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If you're interested in how all of this started, click on the April archives below right.
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The Orphans of Ukraine: April 2006

Sunday, April 30, 2006

Safe in the Ukraine



Hi, all-
I must say that the rest of my journey to Odessa, Ukraine was uneventful. I flew out of DC Saturday evening and landed in Vienna, Austria Sunday morning. After a brief layover, I flew into Odessa. My luggage was all there and accounted for, there was no terrible turbulence, and I had one of those great exit row seats. Sounds pretty posh, huh? That is until I was somewhere over the Atlantic and that little voice started to ask me what I was doing. In the darkness of the cabin I started to think about what I was usually doing on a Saturday night: watching a movie with the kids, working on the computer, talking with my husband, etc. And then the doubts came. For a brief moment, I doubted the purpose in my coming here. But sleep and reflection helped to lull those thoughts away and I made it to my final destination. As I gathered all 150 lbs of luggage (sidenote - there are no luggage carts in Ukraine!) and approached immigration and customs, an American in line behind me struck up a conversation. After surveying my luggage, he asked if I was moving to Odessa. When I replied that I was bringing some things to "friends", he lowered his voice and said "Don't tell them that at customs! They'll charge you a 50% tax on the declared value of everything you brought." Oy! "They'll definitely stop you and ask because you have so many bags," he continued. So I get up to the X-ray machine and load everything through. The official standing at the other end waves me to a place on the side to wait as the other American loads his things through. When both of our things have passed through the machine, he looks at both of us calculatingly and says "You may go, miss. You sir, bring your bag to the desk." And quickly as I could, I grabbed everything and headed for the exit.

Just as promised, Dr. R and a handful of orphans are waiting for me. He introduces me to a 26 yr old young woman named Olya who he has arranged to go with me and act as my translator. Praise God! She is stunningly beautiful and sweet natured. After a few moments talking together, we figure out that WE KNOW EACH OTHER!!! She and I have communicated months ago when I was doing some research into adopting in Ukraine. What are the odds??? Olya has a ministry to the kids. She goes on to tell me about her church. She is Presbyterian (and she makes sure I understand that she is REFORMED Presbyterian). We get to know each other on the car ride to the hotel. It is centrally located and safe. It is quite nice by European standards.

Our first stop today was Orphanage #4 that houses 7-17 year olds. It is a holiday weekend (today was "Cemetary Day"), so many children have gone to attend a special event. But that gave us a chance to walk the halls of the orphange. This one held 400 children at one time, but is now down to around 200. It is a very stark environment with a Communist era building serving as both school and dormitory. Layers of paint flake and crack along the walls. You have to watch your step as the floor is coming apart in sections. One dark and gloomy hall melts into another darker one. The children sleep on the second floor and attend class on the bottom floor. They live in "groupas" according to age/grade. I asked where they "hung out" when they were not in class. Imagine this, their classrooms are also their living rooms. So in other words, they come down to class each day, go to the cafeteria for lunch, back to class, and then at the end of the day they return to their classroom or play outside until its time for bed. Can you imagine? Oh, and their bedrooms! I saw beds that were 40 years old, sunk in the middle, with thin mattresses. Their personal belongings fit in a shoebox at best.

Later in the afternoon, we visited Orphanage #5. The dormitories where the children live has been under renovation for 2 years (things move very slowly here). So the children are housed in another facility a mile away. They walk to school in two rows each day, then back to the dorms in the afternoon, and then back to the school for supper in the evening. And that is regardless of weather (rain, snow, etc). I was able to meet about 40 children at this orphange. One little girl asked an older girl who spoke English to introduce her. Her name was Sasha and she wanted to make sure that she had said hello to me before I left. I thought she was 7 years old from her size, but I found out that she was 12! While the children here are not starving, they are malnourished. They are small for their age compared to American children. They faces are thin and sometimes drawn. The children were polite and well behaved. They seemed cheerful despite their surroundings. I watched the boys play soccer and the girls talk in whispered huddles. At dinner time the kids filed into the cafteria where they were served great hunks of bread and what looked alike a rice based mush. Most of them pushed it around their plate and then returned the plate to the kitchen still full. While the government provides the orphanges with financial support, it is minimum at best. The orphange gets roughly $3 per orphan per day for food. That does not leave room for luxuries like fruit and candy.

Jet lag is starting to kick in and I have an early morning tomorrow to visit several more orphanges. I will try to post pics if I can find a computer that will allow me to. Keep praying for me.

Saturday, April 29, 2006

Here We Go . . .

Well time passes more quickly than I anticipated and it is time to
board. I have long journey ahead of me. I will be in touch soon. Pray
for me.
Leslie

I've Got a Camera and I'm Not Afraid to Use It

Patti, you kill me! Bocciardi isn't the one who I offended. (At least I
don't think I have. Bocc, if you're out there and I have offended you
in any way brother, then I apologize and ask your forgiveness.)

