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Author: Virginia
Very Brief Update Monday
I didn’t have time to format this so just copied and pasted the html from the email.
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Brief Update Summer
Isa and Roshan in Afghanistan |
Many of you have asked how things are going, so here is quick update…The latest…Isa and Roshan are attempting to move up their departure flight dates, but things are a bit tricky with so many people trying to get out of Kabul. Ghani is still safe in Pakistan and working on an exit strategy. Roshan is exploring options for getting his family to India or Pakistan, but his mother and little brother don’t have passports and the Government closed the passport office. Isa is having similar challenges as well as trying to assist families from his village who fled and are in Kabul without any resources like food or shelter. I have written a letter that I am sending to various government officials and have included it at the bottom of this email. Feel free to take whatever you like and write your own version. The situation is so much more terrible than I think anyone anticipated, and it is happening so much faster. Several folks have expressed some incredulity around Isa and Roshan being in Afghanistan and not just leaving right away. So I have come up with a way to try to convey the context in a way I hope you can relate to. It could be fire, floods, storms, or war – any disaster outside of your control that is threatening the lives of your family and community. This is what our boys are struggling with. And all we can do is pray and do our best to advocate for them by contacting anyone who might be able to help. Imagine…You have been away for a really long time and you finally are visiting your family – your parents, siblings, cousins, etc. Now, where they live, there have been some wildfires around, but nothing too close to where they are, and there have been wildfires around before, so it seems safe enough. And some members of your family can’t fly, so you must visit them where they are. You go and you are having a great time but the wildfires are getting worse, and closer to where you are. You think the fire people will come and put it out and we will all be okay. But the fire gets bigger and closer and now you think geez, I need to get my family out of here. At the same time, friends and relatives start showing up because their homes have been consumed by the fire, so you are trying to help everyone and make sure they have food and a place to sleep and figure out how to get all these folks to someplace safe. You have a ticket to fly out, but no one else does and there are no more tickets for any flights because so many people are trying to escape. Your parents and siblings, neighbors, friends, cousins, are all there with no way to get away from the fires. The fires have surrounded the area except for one road, but that road is closed. So you keep trying to find a way to keep your family safe. You know you are going to have to leave with that ticket you have but what is going to happen to your family? How can you help them? You must do something. If your family and friends and neighbors all die in this fire, how are you going to live with that? Of course, if you are also dead, you can’t ever help anyone. This is an impossible situation! You need a miracle. Isa and Sima in Kabul Roshan and Shegufa in Kabul My letter: While I appreciate President Biden’s intention to end the war in Afghanistan, the way that he is doing it is creating a horrific humanitarian crisis. The Taliban are brutally murdering and torturing non-Taliban. Interpreters and their families, Afghan women, and Hazara people are in grave danger. Right now, two of my foster boys who recently got their US citizenship are in Kabul, desperately trying to find some way to get their families to safety. Unfortunately, there are no good options. But staying there is almost certainly a death sentence. The USA needs to provide some safe passage for these people to escape to a refugee camp or something. UNHCR is set up to accept refugees in Iran, but the borders are controlled by the Taliban, so that isn’t an option. There is one potential route to Pakistan that isn’t completely controlled by the Taliban yet, but Pakistan has closed its border and is not allowing the people in. Flying out of there is also not an option for most people as it is costly and requires passports, which most people do not have. And if they could get a flight, where would they go? Many have relatives around the world but going to stay with them would require all sorts of documentation to get visas, which is terribly difficult in the best of times, and definitely not feasible at this time. I don’t know what the USA can do, but it must do something. We cannot just walk out and allow hundreds of thousands of people to be brutally slaughtered behind us. We must do something – provide air support to the government at least so that people can get out of the country. Do not allow the Taliban to completely take over the country, which is exactly what is happening. My children and their families are surrounded by danger with no practical means of escape. If there is anything you can do, please help them and all the others who are in the same predicament. Thank you. Virginia EllenYou can contact: your US Senators: https://www.senate.gov/senators/senators-contact.htm US Representative: https://www.house.gov/representatives/find-your-representative the President and Vice President: https://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/ UNHCR: https://www.unhcr.org/en-us/contact-form.html the UN: https://www.un.org/en/contact-us-0 the State Department: https://register.state.gov/contactus/contactusform the DOD (scroll to the bottom of the page): https://www.defense.gov/Contact/ |
Family Update Spring/Summer 2021
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2020 Spring
View this email in your browser We hope this email finds you well during “CoronaTime”! We are doing well and as usual, are overdue for an update letter. So, here is the latest on our crew… Isa is driving a big truck – he is driving by himself and enjoying it very much. Fortunately, in this “Corona Time”, it is pretty easy for him to isolate as he has very little interaction other than on the phone. Isa is officially engaged to a lovely young woman from his home town and they talk on the phone pretty much all the time. He is very happy. We had a visit from him recently – he needed groceries from Elias and a couple of masks and some hand sanitizer. 