Ice-Cream Leftovers versus
Love and Care
http://www.wumag.kiev.ua/index2.php?param=pgs20031/90
By Oleh Polyakov
Last summer
I happened to watch a scene which profoundly saddened me — a barefoot grimy
ragamuffin of no more than ten years of age scooped ice cream leftovers with
his dirty hand from the bottom of a huge saucepan. The kind-hearted cook from
the nearby cafe took the shiny saucepan from the boy when he had finished and
promised the boy that he could come the next day — “There will be some more for
you.” And then she added heaving a sigh: “Poor thing, life must be pretty hard
for you, kids, in your orphanage. Otherwise you would not keep running away
from it, would you?”
There was
indeed a shelter for homeless children situated in the immediate vicinity.
Ice cream
banned by a regulation
According
to the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine, there were over 103
thousand children in Ukraine who were either orphans or children either
abandoned by their parents, or whose parents were deprived of parental custody
(the figures used in this article have been picked up from different sources
and averaged; there are considerable discrepancies in figures given in
different sources).
There are
over 11 thousand children of preschool age in the orphanages of
According
to an official report, submitted by the Department of Social Adaptation of
Minors, many orphanages, asylums and internats (that is the boarding schools
where orphans live and study — they are a far cry from the ones, in which rich
parents educate their offsprings) fail to provide their wards with adequate
food which is deficient in such products as meat, fish, dairy products, eggs,
fruit and vegetables. The reason — inadequate financing by
the state.
Many of the
internats are forced to start growing vegetables and fruit in their gardens in
order to provide better nourishment for their wards. Besides, there are all
kinds of regulations and bans on what is allowed and what is not allowed for
children to have. Ice cream is banned, for example, because it does not fit
“sanitary norms.” Clothes and bed sheets are in short supply. Instead of 50 to
70 children as is the norm in most western European countries, Ukrainian
internat boarding schools are overcrowded with up to 300 children; almost a
hundred internats do not have running water; 104 of them have no gyms; over a
hundred are in bad repair and twenty are in a badly dilapidated condition.
The number
of children who need to be placed in orphanages and internats is growing and
hundreds of the destitute parentless children are kept at various medical
centres and hospitals which do not have either facilities or trained personnel
to take proper care of such children.
Another
social blight is homelessness of thousands of children in
About 70
percent of homeless children are not parentless; about 40 percent of them use
drugs; close to 60 percent steal to stay alive; about 80 percent drink alcohol;
over 90 percent of them have regular sex, starting from the age of six. Begging
in the streets and stealing is a way of life for them, as well as various forms
of drug and alcohol addiction; groups of homeless children are structured
similarly to criminal hierarchies and have criminal connections. Diseases are
rampant and the death rate is very high.
“I have
been dealing with the problem of children homelessness for over five years now
and can tell you that though these children put on a bold front, they are dead
tired of the life they lead and want a decent home to go to. Those who are
empowered by the state to do something about the homelessness problem and do
very little about it, never forgetting, of course, to provide their own
children with everything they need, may soon find themselves — together with
the rest of us — living in a society where a considerable number of people —
formerly homeless children — are completely asocial, with no education, ready
to steal, burglarize and commit other crimes,” says Mr Yatsenko.
Adoption
and obstacles
In many
more-developed countries (MDC), the problem of homelessness of children is
being solved by their being adopted. In the
The
Children Adoption Centre at the Ministry of Education of
Foreign
adopters are much less strict or rigid in their adoption requirements. They are
prepared to adopt handicapped children and sick children, children who are in
an urgent need of an operation, children who are over 8 years of age (the
chances of such children for being adopted by Ukrainian families are close to
nil; in fact, all the children with handicaps are adopted by foreigners). The
Children Adoption Centre has registered adoptions by adopters from 32 countries
of the world, mostly from the
At the end
of December 2002 there were over 1,300 foreign families waiting for their turn
to adopt a child. For most it is a harrowing experience — you have to visit
Ukraine several times not only to see the children offered for adoption but to
go through various bureaucratic procedures, and in the end it is the court of
law that decides whether this particular family shall be given the right to
adopt this particular child — and the much bureaucratized courts in Ukraine are
never in a hurry to take a decision. The adoption procedures may last from six
to twelve months. Frequent visits to or staying in
All of this
procrastination is probably the direct result of the state adoption policies. There
are more than enough Ukrainian children to be adopted but the Centre is
reluctant to advertise abroad the availability of children for adoption. One
reason — the Centre’s resources are limited and it cannot process more requests
than it actually does. Another reason — in the words of Olha Pariyenko, the
Centre’s director: “Our policy is to have Ukrainian children living in their
native country and we encourage our Ukrainian families to adopt children rather
than have them adopted by foreigners.”
There is
some encouragement given but mostly verbal. The results are minimal. In 2001,
an Adopt a Child campaign was launched and those who would agree to adopt
children were promised some financial backing — from 250 to 300 hryvnyas a
month (about 50 US dollars) taken from the local budgets but there was very little
response — “Either the people have become too callous or there was too little
money promised with no firm guarantees it would be paid,” wrote a newspaper in
the city of Donetsk.
Three basic
reasons are generally given to explain the Ukrainian state’s great reluctance
to allow more adoptions by foreigners: it is wrong to have “our” Ukrainian
children taken out of Ukraine; secondly, it is not known what will happen with
adopted children afterwards — what if they are used for some sinister
purposes?; and thirdly — if there are too many foreigners adopting Ukrainian
children, there will not be enough children left for adoption by “our”
Ukrainian families.
They are
all very wrong reasons with nothing to substantiate them.
“Our” is an
absolutely wrong adjective to use — orphaned children are not the state-owned
property and they do not have any “responsibilities” before the state. It is
the state that has to provide a more or less decent
living conditions for them — and if it cannot why not let others do it? It is
the well being of the children that should be the primary — in fact the only —
consideration. It is the fate of thousands upon thousands of children remaining
to lead miserable lives in internats and orphanages that should be of a concern
for the state — not the wrongly interpreted considerations of “prestige” and of
“what people would say.”
Secondly,
“what happens with the child after it is adopted by a foreign family” is
closely monitored by several state bodies, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
included — much more closely in fact than the life of the children adopted by
Ukrainian families.
Thirdly,
the number of children who can be adopted is many times over the number of
requests for adoption coming from the Ukrainian families; besides, most of the
children who are adopted by foreigners would have practically no chance of
being adopted by Ukrainian families because of their age, ancestry and health. Permissions
for adoption by foreigners are given only after no Ukrainian adopters have been
found within a specified period of time.
There is a
definite and urgent need to have the policies which are currently pursued by
the state in adoption of children reviewed and changed — for the benefit of the
children.
One look at
the photographs of their adopted children the adoptive parents send to the
Children Adoption Centre should convince anyone better than any amount of words
that these children are well taken care of — they are healthy, well nourished
and happy.
Or shall we
leave our orphans and homeless children to the mercies of the streets and
criminals and hope for the kindness of goodhearted cooks at the roadside cafes
to treat them to the leftovers of ice cream?