Fighting for Love

Forever Angels Baby Home, at first glance, looks like a really excellent pre-school or day care facility.  Bright murals cover every wall.  Everything is spotlessly neat and organized.  Detailed schedules are laid out on a bulletin board.  Safety gates are on every doorway.  A beautiful fenced-in garden gives the children plenty of space to play.

But of course, there are differences from a day care center.  In the bathroom, there are rows and rows of carefully labeled colored cups and toothbrushes.  Each child has a small crib with his or her name on it, and a mosquito net.  And these children are not “checked-in” every morning by loving parents.  Instead, this place is their whole life.

The children are universally beautiful, healthy (unless they’ve just arrived), and happy.  Big eyes, round tummies, loads of giggles.  Forever Angels truly is the highest quality orphanage I have witnessed.  But it was a bit eerie.  I sat down on the lawn yesterday and was instantly covered with about 6 toddlers.  One pulling my hair, one climbing on my shoulders, and about four more shoving and squishing and pushing their way into the coveted lap position.  Literally instantly.  These children know no strangers.  Anyone who comes through their gate is a potential source of love and attention.  And the most persistent ones tend to get the most.  So they learn to persist.

It was both beautiful and strikingly sad.  As an adoptive mom, it cuts me open.  I was only there for 24 hours, and even that was almost too much.  So many children who needs families, and I am only allowed one.  There was Zawadi, a petite little fairy princess of a five-year-old, extremely bright, completely-bi-lingual, and a total charmer.  She’s old enough now to understand her circumstances, and every time a child gets adopted, she asks the director, “When is a family going to take me?”  There was Baraka, a three-year-old with a mischievious grin.  He figured out my name and all day reminded me of it.  “Amy!  Amy!  Amy!” 

And of course, there was the one we think God has planned for us.  I looked into her eyes and she looked into mine….she seeing only another white stranger, someone who would hold her for a day and then disappear, but she was willing to take what she could get.  I seeing a daughter, a princess, a whole long future of laughter and conversations and celebrations stretched out in front of me.  You have no idea what you are seeing, do you, dear one?  I whispered to her.  You have no idea how your entire life has just profoundly changed. 

I followed her around and stared at her all day; she noticed my attention and flirted back, always checking to see if I was still looking.  I always was.  Today I had a few hours before I left to come home, and she just wanted me to hold her.  She would scream if I put her down.  I’m not sentimental enough to think that somehow she knew I was different from the others; I know that she reacts exactly the same way to anyone else who will give her attention.  She would fight and screech and shove any other child who would try to touch me or get on my lap. 

Dear one, how I long to give you a love that you don’t have to fight for.  Soon, soon, hopefully, prayerfully soon!  I’m coming back for you, I whispered to her.  I know she doesn’t understand.  But soon she will.

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8 Comments

  1. Sammye Walton

    I have been checking daily for this post. So very happy for you and your little girl. I cannot wait to meet her! I understand the feelings you described so beautifully. Wishing the process was such that Zawadi (or any of the children) could come home with Tumi and me.

  2. Becky

    Oh Amy…you just made me cry!!! So excited for when you get to take your little one home soon.

  3. jibberish

    Very well put, Amy. And I agree with Sammye's wistfulness about the adoption process, though I know it's partly designed to protect these children against childish adults making life changing decisions on a whim.

    Maybe someday we can combine the joys of visting with the Medinas and with those of adding one of those sweet Tanzanian babies to our family. No such plans are in the works at this point, but I can very much envision it happening several years down the road if God allows.

    Thank you for your and Gil's faithful example and for speaking out so well on behalf of those who cannot make themselves heard.

  4. Amy Medina

    Amanda–sadly, in Tanzania there are no international adoptions. You have to either be Tanzanian, or have lived here for at least 3 years to be able to adopt. That's why only about 50 children get adopted every year, in a country with 3 million orphans. So even though we would love a visit, 🙂 unless the laws change, you would have to visit us on your way to somewhere like Rwanda or Ethiopia to adopt a child.

  5. Anonymous

    aww cant wait to see the 3rd medina!

  6. Ashley @ Root And Twig

    Three million orphans? Unthinkable.
    Thanks for sharing this experience, as you go through it step by step. Two of my sisters are adopted. Every child's story is unique, just like every child.

  7. jibberish

    The current state of Tanzanian adoption law is very sad. Maybe one of the young people you and Gil are helping to train will someday be in a place to influence positive change in that area.

    I can understand wanting to keep such beautiful children in the country, but to deny a child their own loving family based on nationality is simply cruel.

  8. Melodie Monberg

    Very moving post…I've been there…and I don't know how you were able to leave her there…Praying she is with your family soon!

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