🙂 Roshan is still driving the truck with his partner Alijan. They two of them seem to be doing well – staying away from everyone and a bit bored, as usual. They are both engaged to girls in Afghanistan. Roshan is looking into finding a way for his sister to attend college here. He says that she is super smart, and studies all the time. He would love for her to have the opportunity to go to a university here. Under normal circumstances, that is tricky. Now, it seems impossible. But we will investigate and if we are lucky, get something in place for when we reach a new normal. Ghani was home November-March with his cousin, Arif K. It was wonderful to have them. I was hoping they would stay, but they are planning to open a car salvage and export business near Orlando with the help of Ghani’s uncle. They were ready to get the thing started when the Coronavirus brought everything to a stop. They went back to Michigan the day before MI issued the stay at home order and are there with a bunch of the other boys. Ghani and several of the other boys are working in factories, making food and they seem to be doing well. They are concerned about exposure at work, though. Hedayat is still here. He has been struggling – got mixed up with a naughty group of kids from Emmaus while at LCCC and was arrested for DUI in mid-February. His court hearing has been postponed. Since then, he is pretty much just sleeping and hanging out. He has applied for a few jobs but hasn’t gotten anything yet. We are a bit worried about him. He is amiable enough when he is with us and we are hopeful that once he starts a regular full-time job, he will feel better. It is a bit of a mixed bag though… a job would be great for him, yet any job he would get now would create a lot more exposure, so he is much safer at home (and we are safer too!). Abu is doing well. He is in his senior year and we have no idea what will happen regarding his graduation. His grades are excellent and he has been accepted at NCC and is planning to attend there for 2 years and then transfer to a 4-year university. He traded in his first car for a newer, used car this week and is still working part-time at Walmart. When the virus hit, he took a couple of weeks off as he was not keen to get sick. After the two weeks, Walmart called and said they had put in place a bunch of things to make the workplace safer, so he is back at work and doing fine. Abu had planned to move out over the summer, to live somewhere closer to the community college and to have the experience of living sans adults, I guess. He found a roommate — a medical student/resident from Kenya and he is moving out at the end of April. It is a bit sudden and unexpected, but as Abu explained, he knows that he can come home whenever he wants to, and he is not going far, so he will be home regularly. The boys have had to cut each other’s hair since all the barbershops are closed! They have actually done quite well. Jean Claude is here as the dorms are closed. He has been doing quite a lot of schoolwork as things transitioned to online pretty quickly for him. He is doing well – looking for a job for the summer and keeping up with schoolwork, so he keeps himself quite busy. Arif Saramad is our new guy. He arrived on February 12th. He is as lovely a young man as anyone could wish for. He is helpful and cheerful and works hard. He is using the online Khan Academy to learn algebra and has been working with my mother on English vocabulary and grammar. The high school has moved to online schooling and he is doing a great job at keeping up with that. He enjoys cooking and is eager to help out in any way. He still has the “new boy” syndrome. I told him that I hope it lingers! He is so delightful. He is looking forward to getting his driving permit and work authorization. Like everyone else, our lives have changed a bit since the beginning of March. I have been busy, not accomplishing much, as usual, it seems. 🙂 The three big-time sucks are shopping – the new shopping experience is a lot slower, and since I am shopping for 8-12 people, well, it takes pretty much of at least two days a week. And then I am tired. I am actually tired quite a bit. I expect it is a combination of my perpetual battle with sinusitis and the stress that is inevitable when living through what we are living through. I have been a bit easier on myself about that, though. We have family movie nights at least 4 nights a week, which means that on those nights I am not in my office or studio until midnight, trying to be productive. I also dug out my sewing machine and spent a ridiculous amount of time perusing mask-making videos and articles, and shopping for supplies, and tools related to making masks, I have been experimenting with different designs and trying to combine some of the best features – it often doesn’t work when I do these experiments as I seem to have a real knack for putting things together inside out or backward or just the wrong way. But I am persisting and spending a lot of time with my seam ripper. 🙂 I have narrowed it down to 3 patterns that seem to work, are comfortable, and aren’t ridiculously complicated to make. This project started in the dining room but had to be moved down to the studio as it was taking over. I have an order for 50 of them from my brother, but so far my supply is depleted as quickly as I make them. Two of my boys who drive trucks needed them, my parents, friends, my boys, some of their friends, even one of my ex-sisters-in-law… and of course I had quite a few that didn’t quite make it through the first washing machine test. But now that I have settled on a couple of patterns, as soon as my fabric order is in, I should be able to go into production. The third thing that takes an inordinate amount of my time, is reading the news. I check my phone to look up something, open google, the news headlines pop up. I scroll through and click something that looks intriguing and it is a bit like getting lost in Dumbledor’s Pensieve. At the beginning of this “Corona Time”, I was taking product photos and putting things on Etsy, but it didn’t seem like that was going anywhere – our sales were pretty much none. But we have had a few in the past week, and some for something not in stock, so I am going to have to reclaim part of the studio (that has been taken over with sewing) to make a few mead mugs. I am looking forward to having a bit of time in the studio to just make things, but I am not sure when that will be, and I am not sure really how our business will evolve to survive this. I think a lot of small business owners are contemplating the future and wondering if their business will find a place in whatever the future looks like. Nolan is working from home too. He carved out a pretty nice office for himself downstairs and has settled into a fairly comfortable routine. He is working long hours though – longer than when he was at the office – and work has been pretty stressful. But he is enjoying cooking with Arif and has started puttering in the garden, so he is doing pretty well. Nolan was talking with the boys about how we are helping Bethany set up a virtual foster parent support group. And Abu was very sweet. He said that we aren’t foster parents, and this isn’t a foster family – it is a real family. The boys are handling the stay at home orders pretty well. They spend a lot of time on their phones, talking with friends, and playing online games with friends. When we have nice weather they do go out to the stadium to work out and kick the soccer ball with 2 or three friends – but they are quite mindful of the dangers and keep