I made my first trip to Haiti in 1998. Fell in love with my first orphan in 2000. Started a non-profit to help Haiti in 2003 and started taking teams down on short-term mission trips soon after. I fell in love with Wanna and Fritzon (and a lot of others in the same orphanage) in March of 2010 and had to wait over 2 years to start the adoption process due to the laws of Haiti and a process that is always changing. Our documents were finally submitted and accepted in the fall of 2012 and are currently moving through the court system. We are quickly (hopefully) approaching the end of our adoption. This is my blog to talk about all things related to our adoption and any thing else I think is relevant to it. Enjoy!

Search This Blog

Monday, April 22, 2013

Babies in the River....

I was talking with someone the other day on a topic that has become personal.  It's not an easy topic and there are no perfect answers for it but it demands discussion and requires action:  Orphans: Family Preservation and/or Adoption.  She shared this story with me and surprisingly, though it seems to be a pretty popular parable, I had never heard it before:

"There was a small village on the edge of a river.  One day a villager took a break from harvesting food and noticed a baby floating down the river toward the village. She couldn't believe her eyes! She heard crying in the distance and looked downstream to see that two babies had already floated by the village.
"Oh, this is terrible!" A woman who had been building a campfire shouted, "Look, there are even more upstream!" Indeed, there were three more babies coming around the bend.

They quickly organized themselves to rescue the babies. Watchtowers were built on both sides of the shore and swimmers were coordinated to maintain shifts of rescue teams that maintained 24-hour surveillance of the river. Ziplines with baskets attached were stretched across the river to get even more babies to safety quickly.
The number of babies floating down the river only seemed to increase. The villagers built orphanages and they taught even more children to make blankets and they increased the amount of food they grew to keep the babies housed, warm and fed. Life in the village carried on.
Then one day at a meeting of the Village Council, a villager asked, "But where are all these babies coming from?"
"No one knows," said another villager. "But I say we organize a team to go upstream and find how who's throwing these babies in the river."
Not everyone was in agreement. "But we need people to help us pull the babies out of the river," said one villager. "That's right!" said another villager. "And who will be here to cook for them and look after them if a bunch of people go upstream?"
So one group stayed while the other went to find the cause and search for a solution.

_----------

I have found myself in a position of pulling babies out of the stream.  I encourage those who want to, to go find who is throwing babies in the river and figure out solutions before it gets to that.  I don't think they will be able to stop every baby from floating down the river to us but if they can stop some then lives will be saved and changed.  I never jumped in the river to gain attention or glory.  I didn't grow up thinking that I would be trying to rescue orphans when I was an adult but that is what God put in my path and I can't walk away from that.  It is who I am and what is in me.  I am happy to encourage and support others who are on a similar mission but a different path.  Instead of being in the water they are on the shore, going upstream to stop the tide of children being washed away.

What I never expected to encounter were people standing on the shore yelling at me that I'm doing it all wrong.  I never expected people to attack me for choosing to step in the water, instead of go upstream, as those children drowned.  I didn't know I would be persecuted and told that I was part of the problem by rescuing those already in the water.  Part of me wants to yell back to these groups that are picketing my wet, mucky work and say, "Hey... why are you wasting your time yelling at me?  Take all that energy, go upstream and do something there.  I can't be there and be here so go if that's what you want."  As I search more into adoption, ethics, family preservation, the orphan crisis and so forth I am shocked at how often adoptive parents are told they are the problem and that Christians are fueling the problem.

You've never had that experience or heard of people saying that?  This is just one of many articles on the issue:
http://www.buzzfeed.com/jillfilipovic/why-evangelical-christians-love-adopting-kids

I don't pretend to have the answers but I will say that I see way too much dissension in the adoption world and I just wish we could work together.  Adoptive parents are not the enemy.  They may not be educated or know there are ethical issues in adoptions.  I didn't know that until I started on my own journey but I will not spend my time and energy bashing and degrading those who didn't or don't know better.  Instead I will do my part to walk along side and educate these parents.  I will search for truth in between pulling kids out of the water.  I will send my support and encouragement to those who are not pulling out babies but searching for solutions upstream and I will not bash them for their efforts.  We are all in this together and the results in the adoption world and with the "orphan crisis" might be a lot better if we actually learned how to do this.

4 comments:

  1. Well said. I feel very similar each time I hear that instead of helping Haitians learn to feed and care for their health issues we should be helping the poor in America. Thankfully it is not said to our faces often. Lifting you up.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I agree - I think the enemy would have us become immobilized with fear of making the wrong decision = doing nothing at all. My hope is that (as typically happens), the pendulum will swing from "saving the orphan" to "there are very few 'real' orphans" (which is where we are going now), to being balanced in the middle... where agencies and country officials and adoptive parents all work together to be educated and do the best they can for families. It's hard being stuck in the middle as adoptive families and being made to look/feel guilty for doing what we thought was good for our families and for the children we adopted. Keep up the good work, Shasta. You are doing such amazing work for the families while championing for the children and their biological families. Don't get discouraged!
    www.pressingin.com

    ReplyDelete
  3. Then one day at a meeting of the Village Council, a villager asked, "But where are all these babies coming from?"
    "No one knows," said another villager. "But I say we organize a team to go upstream and find how who's throwing these babies in the river."

    One would think that that would be the FIRST thing that should have been done. That is what family preservation first is about - it isn't saying family preservation always - just saying that there should be an order to how things are done.

    "Not everyone was in agreement. "But we need people to help us pull the babies out of the river," said one villager. "That's right!" said another villager. "And who will be here to cook for them and look after them if a bunch of people go upstream?"
    So one group stayed while the other went to find the cause and search for a solution"

    And often the solution means that there will be FAR less babies sent down the river. If this had been the FIRST step, then the solution might have been quick. By LEAVING IT for so long, the solution may now be far harder.

    No-one is saying international adoption shouldn't exist but it should be the last resort.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree BUT it did start the other way around in most countries so we can't get mad at those that did it wrong to begin with if their intentions were pure and they just didn't know better. Now we have to work together towards a shift and make sure that a system is in place to slow the pace of those being thrown in and help educate all those living around "rivers" know how to handle it for all the future babies showing up in rivers. We can't have a shift if no one is willing to work together and both sides think they are the only ones with the right idea.

      Delete