As I
tried to get up and leave the orphanage with 500 children,
the little boy that had been sitting on my lap wouldn't
get down. When he finally did, he grabbed hold of
my khakis with five tiny fingers and started tugging.
Can you imagine having to pry yourself away from that
image?
Like many children
without parents, these children will grow up the same.
But they have one more fear to overcome besides abandonment.
The fear of water. The relief organization in this
Tamil-controlled region of northeastern Sri Lanka
is beginning mental health counseling for everyone--
adults and kids. But it is not an overnight solution.
And the tsunami's smallest victims may be the hardest
to heal.
On this day though,
children from central Ohio healed in more ways they
can ever imagine. Before they left, Dr. Mervyn Samuel
and his wife Mallikha, of Blacklick, Ohio, gathered
up hundreds of care packages made from several Columbus
girls. Inside these care packages-- crayons, candy
hearts, Jolly Ranchers, gum, soap, and other small
goodies. As part of their medical mission, the Samuels
allowed 10-TV to travel with them to these orphanages
and help pass out the gifts. As I put one of the candy
hearts inside a little girls mouth-- I said "candy."
She repeated, "condee?" And smiled. And
the way they said thank you-- so, so soft with such
a sweet accent. They sounded almost like Audrey Hepburn
in the movie "My Fair Lady" when she played
the role of beggar-girl-turned-aristocrat Ms. Eliza
Doolittle.
These children are
not called orphans. In Sri Lanka, orphans are considered
people who have no one to care for them. Instead,
they are referred to as "children without parents,"
because they have the people of Tamil caring for each
and every one of them. And in this case, also the
people of central Ohio.
SOURCE:
http://www.10tv.com/Global/
story.asp?S=2879288&nav=LUERWAx9
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