their distance. We remind them regularly how important it is because if they do bring the virus home, they could infect all of us. Right now the only one with a driver’s license is Abu (Hedayat lost his driving privileges and will have his license suspended when he eventually gets to court for his DUI). Though Abu is busy, he is happy to run errands to do porch drop-offs or pickups for me. The boys are all taking the virus very seriously. They are washing their hands and staying inside most of the time. They are concerned about the future and how this will end, as we all are. We talk about it and are clear that right now, there are lots of questions and very few answers. We are trying to keep a bit of fun going. We have fires in our outdoor fire pit when the weather is okay, and we watched the entire Hobbit and Lord of the Rings series and the Harry Potter series. We would do more, but I am terrible at managing my time, (and spend a lot of it reading the news) so I always have too much to do and often work in the studio after dinner – when we could be playing a game or watching a movie together. And with Ghani not here, I seem to be the default instigator. Ghani is a good instigator – he could get everyone motivated for a game or a project. I miss him a lot, and his cousin, Arif, who is a very kind and thoughtful guy. We received a call from our caseworker yesterday. He had heard that Abu is moving out and was concerned about that, but when I assured him that all was well, he mentioned that with Abu out, we would have a bed available for a new foster… 🙂 So we may have more news coming soon. We hope you are doing well during this crazy time. If you need a mask, please let me know, I am happy to send you one (or more). And if you are local and need any supplies from the store, please let me know! Added note: Roshan surprised us with a very quick visit last evening. He and Alijan needed masks, and Roshan really wanted to come home, even if just for a few minutes. He joined us for some pizza at dinnertime, picked up 2 masks and some bread, and was back on the road. He told us that he is planning on taking a job in NJ which will allow him to be home 2 days every week. He misses home, misses playing soccer, and sitting around the dinner table with everyone. He is planning on getting an apartment in Emmaus or Allentown with one or two of the other boys who are driving trucks. It sounds like he is planning on making this move within the next few months. This relationship that we have now with Roshan is somewhat miraculous. For quite a long time after he came to live with us, Roshan was so challenging. I despaired on more than a few occasions about him – he was grouchy and uncommunicative and did not seem to want to be here with us. I worried about him affecting the attitudes of the other boys. And now he is totally different. He is loving and thoughtful and appreciative, and he talks to us. He is certainly much happier since he visited his family in Afghanistan and got engaged to Shegufa. Whatever the reasons, I am enjoying the result! Copyright © 2020 Clay Street Speakeasy, All rights reserved. |
20191230
Catching up – October 2019 – The new guys:
Abu
Abubakar is from Ghana, has a rather long story, so I will try to keep it brief. When we met him, Abu was living with a foster family in Hellertown. This family had one 3-year-old child and lived in a remote and rural area. Abu went to the Saucon Valley high school, which has a reputation for being racist. Abu was quite lonely there and didn’t have any friends. He came to stay with us for a week when his family went out of the country, and our guys took him to the park, and to play soccer, and other fun hanging out teenage boy stuff. Abu told his caseworker that the week was the most fun he had ever.
It turned out that our home was a much better fit for Abu, so the agency planned to place him with us temporarily and then transfer him to the group home in Bensalem. But Abu was happy here and we wanted him to stay, so the agency eventually agreed to make it a permanent placement.
Abu is a very cheerful person, though he can also be shy about making new friends. He is very helpful and kind. Abu had his first interview at Walmart for a cashier position, and they offered him a job on the spot. He often works at the self-checkout and likes it very much. He is interested in technology and has plans to pursue a career in computer networking and cybersecurity. He is an excellent student. Because English is one of his first languages and he went to school in Ghana into high school, he is more academically advanced than our other boys. He has already been accepted at Northampton Community College for Fall 2020, but he is considering also applying to some local 4-year colleges.
In August, Nolan and Hedayat went to Detroit for the Umoja soccer tournament during the same weekend that my mom and I went to the Irish festival in Dublin, Ohio. We left Abu in charge of the house. I posted our several pages of “house instructions” for house-sitters on the refrigerator, and Abu was horrified to see how much work it was to manage the household, with detailed descriptions of dog and cat feeding procedures, trash and recycling schedules, and so on. I assured him that it wasn’t that difficult and that he would have help. He said that he didn’t realize how much work went into being an adult and managing a household. He was grateful that he didn’t have to manage all that stuff all the time. He did a great job managing everything, though, and I wanted to do something nice for him to show our appreciation.
Abu mentioned that he would like to have a pet cat. So we went kitten shopping and Abu picked out the kitten he wanted after meeting a bunch of them at a rescue. Abu’s new cat is named “Happy” and she is great! The day after she came home, I got a phone call from Abu who was upstairs in his room. He asked me to come up right away as he was worried about Happy. He was worried that she was sick because she was making a strange noise. I went right upstairs to find Happy snuggled up on Abu’s lap, purring contentedly. I explained that nothing was wrong – that is what cats do when they are happy. 🙂
Jean Claude
Jean Claude (JC) is part of a group of Hedayat’s and Ghani’s friends from high school. JC is from the Democratic Republic of Congo and came here with his extended family through the family resettlement program. This program offers assistance to newly arriving families for two or three months, then they are pretty much on their own. The family that JC came with was unable to support him, so partway into his senior year of high school, JC became homeless. A family we know who operates the “Living the Dream” and “After Dark” programs for teens knew JC from the program and offered to take him in. They went to his soccer games and took him to tryouts and around to visit colleges and all the normal stuff that parents do. When they went out of town, JC would stay with us. Then in May, they had some family issues and asked if JC could stay with us until he starts college, and so now JC is part of our family too.