So we landed in DC at 10am and I don't fly back out until 6. I don't
think I have had this much alone time since . . well . . . maybe the
womb. I have never traveled alone so I didn't realize it could be this
BORING! I have two novels, a magazine, a Bible, and my Sidekick to
entertain me for eight hours. I will probably sprain a thumb playing on
the Sidekick. Hush, Kim, I don't want to hear it. Courtney, there are no
massage chairs here and the rows are bolted to the floor so that you
can't slide them closer to get comfortable. I am actually regretting not
bringing stuff to grade. I know. I know.

So I find myself playing with Liz's camera, reading the owner's manuel,
and taking random pictures for practice. MOST people aren't here 8 hours
early for their flight, so my subjects are the trashcan, the chairs, and
the cleaning crew. Yeah, they're definitely scared of me now. . .the
cleaning crew, that is.
Leslie

I'm Leaving on a Jet Plane

God is so funny. I have actually laughed at Him in the last couple of
days. Thank you, Patti Shivers, for forcing me to live out of a carry on
all week. Yes, that's my bag in the picture. And yes, people did stare
at me as I took a picture of it while waiting to board. I got to the
check in counter and cringed as they weighed the bags I was checking.
The weight limit for 2 bags is 100 lbs. These were 120 lbs. The agent
went on to explain overage fees and payment options. Before I could pull
my credit card from the backpack, she asked me, "what's in the bags?"
When I told her, she waved my attempt to offer payment away. Thanks for
being there, God.

Let me tell you another sweet intervention of God. As I was getting my
things Thursday in preparation for the trip, I was bemoaning the fact
that I didn't have a good camera of my own to document the trip and the
children I will meet. I stood at a checkout counter with this great
camera in hand and fought with whether or not I was justified to go into
debt for such an item. I couldn't go through with it and begrudgingly
placed the items back. Friday morning I was talking with Liz Miller who
was subbing at the high school and she offers to let me take her camera
on the trip! And it was the exact same camera!!! Coincidence? I don't
think so.

I should be boarding in a few moments. I have a 6 hour layover in DC, so
I'm sure I'll find time to post again. Oh, and one last thought. Darn
that devotion this week, Anthony Bocciardi. I'm in the car this moring
and Matthew 5:23-24 is going through my head. I found myself needing to
contact someone and have a conversation at 5:45. I'm sure now they have
a whole new grudge against me . . .
Leslie

Friday, April 28, 2006


My God shall supply all of your need according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus.
-Phillippians 4:19

Suitcase number one of two! Vitamins, medicine, clothing, crayons, toys, puzzles, etc. Both suitcases will be over the weight limit, but we can work with that! Thank you for your rich generosity and display of love; God will not forget your sacrifice.

Monday, April 24, 2006


Beyond Good Intentions

Several of you have asked me why I am going to Ukraine. That sounds like a simple enough question, but the answer is so complex. How can you see a need and feel as though you can help and not act? For those of you who viewed the video on the children in Africa, do those voices not still haunt you? Do you remember the boy who asked if you would forget about him? The need is so great in Africa, Ukraine, here. The best I can explain, God opened the door and I am walking through. He is testing me and I am testing Him. I reflect on Christ's time on earth and understand that He was not a man of wealth or stature. His impact on those He met was felt in the words that He spoke, in the hands that He touched them with, and the love that He shared. I can do that. I can speak, touch, and love these children because He has done that for me.

Thursday, April 06, 2006


Scary, but true. . .

•There are over 125,000 orphans in Ukraine.
•The older an orphan gets, the chances for his/her adoption drastically decrease.
•Each year many orphans between 15 to 18-years-old leave the orphanages.
•Most of these orphans have no one to turn to for help.
•About 10% of them will commit suicide after leaving the orphanage before their 18th birthday.
•60% of the girls will end up in prostitution (many as victims of international human trafficking)
•70% of the boys will enter a life of crime.
•Only 27% of these youth will find work.

Monday, April 03, 2006


But Moses said to the LORD, "O my Lord, I have never been eloquent, neither in the past nor even now that you have spoken to your servant; but I am slow of speech and slow of tongue." Then the LORD said to him, "Who gives speech to mortals? Who makes them mute or deaf, seeing or blind? Is it not I, the LORD? Now go, and I will be with your mouth and teach you what you are to speak."
Exodus 4:10-12


Here is where I am headed: Odessa, Ukraine. Just looking at it on the map makes me nervous and excited. I feel my inadequacy every time I look at it. What makes me think I can do anything but be under foot the whole time I'm there? I wish I were fearless like K. I wish I was outgoing like P. I wish I had a gentle spirit that shined through like A. But I am who He has made me and that will be enough.