I
have such mixed feelings about the recent news in adoption in the Democratic
Republic of Congo. At first I was so excited, thrilled, and giddy! Then after
the initial excitement wore off and I searched deeper for better sources on the
activity, I was feeling kind of blah with a hint of hope. Now after this final
wave of information from our Department of State I feel as though some movement
is better than nothing. I still hope and pray that this will launch quick
progress even though it appears from the Department of State’s statement that nothing
has really changed for our family.
Thanks
to Jenny
Lotz's blog I found out about the first
wave of news. I sometimes wonder if I would ever find out anything if I didn’t
follow her blog, so thank you Jenny for being so up to date. First, I read her
blog and thought wow 27 Italian families and 6 Belgium families united this is
excellent news. Somewhere else I had heard about 15 United States families
united as well, but I felt like the sources were not really the best websites.
This one appeared legit Six
adopted Congolese children arrive in Belgium. This one appeared kind of
vague and not to legit to me Finally
in Italy adopted children in the Congo (05/26/2014). I searched and
searched online and couldn’t find much else out.
Then
I found this through our adoption agency on Facebook Adopted
Congolese Children Finally Joining Their Families. I felt this was pretty
legit since it not only came from my agency, but I have also heard of Children
Deserve Families before. Oh yes, this is where I heard of the 15 children “From
what I have been told, there are only 15 families on the list to get exit
letters.” on the bottom of the page. If felt pretty vague though and not really
incredibly informative.
Finally
the Department of State released this statement. Alert:
Democratic Republic of the Congo to issue Some Exit Permits; Others Must Wait
for New Laws. The title of the announcement in itself put a pretty big
damper on my feelings of excitement. Then as I continued to read my hopes
continued to diminish. Especially with this paragraph:
The DGM cautioned that all other children adopted by foreigners will not be issued exit permits until a new law reforming intercountry adoptions enters into force, even if their cases met the DGM’s previous exception criteria (as outlined in the Department of State’s October 23, 2013 Adoption Alert). This new law has not yet been drafted and Congolese authorities are not able to commit to a particular timeframe in which they expect to develop and implement any new law(s).
I
am still in continual prayer for our son’s safe and speedy arrival into our
family. We are still waiting on Final Judgment in the DRC Courts for our
adoption case. Please continue to keep us in your prayers and thoughts. Thank
you!
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