Thursday, June 28, 2007

Travel Dates

The pink slip has arrived (via email). We're expected at the Embassy on July 13 bright and early in the morning. That's a Friday, and Gus's visa won't be available for pickup until Monday, so it'll work out that we're there for almost a full week since we have to stay the weekend. We'll go to Antigua for the weekend, since we hear it's a much nicer place than the capital.

Rough schedule:
  • Wed. 7/11: Fly down to Guatemala City
  • Thurs. 7/12: Gus gets handed over to us; we meet his foster mother
  • Fri. 7/13: Embassy appointment
  • Sat. and Sun 7/14-15: Vacation in Antigua, Guatemala
  • Mon. 7/16: Get Gus's visa from the Embassy
  • Tues. 7/17: Back to Los Estados Unidos

Monday, June 25, 2007

What about the others?

Of course we're completely pumped that Gus will be arriving home soon, but our excitement over his arrival doesn't remove the elephant in the room: what about the other children? Not long after we chose to build our family through adoption, we started to ask this question. We are thrilled to be the family for our children, even though it's not fair that they should need a second family. But what about the children who lose their first family and don't have a second family either? We can't adopt every child who needs a home.
We aren't the first people to ask this question, of course. Half the Sky, a non-profit foundation which provides love, education, and foster families for an increasing number of children who are without homes in China was founded by a family asking this question about the children who they had seen in their daughter's orphanage. Since its founding in 1998 and the opening of its first pilot program in 2000, Half the Sky has expanded to serve thousands of children in its 30 centers in China.
We are proud to support Half the Sky--but the question "What about the others?" is really two questions. The first is, "What happens to the children who have lost their first families?" This issue is what Half the Sky addresses. Although we value Half the Sky's work in loving and educating children in orphanages, its work does not answer the second question, "Why do so many children lose their first families to begin with?" In this case, there's very little that we as Americans can do about that problem, because it is rooted in governmental action and social norms.
However, we can do something about that problem in Guatemala. Most of the relinquishments in Guatemala are rooted in poverty and lack of education. We cannot change that Gus needs a second family right now, but if we could help the families before they have children whose care they cannot sustain, then we could help reduce the number of children in Gus's situation who need a second family. And by solving the second problem, we would also solve the first.
With this goal in mind, we recently evaluated a number of charitable organizations that work in Guatemala and around the world. There are many worthy organizations that work with children who are growing up in orphanages or on the streets of Guatemala, but we wanted to focus our efforts mainly on prevention. We found three organizations which we are now proud to support. We wanted to bring them to your attention so that you could learn what efforts are being put forth to help keep children in their first families in Guatemala, and to assist in those efforts if you choose. We feel that as adoptive parents we bear a special responsibility to the children who are missing their first families and who, for some reason, are not in Gus's place to come home to ours (or to other loving families). And we hope that with our help, Gus will be one of the last children in Guatemala to need a second home.

Safe Passage works with the families whose livelihoods depend on the Guatemala City dump. These families, who were profiled in the Oscar-nominated short documentary "Recycled Life," are mainly indigenous Mayans who were forced from their land during the civil war. The parents daily dig through the trash, but children were banned after a methane explosion in 2005. Safe Passage works with those children and their families to give them a way out of poverty, so that the next generation will not look forward to a "career" of digging through the dump. In Guatemala, school is free but the uniforms and materials required to attend it are not. Safe Passage provides uniforms, after-school tutoring, music and sports, nutrition, and medicine for the children. They also offer literacy tutoring for the parents.

Freedom from Hunger is a microloan organization (this concept has become much better known since Mohammad Yunus won the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize for his work in microloans, but it's not a new idea. FFH was founded in 1946). It provides small loans and business advice to people (usually women) to start small businesses. Along with the business assistance they provide education on health and nutrition, which along with the extra income significantly improves the health and outlook of the family. Repayment of the loans allows new loans to be made and more families to better care for themselves.

Agros International is the most innovative charity we've seen yet. It focuses on an entire rural community, first helping them secure a loan as a group for land for their community. The land is key, because in Guatemala and other places, the indigenous people were forcibly removed from their land and communities. Their way of life was destroyed and they were given "career options" like digging through the Guatemala City garbage dump. Agros begins with a community looking to work together to start over. It finds land for that community, then helps them succeed with community education, infrastructure assistance, and microloans. As the community flourishes they are able to repay the loans, which are then used to secure a land loan for another community.

We feel that it is a great gift to be able to help Gus's people--it is a privilege, like the privilege of being his parents. Of course we would be delighted to discuss any of these organizations further in person, and we hope that as some of you are looking for gifts for Gus that you would also or instead consider a gift to his people in his honor.

Friday, June 22, 2007

Final Review

We got an email today from the agency telling us that our paperwork is now at the US Embassy awaiting final review. They told us that at this point it typically takes 3-4 business days for them to review it, at which point they'll issue the long-awaited pink slip with our Embassy appointment date. The appointment dates are typically 10 days after that.

All this means that we're about 2-3 weeks from travel time. Our abogado is really on the ball down there.

By the way, we've been brushing up on our Espanol for the last few weeks (I'm a complete Spanish newbie, so "brushing up" is a very kind way of putting it). We really recommend Coffee Break Spanish, which is a podcast series that teaches Spanish in very small chunks (about 20 minutes a week). Check it out.

Still much to do. I've finished our paperwork, but we still need to pack and buy lots of little stuff we're going to need. And we're out of town next weekend. Well, we can shop in Philly as well as we can here.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

This is how I roll

Two new acquisitions of note to report. Reb has recently learned to knit, and of course the first project she decided to take on was a wool diaper cover for the young'un. He'll be stylin'. It turned out really well, I must say. Note the drawstring waistband.


The other recent acquisition was a gift from some new friends who have two Guatemalan children themselves. I don't really know what it's called, but I fully expect him to have a blast bouncing around in it, waking the neighbors downstairs.

Pressing on!

We got the email today telling us that we have been approved by PGN, exactly two months after the last time that we went in. We are now out of the Guatemalan attorney general's office and moving on to the next (and final) step!

Now there are only two things left that need to happen before we get the travel go-ahead. First, Gus's first mother signs off on the adoption for the third time (she's done it twice already). At that point, as far as Guatemala is concerned, Gus is ours. Then the US Embassy works on the adoption visa for him so that he can come home with us.

Typical (I repeat, typical, and our mileage may vary) wait times from this point until our final travel date are 6 to 8 weeks. We'll probably only get a week's notice of our court date. In the meantime, we have some forms to gather to take down with us: tax forms, immunization records, the I-864, and a copy of our home study.

Starting to freak out a little bit. We're definitely well into the third trimester now!

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Status update

We just received word that we are still in PGN. No news is good news; at least we haven't been kicked out.