JC is going to Northampton Community College and is living on campus. I went to an all-day orientation with him and was quite impressed with the school. Unfortunately, they don’t have reciprocity with Lehigh County, so JC pays out of county rates. But he has some scholarships and grants, so his student loans will be limited.
A More Current Update (December 29, 2019)
Ghani had moved into an apartment with several of his friends in Grand Rapids, Michigan, was working and saving money with the aim to launch a car and car part export business. Many of the people in his very large extended family are successful in this same type of business, and several uncles and cousins have offered to help/mentor/partner with him to get it started here in the United States. After doing some research, Ghani realized that it would be much more costly to conduct an export business from Michigan than from PA. He talked Arif – one of the other Michigan boys (who is also his cousin) – into going into the business with him, and they both moved back to Allentown at the end of October.
So now we have four full-time kids, and JC who is part-time, and the house feels a lot less empty than it had when everyone abruptly moved away earlier in the year. There are a few other friends of theirs who regularly join us for dinner and can often be found asleep on one of the couches in the morning. 🙂 They are great guys, and while they can get a little loud during the night, we are willing to deal with some of that in exchange for knowing that we have created a space where they feel welcome, comfortable and safe.
In October, Bethany told us about another Hazara boy (also named Arif, like Ghani’s cousin) who was living in Indonesia and approved to come to the United States, and they asked if we would take him. I checked with Ghani and Hedayat, who both knew this boy when they lived with him in the shelter, Hedayat immediately contacted him on Facebook Messenger. Arif was over the moon! We have been keeping in touch with him several times a week. He is a super guy and we were hoping he would be here for Thanksgiving, then for Christmas… but still there is no word on when he will arrive.
We initially assumed that his birthday was January 1 (most Hazara boys have this recorded as their birthday) which would mean that if he didn’t get here by Dec 31st, he would age out of the Unaccompanied Refugee Minor program and no longer be eligible for the program, and he would no longer be able to stay in the shelter in Indonesia… It is so hard for those guys. And this poor kid has been there in the refugee shelter since he was 12 years old! It has been a very long five years for him.
I lost a lot of sleep worrying about this young man, who keeps asking if I have heard anything about when he is coming. After multiple communications with our Bethany caseworker, we were informed that Arif’s official birthday is actually Feb 25th, so he is not yet in danger of aging out. We still have two months. Whew! It would have been lovely to have known that before I spent a month hyperventilating about it!
We also agreed to take another Hazara boy, Aziz, who is living as a refugee in Malaysia. He is only 16, so we aren’t as concerned about the timing of his arrival. None of the boys we know here are familiar with him, and I couldn’t find him on Facebook, so we haven’t had any communication with him yet.
For Christmas this year, we are very happy to report that all of our boys were home! Roshan, Isa, and Rohullio were all here for Christmas Eve and Christmas day! Unfortunately, Isa and Rohullio had to leave right afterward and Roshan the following day. On Friday, 12/27, Hedayat and Arif drove Roshan to Chicago, where Roshan plans to catch a ride with Isa and Habib (in their truck) to Nebraska, to meet up with his own driving partner, Ali Jan. Hedayat and Arif — Ghani’s cousin, not the one still stuck in Indonesia 🙂 — will visit with the Michigan boys for a few days and then return home.
In preparation for the sudden population increase, we obtained two additional bunk beds, a loft bed and a bunch of twin mattresses and sheet sets, so we have sleeping accommodations for 10. Of course, we still only have one small bathroom upstairs. 🙂
I have to tell you more about Isa and Roshan and their adventures, but I don’t want to make this too long.
Isa had quite an adventure this summer when he was involved in an accident while driving a truck and he ended up in jail in Iowa! Rohullio (who was his driving partner at the time) had been asleep at the time, handled it brilliantly and ultimately it all ended as well as it could. It was an expensive and stressful experience, but there were some important lessons learned and no permanent harm done to anyone, so that is great.
One of the positive outcomes was that Nolan and I demonstrated in a very powerful way that we are here for the boys no matter what. It is one thing to say that, but another thing to prove it. I think that for Isa, the experience broke down whatever remaining barriers he had about us, and he knows that we really love him and we really are his family. That is a big deal for him. I think it also made an impression on Hedayat, but I think he already pretty much got that message from us.
Most human beings suffer from some version of feeling unlovable, or unworthy. While it is a pretty universal thing, for kids who have been sent away from their families, no matter the reason, they face many challenges and they can’t help but feel rejected by their families. When someone else shows love, they can get angry and confused. It is a very natural reaction for foster kids and step-children (in my experience).
