Monday, February 28, 2011

!dea Camp - Session 2 - Causes & Ramifications


More notes from !dea Camp's discussion on Orphan care - feel free to pass it on to others. 
This is edits from Friday afternoon's talks & workshops. 

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// Adoption is a calling – not every one will or should adopt…

//  …BUT Orphan Care is a mandate for us all!! It is something that every single one of us needs to be a part of helping with.



TRAFFICKING

// Traffickers prey on the most vulnerable to make a profit – the loss of parents creates vulnerable children & teenagers

// Every two minutes children are abducted and trafficked

// There is a growing increase in child trafficking mixed with international adoption
- often when adoptions take a long time that is a good thing; it means they are fully investigating whether or not the child is an orphan and making sure they haven't been trafficked. 

// We are better at doing mercy (quick fix, see effects immediately) than justice (complicated, longer term involving systems such as religion, governmental and economic) - people need JUSTICE!

// 1/3 of runaways in the USA are approached by a trafficker within 48 hours

// Imagine if we put similar efforts into preventing children from becoming orphans


MALNUTRITION

// A child dies every 6 seconds from malnutrition – it kills more than AIDS and malaria combined

// The truth is that mums love their kids internationally BUT many are under resourced

// Where possible we should keep mothers and children together and support both of them to prevent orphaning

// In slums, at any given time, 50% of girls are pregnant. This is not a result of promiscuity but through selling sex to provide food for their families. Mothers will often ask their eldest daughter to sacrifice her sexuality in order to provide for their family.

// Every minute a mother dies through childbirth – tackling maternal health helps tackle the orphan crisis. You are 100x more likely to survive pregnancy if you are in the USA vs. on the African continent.

// Every 35 seconds a child is orphaned by AIDS.

// AIDS isn’t an event; it’s a disease. And it’s not just a “medical” effort that is needed to help it.

// Ask better questions. Listen to the people directly involved in these struggles.


SPECIAL NEEDS

// The plight of children with special needs internationally is horrendous – political ideologies, sense of shame and warped religious views create a sense that those children are worthless.

// In America, when it is discovered a child has Down’s syndrome, 90% of those pregnancies will be aborted. While other countries publically scorn children with special needs, America simply covers up brokenness and pretends it didn’t exist.


PHOTOGRAPHY

// “Fly in the eye” photography (where we desire to highlight human poverty with a pathetic looking child” is simply developmental pornography. We are exploiting people.

// Ask yourself these questions before taking pictures in other cultures:
// Is this photo for them or for me?
// How does God see this person?
// How would I feel if I was this person?

// We need to listen to the people we photograph. We need to ask what is their story and then seek to help bring long-term solutions to their problems.
// Empower women to look after their families. Help them get a job and/or an education
// Train young people in an occupation or trade that will build them a sustainable future


DOMESTIC VIOLENCE

// Children are made vulnerable in domestic violence situations

// Children are often “orphaned” by a parent that is around but is not actually involved in their live, or involved in a negative way (abuse, substance addiction). Though they have a “parent of record”, this person is merely a figurehead and the child needs to be cared for.

// Domestic violence affects both the children involved (educational delay, loss of innocence, parentalization, bullying, ADHD, over-achieving, eating disorders…) as well as the wider society (repetition of domestice violence, less graduates, higher mental health sufferers, poor relationships, teenage pregnancy, chronic disease e.g. depression, obesity…)

// Solutions to Domestic violence: face it and realise it happens everywhere, be available, know what to do, be an open door, find the root cause, educate yourself, collaborate, teach from church pulpits, support programmes, use your gifts. 

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What stats stand out to you? Anything surprise you? Thoughts?

Saturday, February 26, 2011

!dea Camp Morning #1 - The Global State of the Orphan

Steve and I are currently attending !dea Camp, a collaborative conference where everyone gets a voice and chance to throw in their thoughts, ask lots of questions and really engage with the topic. This years theme is 'Orphan Care'. 









These are just a snippet of my notes from the morning session (there will be three more notes like this to come in the next coming days) - there were 8 different speakers (with 5-20 minutes each) plus workshops where all delegates were actively encouraged to throw in their ideas. 
Some of these are statistics. 
Some are experiences from work in various fields. 
Some are just simply random musings. 
The point is not what they are, but what it triggers us to think...to feel...to see...to do. 

Feel free to comment with your thoughts, experiences, opinions!!

