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Rwanda's Orphanage Free Plan Leaves Children Fearful
By Heather
Murdock, VOA | Nyundo, Rwanda
Posted on Tuesday,
September 27, 2011
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As part of a plan to make
Rwanda "orphanage-free," this central African nation plans to close the
doors of its largest and oldest orphanage to children over three years old.
And while officials say the children will be placed in safe host families,
orphans say strangers or families that abandoned them will not take care of
them.
The room is tense, but when called upon to pray, the teenage orphans sing
out. They have just been told that their home, the Noel Nyundo Orphanage
will be downsizing. About 450 children over three years old will be placed
in families. For many with no known relatives, that means with strangers.

Teenage Orphans listen as officials explain that the Noel Orphanage will be
downsized, and they will be relocated. Photo: VOA - H. Murdock
Teens speak out
After the announcement, the teens looked pensive. At the Noel, children have
food, shelter, friends and the chance to go to school. For orphans in one
of the world’s poorest countries, this is a lot to lose.
The officials sat down, giving the children a chance to speak. One by one,
the teens stood up and expressed their fears. Officials listened carefully,
taking notes.
One boy said in families they will not be treated like sons or daughters -
they will be treated like servants. A girl pointed out that her family
abandoned her. She said they will have to be forced to take her back.
Another boy stood up and said when he tried to go home and take back his
family’s land he was attacked and blinded. A girl said she was threatened.
In Africa’s most densely populated country, orphans returning to villages to
claim their family’s old land are not normally welcomed.
Several teens asked about school - they are afraid they will be forced to
drop out. The teens applauded when one boy suggested that everyone stay put
until they finish school.
But officials say the teens have nothing to fear.
Gradual downsize
Benilde Uwababyeyi specializes in child protection at the Rwandan Ministry
of Gender and Family Promotion. She says the downsizing of the orphanage
will be gradual, and all of the children will be placed carefully. The
poorest families who take in orphans, she says, will get money to help pay
for food, clothes and school fees.
“We will not reintegrate that child, even though she or he has family,
without the acceptance of that family. If it refuses, we will not bring that
child to the family,” Uwababyeyi said.
She says the downsizing of the Noel orphanage is part of a larger plan to
phase orphanages out of Rwanda altogether. Seventeen years after genocide
and civil war devastated the country, leaving millions dead and hundreds of
thousands of parentless children she says Rwanda can take care for its
children without orphanages.
Foreign aid
But international donors say closing the Noel discourages much-needed
foreign aid.
Charles Trace is the chairman of the United Kingdom-based Point Foundation,
which over the past few years has funded new medical and dining facilities,
dormitories, bathrooms, a library and a computer room - all for the older
children of the Noel.
He says while the Point Foundation intends to continue its support for the
Noel, downsizing the orphanage after all that investment is already making
some of his donors consider moving their money out of Rwanda.
“If we put the resources into doing what we’ve done and a year later found
that somebody has come and taken it all over - whether it's for their own
purpose or their community purpose - I won’t probably do that anymore,”
Trace stated.
Impractical measure
Trace also says closing all orphanages is impractical, as it will not stop
mothers from dying and babies from being abandoned.
For most of the 600 children at the Noel, however, their departure from the
orphanage appears to be certain, though not immediate. Mama Ineza works at
Noel and says she is glad the ministry decided to send the children away
gradually, without a time limit.
She says that with so many children at the Noel, and babies continuing to be
found by police or being dropped at the center, she says it may even be hard
for even God to find homes for them all.
(Source: VOA News)
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