Isa is the only one of our kids who was an orphan (I intentionally used the past tense there). The others all have contact with at least some of their original family. Roshan has both parents and several siblings, Ghani has siblings, cousins and aunts and uncles, Hedayat has a mom and siblings and some cousins, Abu has a mom and a sister. After his “Iowa adventure,” Isa ended up stranded in California, so I helped him rent a car so he could drive to Arizona and visit Grandma and Grandpa LeBlanc. A couple of weeks ago, Nolan made it to Arizona to visit his parents and Isa was able to route himself via Phoenix and stop in for a visit again. And Nolan’s parents are welcoming and embracing of all the boys as their own grandchildren, so Isa knows he has family here, and he appreciates and celebrates that and it is hard to explain how awesome that is. He tells his friends that he has grandparents in Arizona, and when they ask him how that is possible, he says “that is a long story.”
On a recent visit home, Isa told me that he gets to see the whole country and there are lots of beautiful places and interesting places, and they are great to visit, but only coming back to Allentown feels like home.
I suspect that Roshan feels similarly. Roshan, who talked about getting married the first week he was with us, went back to Afghanistan this summer and got engaged to a lovely young woman who is studying pre-med at college in Kabul. His trip is quite a story – 550 people at the engagement party, some amazing photos, lots of scary stuff, bombs and other things that we can’t even begin to imagine, comprehend or appreciate about his family’s situation. We were extremely relieved when he and his driving partner arrived safely back in the US. (They were too!) We are excited about the idea of having daughters-in-law! And now Isa is also planning on a trip and already has a special someone with whom he communicates regularly.
But I think I have written more than enough for one email, so I will sign off for now. For the next update we hope to have good news about Arif S and maybe Aziz!
Wishing you all a wonderful 2020!
Love,
Virginia and Nolan
20191019 Catching up to 2019
Catching up to 2019
(link to text with photos)
So much has happened since our last update…
Roshan and Isa had graduated high school in 2017, attended Lehigh Carbon Community College (LCCC) for a time, and dropped out of school for different reasons and are now full-time long haul truck drivers.
Ghani graduated from Allen in 2018 and attended LCCC for a year, then left for Michigan where he has been living with his friends and working at a factory. Hedayat graduated from high school in 2019 and is attending LCCC and playing soccer.
All of the leaving has been heartbreaking. The boys know that this is always their home and we are always their family… and I wish we had more time. They can come home to visit, but it will not ever be quite the same. I assume that for normal families, by the time the kids leave home most parents are ready. We only had 3 years and were definitely not ready. But we have had to keep moving through our grieving. For sure it has also been hard on Hedayat, and we have to make sure that we are supporting him. And we have the new guys!
A new foster son from Ghana joined our house in May! His name is Abu-Bakar. And Hedayat’s friend, Jean Claude, from Congo, also joined us. More on these guys soon…
We skipped updates for all of 2018 – and a lot happened, but so much has happened since then, it is hard to remember. We did a lot of fun stuff in 2018 – snow skiing, bowling, and a week at the beach with 12 Hazara boys! Mostly it was life as usual… and then it wasn’t.
Last November, the Taliban attacked the boys’ home district. The kids were on their phones, getting updates, and hearing a lot of tragic news about their friends and neighbors for days which turned into weeks. Fortunately, Roshan’s family made it safely to Kabul. It was so hard for them to be here and not be able to do anything. It is hard for us to imagine what that is like.
This pushed Roshan to step up his plans. He quit LCCC and within one month had his commercial driver’s license and a trucking job driving long-haul. He left home after the holidays (on my birthday) and began driving an 18-wheeler across the country with his friend from the Indonesian refugee shelters, Ali-Jan. Roshan felt he needed to do this to make money so that he could visit his family and help provide for them. He also really wanted to get married – but I will cover that one on a different update.
Isa left LCCC, as his heart just hadn’t been into college. He started doing full-time construction for a general contractor who was very distrustful of Muslims, or anyone not from America, but Isa was able to break through some of the stereotyping. Isa learned a great deal from Mike, too and was enjoying the work.
Unfortunately, Mike also intentionally underpaid Isa, giving him various obfuscating stories. Initially, when Isa asked about his pay being lower than expected, Mike claimed to Isa that he was taking taxes out. Only after Isa repeatedly asked for his W2 did Mike say that he had NOT been taking out taxes, that he considered Isa to be a subcontractor, and Isa was supposed to have been taking out his own taxes. Since he said he was taking out taxes, of course, this was really underhanded and deceitful.
Isa understandably felt betrayed, and when we attempted to obtain a lawyer to help him recover his lost pay, it took several weeks. By the time anyone could be engaged, Isa had moved on. He didn’t want another construction job. He and our friend, Rohullah, attended the same Miami-based truck driving school as Roshan had, and started team driving across the country for a Russian/American company based out of Rochester, New York. Isa and Rohullah are enjoying driving the truck across the country and are stopping in at home every couple of weeks. We are so happy that they are visiting regularly.
Once Ghani finished his second semester at LCCC, he only had a few more months in the Bethany Unaccompanied Refugee Minor (URM) program, which would end when he turned 21 in August. He had been keenly looking forward to visiting his family in Australia with Nolan, but those plans fell through when the Australian consulate rejected his travel visa saying that his US travel document had been stolen.
Stolen?! It was in the desk drawer in my office! When we followed up on this claim with the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) they told us that the document was in good standing, they would not provide the consulate with any sort of document correcting the Australian consulate’s error. So the US says, there is nothing wrong, we just send that document and Australia says it is marked stolen, and neither side would do anything about it. He was stuck.
