportedly to go find work. Julius became one of
the kids at Sally Test Pediatric center. Basically they are there are there
during the day then go to the peds ward at night. Not a nice or ideal life for
a baby. I was spending a lot of time
with him there at Sally Test, and then when the courts sent them to a very nice
children’s home about 40 minutes out of town, I started going out to see him
and the other kids who had moved away. He continued to be sickly so I became
concerned and began focusing on him alone.
Over time it became clear that Julius is in need of some
special care. He kept being hospitalized by the children’s home and each time
was diagnosed with pneumonia. I was there each time, trying to get information,
give background facts, talk to docs and get our AMPATH docs involved, which
fortunately they did. After the last
bout of “pneumonia” I was able to put some pressure on the situation, got him
diagnosed finally correctly (TB thanks to an AMPATH doc) and on the correct
medicine. Because of his incessant needs, the children’s home was glad to have us take him for awhile knowing
that he was needing more than they could give him.
We cannot adopt Julius. He is not even up for adoption at
this point. The adoption laws in Kenya are complicated and the whole system as
far as I can tell does not benefit the children. Knowing what we know and
seeing what we have seen, I am so thankful for the people who run children’s homes. Whether
they are church funded or otherwise, they go to all sorts of lengths to make
sure their kids are well taken care of and get an education. It’s a constant
battle for them because there are so many kids. We are associated with and supportive
of several here, which tellingly, the Kenyan government does not support at
all. Julius’ Children’s Home, Lewa, is relatively well funded and self
sustaining. It’s clean and relatively hygienic. The caretakers, for the most
part, are loving people. The director, Phyllis Keino, is a star and a true
advocate for children in Kenya. Although
I am not dying to take him back there, I feel confident that with our current
stabilization and loving foundation effort and the work they do there, he will
be alright.
Julius represents the
little we can do. It seems like a lot, bringing a child into your home, but
honestly for all the need, it is not much. For all the children I see on the street or
other children at his children’s home who need a hug or to be cuddled, he is
the recipient of all that potential love for now. It could be someone else next
year. It could continue to be Julius. I expect we’ll be in each other’s lives
for a long time, but for now, having the opportunity to love him up and give
him something he desperately needs, is good for all of us it seems, except for
Rafiki, our dog, who now gets to be outside most of the day!(they are becoming
buds though)
Julius after packing on a kilo in one week! |
julius a couple months ago at Lewa |
Michael and Julius at Lewa 2 months ago |
One of JUlius' many talents.... |
kids at Kitale children's home catching termites! |
Julius first week he was here |
Michael and Sean, another boy at Lewa |
Such a sad situation, Lizzy! I probably would be one of those who couldn't even deal with the poverty and in fact when I went overseas to live it was to a very developed country where there is less poverty than here. I salute you and Michael and Liam for your involvement! You guys are awesome! And I'll bet you did not have this in mind when you decided to move. All the best!
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