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Semillas de Amor Children’s Village provides a high level education program for Guatemala’s at risk children and a home for children with exceptional circumstances.

Archive for adoption

Aug
11

Not What We Expected

Posted by: Nancy | Comments (0)

At Semillas de Amor, we didn’t expect that when the Guatemalan government closed adoptions, but promised to finish all adoptions in process that they would lie. Not only lie, but subject children’s homes, adoptive families and their children to a nightmare emotionally and financially. There are over 800 children “stuck” in the adoption mess in Guatemala and it appears that nobody in the Guatemalan nor US governments could care less. Children are not numbers and that is how they have been treated. These children are precious, they have dreams of having a family but that has not happened. At Semillas de Amor we have 22 children in the adoption process and 15 children that do not have families.

When most of the children came to live with us they were infants and some toddlers and a few older children. We expected that the infants and toddler age children would be young when they went home with their adoptive families. But that has not happened. In the past, when we were financially able to take new children into our home, we knew that older kids would always take lots of work to really prepare them to be adopted. Every day the kids get older which means they need to learn a whole new set of social or educational skills. To ignore this reality is to make the transition from our children’s home to their families a difficult one.

As an example, we have been working on table manners. In a family this is done with one child at a time and the kids learn from each other. However, in an institutional setting there is no mom or dad, and the other “siblings” in the home have similar manners so there is no one to learn from. In the last month we have been working very hard at teaching table manners to 37 kids. The kids come in to eat in groups so we don’t have all 37 at once but even in groups of 10 it has taken 4-6 adults to supervise. Kids need structure that makes sense to them and that is happening, it also transfers to other areas of their lives. Teaching children to respect each other, their home and their family is an on-going process within a family. Our kids’ family consists of 37 children, nannies, nurses, teachers, Luvia, Gerson, Gaby, Daisy, me, and of course, the dogs. As normal as we try to make our children’s home it is not a family. But we work at it. We work on manners, responsibility, compassion and respect. This is not good enough. It is not what parents want for their children so why should we want anything different for children being subjected to institutionalized lives. I wonder what happens to those children, in the few children’s homes and institutions left in Guatemala. Overcrowded, understaffed, underfunded, not enough love or attention, food, protection from predators, the list can go on and on. So as we struggle on a day to day basis making sure that our 37 children’s needs are addressed my heart breaks for those children we have had to turn away, stuck in a cruel system managed by people who are suppose to advocate and care for the kids and don’t.

Please keep the children at Semillas de Amor happy and healthy by making a donation to SAVE SEMILLAS

Categories : News
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The United States Department of State continues to look the other way while the Guatemalan government violates the human rights of adopted children of US citizens and continues to break their own laws. Most of these children have passports and US visas. However, the Guatemalan government feels the need to detain these children, most for over a year now. This is an extreme violation of these children’s human rights. While the bureaucracies battle it out, while everyone shirks from taking any responsibility the children suffer. Sure the kids get feed, lots of fresh air but they don’t get their families and that is what they need most. These children have been denied the right to the family that has legally adopted them. You may ask “why?” First, nobody really cares. I have seen that first hand in the US and Guatemalan governments. And the truth is that the Guatemalan government is angry at me for standing up to them. That isn’t done in Guatemala. When one does take on the system the price you pay is a big one.

Please check out the blog guatemala900 for more information regarding the march in Washington DC on June 17th.

As well, please read the article the gives detailed information on how a family adopting two children suffered through this nightmarish insanity

This is a slideshow of some of our kids being held hostage by the Guatemalan government with no help or assistance from the US government. These children know their adoptive parents, think of how very sad it must be for them to be in limbo waiting to go home and more than likely feeling like their parents don’t want them home. Show some support. Check out the Guatemala900 information and help us get the kids home.

Categories : Events, News
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e-mail: info@semillasdeamor.org
phone: 1-305-600-4517

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