In disappointment, Ghani decided he would, instead, visit his best friends (from the Indonesian shelters) in Grand Rapids, Michigan. his came up really out of the blue and hit us all hard. I was leaving for a brief respite trip to visit my Aunt and Uncle in France, and Ghani was going to take me to the airport. But since he was leaving for MI, he would not be there to pick me up the following week… so I drove myself and he left for Michigan. After a few weeks, Ghani got a job as a machinist.
Having lost three of our family members in so short time period, Hedayat, Nolan and I were all feeling a lot of loss.
Hedayat spent most of the summer visiting friends and playing soccer. In early August, Nolan and Hedayat drove to Detroit, Michigan, to attend the Umoja Games, the Shia soccer tournament that they have attended for the last four years. The tournament is run by the Khoja people, a Tanzanian people who are ethnically Indian. Appropriately, “Umoja” is the word for “unity” in the Swahili language.
The (Michigan boys) team we sponsored last year, the Hazara Hurricanes, again played at Umoja. The team did well, though they did not quite make it to the semi-final games. Nolan captured video footage of the games and created a YouTube channel for the team at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4GCcqNw5eUhghET6AE8bZg.
Isa and Rohullah were able to route themselves via the tournament as they were taking a truck load to take to California. Isa managed to park the truck at Nolan’s hotel, (video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fOOWqQtTEmE) and they got to stay for a while and watch the games and spend some time with the boys.
Adjusting to the boys being not here has been hard. Hedayat has also missed them and we have all been adjusting to a cultural shift in our household. He doesn’t say much to us, but we know that it is difficult for him. Nolan has also had to do a big shift in his grocery buying and cooking. The African boys have a slightly different palate I guess you could say.
The timing of Abu’s arrival was serendipitous. He came to us just as Ghani was leaving, and then Jean Claude came shortly after that. So while we were grieving the loss of our original family, we also had to celebrate the new members of our family, and that helped to fill the space for us. It was also fortunate that JC was here for the summer, as Hedayat was mostly away, and Abu was happy for JCs company.
And Abu is delightful. He is quiet and has a lovely accent. His first language is English and while he plays soccer, he seems a bit more intellectual and tech-savvy and plans to study computer networking and cybersecurity. He is very helpful around the house, which is super awesome. He is rather devout and goes to the Mosque whenever he is off on a Friday afternoon. When we ask him if he is up for going somewhere or doing something, his response is often, “yes, after I pray I can go”. When Abu smiles, (which he does quite a lot) his whole face crinkles up and he starts giggling. It is very sweet.
This more or less gets us caught up to the Summer of 2019… more updates are coming – there is a lot to tell you!
——–
20190811 – All Good Things
So much has happened since our last update…
Roshan and Isa had graduated high school in 2017, attended Lehigh Carbon Community College (LCCC) for a time, and dropped out of school for different reasons and are now full-time long haul truck drivers.
Ghani graduated from Allen in 2018 and attended LCCC for a year, then left for Michigan where he has been living with his friends and working at a factory. Hedayat graduated from high school in 2019 and is attending LCCC and playing soccer.
All of the leaving has been heartbreaking. The boys know that this is always their home and we are always their family… and I wish we had more time. They can come home to visit, but it will not ever be quite the same. I assume that for normal families, by the time the kids leave home most parents are ready. We only had 3 years and were definitely not ready. But we have had to keep moving through our grieving. For sure it has also been hard on Hedayat, and we have to make sure that we are supporting him. And we have the new guys!
A new foster son from Ghana joined our house in May! His name is Abu-Bakar. And Hedayat’s friend, Jean Claude, from Congo, also joined us. More on these guys soon…
We skipped updates for all of 2018 – and a lot happened, but so much has happened since then, it is hard to remember. We did a lot of fun stuff in 2018 – snow skiing, bowling, and a week at the beach with 12 Hazara boys! Mostly it was life as usual… and then it wasn’t.
Last November, the Taliban attacked the boys’ home district. The kids were on their phones, getting updates, and hearing a lot of tragic news about their friends and neighbors for days which turned into weeks. Fortunately, Roshan’s family made it safely to Kabul. It was so hard for them to be here and not be able to do anything. It is hard for us to imagine what that is like.
This pushed Roshan to step up his plans. He quit LCCC and within one month had his commercial driver’s license and a trucking job driving long-haul. He left home after the holidays (on my birthday) and began driving an 18-wheeler across the country with his friend from the Indonesian refugee shelters, Ali-Jan. Roshan felt he needed to do this to make money so that he could visit his family and help provide for them. He also really wanted to get married – but I will cover that one on a different update.
Isa left LCCC, as his heart just hadn’t been into college. He started doing full-time construction for a general contractor who was very distrustful of Muslims, or anyone not from America, but Isa was able to break through some of the stereotyping. Isa learned a great deal from Mike, too and was enjoying the work.
Unfortunately, Mike also intentionally underpaid Isa, giving him various obfuscating stories. Initially, when Isa asked about his pay being lower than expected, Mike claimed to Isa that he was taking taxes out. Only after Isa repeatedly asked for his W2 did Mike say that he had NOT been taking out taxes, that he considered Isa to be a subcontractor, and Isa was supposed to have been taking out his own taxes. Since he said he was taking out taxes, of course, this was really underhanded and deceitful.