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// The orphan crisis seems to large with 150-200 million orphans worldwide

//The people of God are the hope of the world

// Research highlights that in America we do not have the ability to be vulnerable. Americans are the most in debt, overspent, most overweight & most addicted – these are numbing mechanisms to cope with not being able to be broken

//80% of people on mission trips to orphans are women

// The problem isn’t that there aren’t enough Christians in the world – it is that the compassion of the Christians in the world isn’t enough

// If our only solutions to the Orphan Crisis are building/funding orphanages or international adoption, we will only reach around 1-2% of the orphans in need – we need to think outside of the box

// Fatherlessness is written in the hearts of this generation – songs, movies, blogs, TV shows…

// Fatherlessness is the engine driving our worst problems – teenage pregnancy, gang culture, homicide…

//The church needs to raise up mentors to help – In Portland, OR at the mentoring project, there  are 1000 kids on the formal waiting list for mentors

// Churches – start small, start with what is already going on, start with prayer

//Jeremiah 32:7 – Nothing is too difficult for God

// There is no reason the Orphan Crisis cannot be solved – Civil Rights: look at what happened 1960-1969? Global Warming: No one even talked about it 15 years ago.

// We need to work out what the “best interest of the child” really means

// Institutionalised care (orphanages/groups homes) are 5-10 times more costly than family care

// International adoption costs around $30,000. Figures suggest raising a child until their 18 in America costs over $200,000. That is $230,000 that could be spent on reaching multiple orphans, not just one.

// In USA, we have sought to eliminate many/most orphanages and group homes knowing these are not in “the best interest of the child” YET we continue to fund and see the solution oversees as building orphanages

// What if we invested our efforts in helping the people of those nations take care of the children in their nations?

// After the mass rise of international adoptions out of China, the government has put its efforts into foster care and domestic adoption solutions – in 2005 the number of children adopted that stayed in China, surpassed the number adopted internationally

// It is not popular to give to AIDS/HIV funding, but this is a major factor in reducing orphans

// Lets not pretend that a week in a foreign country on missions really benefits that place – it changes us MORE than it changes them

// International missions trips: we pay $2000 to go and paint a fence or orphanage in Uganda, but for $5 a day, we could pay a Ugandan national to do the same and provide him with a job

// Most of President Obama’s staff mentor young people

// Just showing up and being there is 90% of mentoring

// It can take over a year of mentoring before you can really break into the heart of a fatherless child

// How can you help?
            // Start small
            // Start with what is already going on
            // Start with prayer

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Thoughts? Feelings? Comments? Reactions?

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Tiger

I am a tiger.

I became one at 11, as my body stretched and grew awkwardly into its shape.

On a middle school trip to France for culture, architecture and food,
we found ourselves
Somehow
In a clothing store.

Excitement grew as we scanned swimsuits.
This was the summer we had waited for:
From one piece
To two.

A grey bikini with short bottoms caught my eye
I eagerly tried it on
Then came out to display it to my friends
The Mean Girls rule applies – you can’t buy something unless everyone agrees on it.

I opened the curtains to find
A boy had infiltrated our group
Now part of the judging panel
He declared:

“What are those tiger stripes on your legs?!”

That’s when I knew I was a tiger.

An ugly one.
One that stood out too much
Too far

And so
I hid away.

Those lines that symbolised womanhood
Strength
Growth
Became the lines
The scars
The daggers marks
That ruined me
Ruined looking in the mirror
Ruined my esteem

I hated the stripes.
The represented my weakness.

You have a weakness too.
Something you feel "lets the side down."

The bump on your nose.
The hair down your back.
The lines on your belly.
The marks on your leg.

Your stripes are big and small
dark and light
bumpy and ridged
wrinkled and taut

Your stripes make you cry
Wince in pain, scream aloud, feel such
Shame

His stripes did the same.
From the whips and the chains
From the crowd jeering his name
As the blood poured out red
As His body went dead

Yet by His stripes we are healed.

Where others saw weakness
There was strength and power
Healing
Life.

His stripes saved me.

And yours will too.

Because behind the scar,
The stripe, the bump,
The line, the cut, the bruise
The disfigurement

Is a story.

As a tiger, 
I couldn’t rely on the outside, the appeal, the appearance to draw a crowd in
I learnt to be modest
That my body wasn’t a spectacle
So I stood back and watched others take centre stage
And watched as flirtation and then promiscuity stood by them and took a bow
And went into 
the encore.

As a growing tiger
Older
Supposedly wiser
My stripes as deep as they were before
I gather my cubs
With their marks, cuts, bruises
The things they just don’t like about
Themselves
And tell them the story of my stripes

And hope that by telling my tale
They
Will be healed.

Their esteem restored
Their hearts inspired
Their lives changed

Though memories fade
Hearts are healed
Your scars won’t be taken away

Because without them
You are plain animal
With no story to tell
With no story to bring hope.

Embrace the thing you most dislike about yourself
and ask
what is the story beneath it?
what is the power it holds?
what have I been taught through it?

whose life will it make a difference to?

I am a tiger.



What animal are you?





Saturday, February 12, 2011

Listen


How do you think God speaks to you?
“I don’t know.”
If you don’t know, then how can you hear Him??

Sometimes its just that gut feeling
“I should go there”
“I shouldn’t speak to them”
“I should go and check they are fine”
“I should call them up”
Just a quiet whispering
A quiet feeling
Of the next step
That sense of security

Maybe it’s repetition
That number “2” you see over again
The clock is always “37 minutes past” when you look at it
The same person serving you at the grocery store each time you go up

It’s the thing that makes your heartbeat rise,
Given you goosebumps
Frustrates you
The news report
The TV show
The magazine article
The local protest

It’s all saying
Go
Move
Do
Act

It’s all
Listening.

