Posted by Constance Parten,
Nightly News Web producer (10:48 am ET, 03/10/07)
Editor's Note: This post is from Mary Dudley,
president and founder of Diema’s Dream, a charity
devoted to changing the lives of disabled children in
Russia. Mary's story, and that of the children she
helps, will be the subject of one of our broadcast stories
Sunday night. Here, Mary talks about the cause, the
children, and how the give so much joy back when given
just a little care and attention. "They are
like a flower that suddenly blooms and the lingering scent
lodges in your heart forever!"
When
I first met Diema, it was hard to look away from those big
brown eyes that were so desparately seeking attention.
He
was three years old, paralyzed from the waist down with an
oversized head. He suffered from Hydrocephalus and
Spina Bifida. He was in an oversized wooden playpen
with not one toy. He was still bottle fed and his
baby teeth were rotten. He didn’t speak, partly
because of never having been fed solid food which would
help develop his facial muscles.
Diema with his headphones on
Children, who have the misfortune of being born with
disabilities in Russia, are for the most part abandoned at
birth by their parents. A holdover from Soviet
times, parents are strongly encouraged to give their child
up to the state. These children are hidden away in
closed institutions where care is at best minimal.
They are forgotten by their parents and ignored by the
state. For families who make the brave decision to
keep their disabled child, there is little in the way of
state support and they are shunned by society. The
assumption is that the parents have led a depraved
lifestyle which is the cause of their child’s
disabilities.
Diema and I developed a very special relationship.
We convinced the orphanage to start feeding him solid food
which was not as easy as just handing him a bottle filled
with soup. Diema loved to play and we developed a
special game using a ball. Before long he spoke his
first word ”miatch” or ball in Russian.
At the age of five, Diema was transferred from the Baby
Home, where our women’s group volunteered. He was
sent to an institution with over 600 children, adult
disabled and elderly people. Institutions like these
are closed to outside visitors. The conditions there
are unthinkable. I was devastated to think of
what I had done. I had given a child love and
attention, special play times and walks outside and it was
all taken away from him. He was in a room of 30
disabled children and there was only one worker caring for
them. The children were often tied to their bed,
their only stimulation -- the food they were fed, which
wasn’t even enough to keep them from wasting away.
This all occurred in the early '90s in Moscow, Russia.
Much has changed and continues to change in Russia.
The oil economy is allowing Russia to catch up with the
rest of the world. However, the government’s focus
and society’s attitude toward these children is not
changing. Yet.
That is what Diema’s Dream is trying to do. It
is an orphanage program working with families and their
children to build a village for young disabled adults.
There is so much more we would like to do. We would
like to bring professionals from the U.S. who can share
their knowledge and experience in working with disabled
children. As these children never existed in society
here, there are virtually no programs in Russia to teach
people how to work with severely disabled children.
There is also a severe lack of medical knowledge.
We would like to do more in building parent advocacy.
We would like to have a government program promoting
changes in the state’s approach to these children.
We would lobby the government that keeping these children
in their families and supporting the needs of those
families is far better for the children and less expensive
than a vast orphanage system. We would like to
provide more medical intervention and treatment.
Many children with very treatable conditions never receive
treatment for their disabilities.
It is hard to put into words how wonderful Jim Maceda
and the crew from NBC were when they were filming at the
orphanage and our family center. They were genuinely
interested and touched by the children. For
correspondents who have covered the globe, it was so very
wonderful to see that they cared. It touched me
deeply and I know made a lasting impression on the staff
working with the children. Thank you NBC for caring
about the world and through your work Making a Difference!