Isa understandably felt betrayed, and when we attempted to obtain a lawyer to help him recover his lost pay, it took several weeks. By the time anyone could be engaged, Isa had moved on. He didn’t want another construction job. He and our friend, Rohullah, attended the same Miami-based truck driving school as Roshan had, and started team driving across the country for a Russian/American company based out of Rochester, New York. Isa and Rohullah are enjoying driving the truck across the country and are stopping in at home every couple of weeks. We are so happy that they are visiting regularly.
Once Ghani finished his second semester at LCCC, he only had a few more months in the Bethany Unaccompanied Refugee Minor (URM) program, which would end when he turned 21 in August. He had been keenly looking forward to visiting his family in Australia with Nolan, but those plans fell through when the Australian consulate rejected his travel visa saying that his US travel document had been stolen.
Stolen?! It was in the desk drawer in my office! When we followed up on this claim with the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) they told us that the document was in good standing, they would not provide the consulate with any sort of document correcting the Australian consulate’s error. So the US says, there is nothing wrong, we just send that document and Australia says it is marked stolen, and neither side would do anything about it. He was stuck.
In disappointment, Ghani decided he would, instead, visit his best friends (from the Indonesian shelters) in Grand Rapids, Michigan. his came up really out of the blue and hit us all hard. I was leaving for a brief respite trip to visit my Aunt and Uncle in France, and Ghani was going to take me to the airport. But since he was leaving for MI, he would not be there to pick me up the following week… so I drove myself and he left for Michigan. After a few weeks, Ghani got a job as a machinist.
Having lost three of our family members in so short time period, Hedayat, Nolan and I were all feeling a lot of loss.
Hedayat spent most of the summer visiting friends and playing soccer. In early August, Nolan and Hedayat drove to Detroit, Michigan, to attend the Umoja Games, the Shia soccer tournament that they have attended for the last four years. The tournament is run by the Khoja people, a Tanzanian people who are ethnically Indian. Appropriately, “Umoja” is the word for “unity” in the Swahili language.
The (Michigan boys) team we sponsored last year, the Hazara Hurricanes, again played at Umoja. The team did well, though they did not quite make it to the semi-final games. Nolan captured video footage of the games and created a YouTube channel for the team at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4GCcqNw5eUhghET6AE8bZg.
Isa and Rohullah were able to route themselves via the tournament as they were taking a truck load to take to California. Isa managed to park the truck at Nolan’s hotel, (video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fOOWqQtTEmE) and they got to stay for a while and watch the games and spend some time with the boys.
Adjusting to the boys being not here has been hard. Hedayat has also missed them and we have all been adjusting to a cultural shift in our household. He doesn’t say much to us, but we know that it is difficult for him. Nolan has also had to do a big shift in his grocery buying and cooking. The African boys have a slightly different palate I guess you could say.
The timing of Abu’s arrival was serendipitous. He came to us just as Ghani was leaving, and then Jean Claude came shortly after that. So while we were grieving the loss of our original family, we also had to celebrate the new members of our family, and that helped to fill the space for us. It was also fortunate that JC was here for the summer, as Hedayat was mostly away, and Abu was happy for JCs company.
And Abu is delightful. He is quiet and has a lovely accent. His first language is English and while he plays soccer, he seems a bit more intellectual and tech-savvy and plans to study computer networking and cybersecurity. He is very helpful around the house, which is super awesome. He is rather devout and goes to the Mosque whenever he is off on a Friday afternoon. When we ask him if he is up for going somewhere or doing something, his response is often, “yes, after I pray I can go”. When Abu smiles, (which he does quite a lot) his whole face crinkles up and he starts giggling. It is very sweet.
This more or less gets us caught up to the Summer of 2019… more updates are coming – there is a lot to tell you!
——–
20170701 Umoja Speech
Umoja Speech – Given at the Umoja Gala dinner in Schaumberg, IL on July 1, 2017
Our friends and family thought we were crazy, but we were committed to doing this. We went through all the training and background checks and waited. Eventually, we got the call and were told that two boys from Afghanistan were on their way. We were excited and terrified at the same time.
It is two years later and we now have 4 amazing foster boys. We could never have imagined how awesome it has been to open our hearts and home to these guys. It has transformed our lives and those of our friends and family. People tell us all the time how lucky our boys are, but we know that we are the lucky ones.
As for our boys, they are great – two recently graduated from high school and are headed to community college in the fall. The other two are still in high school They amaze us all the time with the courage and grace with which they handle their challenges. We do what we can, and that isn’t enough. Fortunately, we all get a lot of support from friends and family and through our boys, we discovered a community of support we never even knew existed. The incredibly kind, supportive and generous people of Allentown’s Al Ahad Islamic Center welcomed our children and us into their community. That support has been invaluable.
As a couple of people who were not into team sports, and were thrust into the roles of “soccer dad” and “soccer mom”, we have quickly learned to appreciate the positive power of sports for our kids. The boys have joined their high school tennis, track, volleyball and soccer programs, and the Al Ahad team, and participating in local leagues, and the Umoja soccer clinic. Given the painful losses and separations the boys have suffered, these sports have allowed the boys to develop new strong lasting relationships.
And, taking it to a new level, attending last year’s Umoja New York tournament, I marveled at how participants and families converged literally from around the world to create new connections and rekindle old friendships. In rising to the challenge of competitive playing, the boys shared an intense and memorable time together.
We feel deeply honored to attend this year’s Umoja Games! We appreciate that it takes an incredible amount of care, coordination, and effort to make a complex event like this happen. It makes being an instant parent of four teenagers seem fairly simple.