The voice of Father creams through the thunder and lightning
And whispers through the cold day breeze

It’s all one

It’s all talk

It’s all for you to hear.


Friday, February 11, 2011

Tea

I loved the Black Eyed Peas Superbowl Halftime show.
To be honest it was the only thing I was looking forward to in regards to the Superbowl.



The dancing
The choreography
Stage design
Costumes
It was a performance
It was a spectacle

I love the party anthem of 'I’ve Gotta Feeling', always loudly shouting, “Mazeltov!”
I love the beats of their songs and how I have one friend, a Christian teacher and mother of three, who always whispers, “Dirty bit!” with a cheeky chuckle.

Ending the show with that age old question:
“Where is the love?”

Where is it??

I know our society is so broken, falling apart in so many ways

But I still see it

In the ever-growing group of people in Arlington and beyond who are fundraising to build 10+ wells providing clean water, classroom buildings and a library in a small village in Ethiopia.

In the kids writing valentines for all their classmates, so they don’t feel left out

In the family I am working with getting me snickers and my favourite Whole Foods bread.

In my brother's care for his seven-month-old cousin.

In the way strangers still hold open doors for people at restaurants and stores.


In men who still woo their wives and take them out on dates after 50 years of marriage. 


In the restoration that comes to a divided family when a new baby is born. 


In the people who work for non-profit organizations, government-funded initiatives, and low paying community efforts, for the sake of others, not for the sake of a large salary. 


In the family that have Steve and I over every week for dinner. 

The love is found when we do not let the cynical rule:
"I always prefer to believe the best about everybody, it saves so much trouble." - Rudyard Kipling. 

When we chose to see the joy in all situations:
"I've learned by now to be quite content whatever my circumstances. I'm just as happy with little as with much, with much as with little." - Paul the apostle

When we use words of care, even when we don’t feel the other person deserves them:
"If you see your enemy hungry, go buy him lunch; if he's thirsty, bring him a drink.
Your generosity will surprise him with goodness, and God will look after you." - Proverbs 25 v 22


When we protect those who can’t protect themselves:
"The greatness of America is in how it treats its weakest members: the elderly, the infirm, the handicapped, the underprivileged, the unborn." - Bill Federer


We open our doors to others:
"Great opportunities to help others seldom come, but small ones surround us every day." - Sally Koch 


We make tea, not war.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

147

First comes love
Then come marriage
Then comes the baby in the baby carriage.

This is how we have been trained to see life.

A picture of a couple settled in holy matrimony,
making a planned decision to bring one or more children
into the world.

A baby is welcomed into the family
With a shower of
Gifts
Hugs
Words of encouragement for the first timer
The belly swells with joy
Pride
Because this is what they have been waiting for

This once traditional ordering is being played around with so much in society

So lets just mess around with it some more.
Lets throw another way into the mix.

A couple with several children open their home to foster children
Adopted children
Not with the usual baby shower
But a “Gotcha” day
And a step out into an unpredictable world.
One of a variety of emotions.
The multicultural smiles around the table,
remind them that this,
though a hard decision,
Is a beautiful one.
The children interact with love
This is what they have been waiting for.

While we are mixing with the non-traditional
Can I suggest something even more different?

A couple, married for a few years, think about a new arrival
Or two
Or three

Not of their own womb, but still to be
Their own

Surprising as they scan the internet, they see so many sibling groups
Twos
Threes
Fours
Even a few fives

What is their story the couple wonder?
Abandoned, abused, neglected, malnourished...

But the story doesn’t seem to matter
It’s the faces that matter.

The faces that say:
“Will you be our family
Forever?”

The hands that hold one another tight and say:
“Please, keep us all
together”

The eyes that don’t quite make contact as if to say:
“I don’t know if we can trust you
but
we want to”

The couple discover on their journey,
It’s not just the cute, little newborn that needs a home
It’s the bigger ones

Those “bigger” in age
Those “bigger” in emotional issues
Those “bigger” in developmental and mental health needs
Those “bigger” in grouping

When the world has 147 millions orphans
147 million individual lives
needing a home
a family
a mummy & a daddy

Why make another baby?
Why bring a life into this world,
when they are so many in need already?

Is it selfish to want a child that looks likes you
Sounds like you
Came from you
When there are so many who still need you?

What defines a child
Your child?
Is it that they came from you,
made with your DNA?

Or is the time that you spend with them
Developing them
Training them
Playing with them
Investing in them
and Loving them?

What makes a mum and a dad?
Is it merely genetics?
Or is it something else
Something more
Something greater

Steve and I step into a journey of working out
What are we called to?
Why is this becoming something that we grow passionate about?
When will we be parents?
Who will be our children?

Whether they come
From us
Or to us








They
We know
will be like us.