As I said one day in August 2012 I was happily playing by the pool with my two kiddo's and had no idea our life was about to be turned upside down by an email. Funny how life takes you on these seemingly side journeys that turn out to be the real road you're supposed to be traveling on. He definitely knows best.
So here is our story....so far....
Our Adoption Story
Our story
began in late summer of 2012 when we got an email asking for our help to finish the summer hosting a
teenager from Ukraine. He had come to
the U.S. on an orphan hosting program and the family he stayed with had a
family emergency. We figured that as
parents with 2 teens still at home we could show him a good time. We had 6
children total but 4 were grown and out of the house.
So Vlad came
to our home and our eyes were opened to the plight of Ukraine teenage
orphans. We found out that they are
released, “graduated”, from the orphanage once they turn 16. They have 2 options at that point. One is to just go out and attempt life on
their own. The average Ukraine family
exists on $450 a month. Orphans who are
barely 16 and have no education or skills are at the bottom of the food chain
and most can’t find even menial work.
They get absolutely no help from any organization or the
government. Most will end up in a life
of crime, living off the streets or in human trafficking.
The other
option is to go to trade school. They
can choose from 5 different trades.
Let’s say they choose culinary.
They are put in dorms – no, not like our college dorms here but rat
infested nasty places where no human should ever have to live. They are given 100 Grivna per month – about
$13 U.S. – and with that they have to purchase their food, clothing and any
food they need for cooking school. Most
can’t afford it so instead of actually cooking they spend 8 hours a day reading
cookbooks and then the rest of their time fending off predators. Again, most will end up in a life of crime
just to eat.
Predators
wait for the teens to be released from the orphanages with promises of food,
shelter and jobs. Little do they know
they are now entering the world of human trafficking? 80% of Ukraine teen orphans don’t live past
their 20th birthday.
Once we
learned this we couldn’t let it happen to this boy who was staying with
us. Without even knowing what it would
take we jumped into the international adoption process. What a nightmare. But 7 months and $30,000 later we brought our
new son home on March 2, 2013. He turned
16 the next month. Whew – just in time.
I (Kathe) came
home from two trips to Ukraine and spending time every day in an orphanage that
smelled like sewer, was freezing cold but where the children were all
smiles. They don’t realize what’s
waiting for them as they approach 16.
They have little food and are constantly told that they don’t
matter. No one teaches them anything
because the adults know that most of them won’t survive anyway so what’s the
point. When our son came home he didn’t
even know how to read or do basic math.
He had no expectations of what he could do or become. He had been told for years that he was stupid
when in reality he is very bright.
After coming
home and having nightmares every night about the faces in the orphanage we knew
this was a new path in our lives. Summer
2013 we hosted 3 more boys and found them families. We found families for several more teens that
others had hosted. We put braces on Vlad
and started him at Novi High School.
What an achievement for him!! His
first real school and it was 10th grade. He was on the football team, a dream of his
when he thought about coming to America, and going to his first homecoming
dance.
In October we
got word that one of his best friends from the orphanage, Anya, had been
“graduated” at the end of August and went to trade school. She was found dead, murdered by strangulation
and stabbing. Typical. It tore out Vlad’s heart, and ours. He felt guilty that he wasn’t there to save
her even though, in reality, there was nothing he could have done. We felt terrible because she had been hosted
during the summer by another family but was not adopted and no family found for
her.
Over winter
break we hosted two more teens. We found
a family for one of them and the other, Yuri, stole our hearts. We just knew we had to adopt him. But the prospect seemed overwhelming. How would we come up with another $30K? We were still recuperating from the last adoption
that wiped out our savings. We still had
3 teens at home, all in braces, sports and with other expenses. The mountain of paperwork that would need to
be done – again. The trips back and
forth to Ukraine – again. We took a deep
breath and said yes, just trusting that through raising funds we could do it.
Then we got
an email from our Ukraine facilitator.
Could we possibly take one more?
Anya’s sister, Kristina, was 13 and in dire need of a family. After the loss of her sister she was
despondent thinking that she would end up with the same fate. Our facilitator said it was urgent because
the orphanage she is in would be closed to adoptions starting in the fall due
to the decision of the orphanage director.
Ugh! That means it has to be a
family who is already in process like we were and ready to move really, really
fast, like we were.
We spent our
days working to earn the money needed, doing fundraising and huge amounts of
paperwork for two governments, something called a dossier. Our dossier was almost complete on a day in
early April when I got a message on Facebook from a fellow adoptive mom. She had adopted a teen girl and wondered if I
knew of anyone who was paper ready who might be willing to adopt her daughters’
best friend who was aging out in July.
I sent out an
email asking but no one I knew was already in process with a completed home
study. So I told Tom about her. Since we were already in process and approved
for three it was do-able for us, except the money part. Costs have now climbed another $10,000. He
said yes, let’s do it.
A picture
taken of Anya a couple of years ago by her best friend who was adopted by a
family in New York.
So now we
have to figure out a way to come up with upwards of $50,000. Three different teenagers, three orphanages,
one in the northeast and one in the southeast and one to the west of Kiev in
Ukraine. A lot more travel, more
expenses. And the time is so short that
no mistakes can be made in the process.
Especially for Anya who is aging out in early July.
We can earn
the money ourselves by working but not in the time frame needed. We are working double to do it but it’s just
not going to be fast enough for these teens.
So we’re
doing what we never do – ask. We have
to. For these teens.
We are asking
everyone to help us fund this adoption.
We can’t do it alone. We can
raise them, teach them and feed them but we can’t do this. Not this fast. We need to be able to travel by early summer or
it’s too late for Kristina and Anya.
We are asking
for donations to our adoption fund that we have set up in Paypal. Paypal.com.
Our account is arbonnekathe@msn.com.
Please be sure to mark as gift so no fees are assessed.
Or you can
send a check to us at: Tom & Kathe
Ray, 24870 Portsmouth Avenue, Novi, MI 48374.
Please put in the memo – adoption fund.
I can’t tell
you what this means. There are no words
to explain how these kids live and what happens to them. It has changed our lives.
Hosea 14:3 In
you the orphan finds mercy.
With our
sincerest thanks,
Tom &
Kathe Ray
248-890-6968
P.S. I’m sure many of you have seen the news on
what is happening in Ukraine. We are
still a “GO”. We have been in contact
with our facilitator and adoptions are still progressing.
So please
pass our information out to anyone you know that has a heart for these teen
orphans. We need the help of a village
on this one! It’s a tall order to come
up with this much money this quickly and be ready to travel.
UPDATE as of
April 25th: Great news. Our dossier has been submitted to the Ukraine
SDA. That is one big hurdle over. The time frame to travel is now approximately
60 days or less. We have raised just
over $10,000 of the $50,000 needed so a lot has to happen in the next 60
days. We are trusting that it will come
in.
Thank you for
any support you can give to us.
Ways to help:
Please mark as GIFT
2.
Send
check to: Kathe Ray, 24870 Portsmouth
Avenue, Novi, MI 48374
THANK YOU!
And thank you for passing our story along to others that could possibly help us bring these three teenagers home to their family. I've never been one for asking for anything, especially money, but in this case I have no choice. We simply can't do it in the time frame that it needs to be done by ourselves. We need the help of the village.
Thank you!
No comments:
Post a Comment