While we feel lucky to have found our boys, and while they have found a loving family, many of their friends have not been so fortunate. Many still wait to be placed in a home. Others have arrived only to be placed in group homes without the support of a host family. Getting through high school is hard enough when you are part of a family. It’s a lot harder when you’re on your own, in a new country, wrestling with a strange language and a different culture.
If you feel moved to do something to help refugees, there are many things that you can do. We urge you to consider fostering or mentoring refugee children.
If you have any questions, please feel free to talk to either of us and we would love to tell you more (or just brag about the kids!)
20170825 – Summer 2017
August 25, 2017
As usual, I don’t know where to start. Did I write about graduation? That seems like ages ago already.
Roshan and Isa graduated from William Allen High School in June. It was pretty awesome!
Shortly after that Ghani, Hedayat, Nolan and I headed to Chicago area for the big Umoja soccer tournament. This is an annual soccer tournament that is put on to bring together Shia people from around the US, Canada and Europe. The trip was quite an adventure for all of us.
We stayed about 15 minutes from where Nolan grew up in Elgin and got to see some old family friends. (We had amazing deep dish pizza and Nolan’s oldest childhood friend took 16 of us out for a super fantastic Afghan dinner.)
Our boys had three friends from Michigan join us, and then two more joined us (so yes, seven boys in a hotel room!). they were all so happy to be together and they had a great time playing soccer. Four of the five boys who joined us in IL were new to Nolan and me – and they were just as delightful as the other boys we have met.
Nolan and I took four of the Michigan boys on a sightseeing trip to Chicago. We went to Navy Pier and took a boat tour. One of the boys had never been on a boat, and the others had only been on the very scary boat ride that got them from Malaysia to Indonesia – so this was a really great experience for all of them. We all had so much fun.
It was a fabulous trip, and we were very sad to say goodbye. So it was a very happy surprise when, the morning after we got home, four of the five Michigan boys showed up at our house in PA at 7 AM. They were not quite ready for the visit to be over and had a few days more of vacation time from work, so they came for a visit to PA.
It is funny how when we had two boys, and they asked us to take 2 more, we weren’t sure how we could handle it and now we can have seven or eight, and when we are back down to only four, it feels very quiet and lonely.
The eight boys went to the park and played volleyball and soccer – they had a picnic and wanted to camp out at the mountain – something they did a lot growing up in Afghanistan. They pitched their tent at my parents’ house but eventually decided to sleep at home. And on the last day of their visit, I took the four Michigan boys on a day trip to NYC and we had a super time.
The program works differently in Michigan. These guys all come in and spend a year in a group home and then they either go to a host/foster family or into an apartment. But they don’t have an experience of being part of a family. Their host/foster families go on vacations without them, they don’t plan their vacations around them. The boys are more independent when they get to the foster home, so it is a different and more distant kind of relationship. They don’t have what we have.
So this experience had me feeling a bit like Wendy Darling from Peter Pan – with all the lost boys. And it feels to me like such a gift to be able to play that part, even a little bit, with these amazing boys.
We were still riding the high from that amazing adventure when a weird and troubling thing happened with our neighbors. It is a long and weird story – I will try to make it brief. We were woken at 3:30 in the morning by a police officer who said that our neighbor was outside in the alley screaming for Nolan to come out. So our behind the alley neighbor was ranting and raving accusing our boys of having thrown a dead opossum at his head at around 8 pm, the previous evening (none of our boys was home at that time and none of them had ever even seen this neighbor, nor had they seen a dead opossum). The story just got weirder from there with laser pointers and opossums stuck in blinds and us buying the Hess mansion… The neighbor was obviously having mental health issues and the xenophobia and anti-immigrant – I am not sure what to call it – the ugliness that is passing for politics these days combined with the mental illness led to this bizarre encounter. The police were very nice and were very clear that the neighbor was having mental health issues. The whole thing was bizarre and unsettling and since then we have not seen our neighbors at all but it is sad that we have to be afraid for our boys’ safety from our neighbors.
Right after this, we were off to the beach at Ocean City, MD. This year we went with my mom and the Shackelfords, and the Laudens – so there were the four Lauden children, three of our teens and seven adults. We had a great time and had a really lovely spacious house. The kids and our boys had so much fun together and I got to go jet skiing for the first time. I never thought much about it, but I told the boys we would go, so I went and oh-my-gosh-I-had-so-much-fun! (They are really fast!!!) We played Uno and dominoes and tried to keep the kids from zoning out on their phones. We went mini-golfing and sailing and the boys hung out at the boardwalk and my mom and Margaret went grocery shopping every day. It went too fast.
We had barely unpacked from the beach when Mom and I were off to Dublin, Ohio for the Irish Festival. The weather was great and it was a good show. We came back, exhausted, but with not much time to recover. Things picked up with four gigs in the seven days we have been back and lots of orders to fill and inventory to make.
In the midst of all that it wasn’t too surprising that Nolan and I both forgot our anniversary… thanks to my mom for remembering or we probably wouldn’t have thought of it until next year! So it was our 9th anniversary and anyone who has known me for a long time will know how amazing that is. Next year we are planning a big party to celebrate our 10th anniversary. And no, I don’t really believe it has been that long because I am definitely not that old!
So this email is a bit newsier because I am trying to cover such a long time and so many different things and I apologize for that.