Sunday 2 October 2016

Some slightly awkward questions about the care of orphans

Wandering around this simple 3 bedroomed house in Embu, I was challenged by the stories of the children who occupied the place. Beautiful and innocent children who were somehow abandoned now sleeping 4-5 in a room with only a couple of paid staff as their family. This was a children’s home. A small, beautiful children’s home run by well-intentioned people, some with connections to The Salvation Army, but a children’s home none the less (or orphanage if you are a donor!).  Well cared for and adequately fed children thrown together and all presenting (at least to the potential donors) as some sort of Annie-esque happy band of brother/sister type gang.

Make no mistake, most children’s homes are places where there is an excellent standard of care, to use social work parlance. But also make no mistake, most children’s homes are task orientated places of routine, where the care of the children is centred on the functioning of an effective, efficient and controlled residence rather than attending to the individual needs of each child. Family intimacy and personal attention is missing and whatever we try to do, nothing can replace the love and protection of mother and father. In every children’s home I have visited and indeed during that visit in Embu, I felt that in some ways the children were missing out on their childhood. 

It is estimated that only 20% of children in homes or orphanages are actually orphans or ‘at risk’. This is a startling figure and one worthy of consideration. There may be a number of factors for this but essentially what is straightforward to gleam is that for the 80% of children in institutional care, their closest family had felt they would be better cared for within children’s home rather than in their family setting. As Craig Greenfield, a man who I admire immensely wrote; ‘People are poor. They struggle to feed their own families, let alone any extra kids that come along if a relative dies. And so they turn to the next best solution - an orphanage.’ Even in our time we have seen children given up to children’s homes by single mother as an act of love, feeling their children would be better cared for by an organisation rather than by family.

The frightening fact of the matter is that many well-meaning churches and organisations are perpetuating the institutionalisation of children and one wonders whether in their desire to do something to address the problem they are causing more harm than good, certainly in the long term.

We went on our own journey in early 2013. Based on what we saw and heard from children and communities across Embu County, we set up a community based orphan support project in Embu. This has been an amazing journey, empowering the families, caregivers and guardians to support their children and make significant choices about their children which are not purely based on their economic situation. The project also seeks to strengthen family and community coping capacities to avoid the people feeling that the only option is some sort of institutionalised care. Our aim was to immerse the orphans and vulnerable children within an authentic and caring community, surrounded by their family – whatever family might look like.  The church was also integrated into the programme so it truly became a community holistic approach.



Alongside this we are developing young leaders to be role models, peer counsellors and play some sort of big brother / big sister role for those in their community. The latter was very difficult to articulate in project proposals and we are grateful that our partners WeSeeHope were so flexible and patient in this approach. So far, over fifteen hundred children who would have been ‘at risk’ of institutional care (rather than ‘at risk’ from the being an orphan or an abusive situation) have been supported within the community by the very people that have loved, nurtured and journeyed with them as they have started out in life. By providing skills, motivation and economic empowerment to single parents, carers and guardians we are now seeing income generating activities flourishing, children in education, scars healed, dignity restored and much more.

For me and Heidie, there was another challenge – we live right beside a Salvation Army children’s home. It is a place I love dearly and it serves an important need. However it is a place that needed to, and still needs change. We approached our leadership, who were clearly shocked and concerned in equal measures that children could be placed in our care for convenience rather than due to their pressing need. With their permission, we started to invest in fixing our residential care for orphaned and vulnerable children who cannot be safely reunited with immediate or extended family straight away.

Then we wanted to try and make the home feel like exactly that, a home. We looked at our home and what was important to our family - new play area, fun days, making sure the essentials like fully functioning water, a new flat screen television, a DVD library, trips out, pizza nights and loads of toys / balls / games etc. were all priorities and have been achieved these to some extent over the course of the last 3 years. We have also explored the school situation (with the help of Carla and Dan) to make sure that we give the kids the best education we can afford and that the teachers treat our children in exactly the same way as children coming directly from their family home. This meant a number of changes in schools for the children, dropping one school altogether and some strong conversations and training with the teachers where they do attend school. An Interior Designer is now working with us on how to make the home more child-friendly (especially the dining room), complete with lots of colours, posters and a memory wall. We have lots of plans to continue this journey of transition and transformation. The hope is that in the small acts of kindness, the delivering of kindness of behalf of others, God’s love becomes real.

But this is only part of issue. Child protection, behaviour management strategies were sadly lacking, although now in place. Next year, we are starting our social work and support programme. This will not be easy. Social work in Kenya is viewed, sadly, as some sort of gatekeeping profession. However, unlike more traditional colonial embedded thinking in Africa and with a social worker mentorship programme in place for our new employees, we are truly believing that we can change that mind-set and that our children’s homes need not be forever. They can be places of rescue, respite and reconnection. So support plans, family contact visit, reintegration conversations and healing interventions are the talk of the town now. The need to facilitate strong, nurturing and deep family relationships for the children in our care should outweigh our desire to look after and fix problems for children who we see as vulnerable and poor.

As many more educated and well researched people than me will tell you – there is no ideal solution to the challenge of the numbers of orphans across the world, just as many Western governments are finding there is no easy fix for homelessness or substance abuse. I often wonder internally whether the reason why we have children homes or indeed any other type of institution care (hostels, Lifehouses or ARCs) is because individual Christians have lost the essence of shared experience and fellowship with those who are locked in poverty. This brings more questions than answers for me.  For instance, am I playing some sort of provider role for the children in the home beside us without having to think about any of the other roles a father should provide? Do I do as much as I can to appease my own conscience or is the welfare of the children my first concern? Does service delivery now replace sacrificial hospitality for Christians? Has the church lost touch with the realities of the people Jesus urges them to serve and befriend?  What I do know now is that paying attention to process and relationships is far more liberating and important than paying attention to the ‘product’ or ‘programme’. Incidentally, the costs of keeping 1500 children out of care is way lower than keeping around 50 people in care!



So this is not another moan about the church or the organisation I work at –they are doing a great job in difficult circumstances - but a challenge to my own personal commitment to solving the issues I am facing in everyday life. I am committed to breaking down barriers and helping people along their path to finding freedom, many of whom are often locked in oppressive situations through no fault of their own. Building long term relationships with the children, opening our home to the orphans, being more creative in our response is all issues I am continually considering. Frustration and guilt are common feelings when we delve deeper than the easy approach of fixing things but working out what these feelings mean or what God is trying to say is equally important. Perhaps this is the question that every Christian should be asking themselves, whoever the poor and the marginalised are in their community – how do I build deeper, long term relationships? Who do I need to open up my home to? And how can I be more creative in my individual response?  Those are tough questions rooted in my desire to respond to the biblical call to ‘give justice to the weak and the fatherless’ (Psalm 82:3).