The most vulnerable: Special needs adoption

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The previous video if from last year’s Christmas project for Reece’s Rainbow, a nonprofit organization that helps children with Down Syndrome find homes. There will be a new Christmas campaign this year. Keep checking back to see what you can do this year to help.

Adoption is one of those truly beautiful things that a person can do for someone else. My father was adopted and several family friends have adopted children who otherwise would be going to bed every night without a hug, kiss, and an “I love you” if it were not for the love and willingness to adopt on the part of their parents.

While there area thousands of children across the world waiting for a forever family, one population is often ignored. Children who have special needs are living on borrowed time. These children have been abandoned because their parents could not afford to take care of them, or they could not handle the stigma of having a child with special needs. Eventually these children wind up in institutions and die within a few years due to neglect or lack of proper medical care.

Even if you do not feel personally called to adopt a child with special needs, you can help these children find loving homes in which they can thrive by spreading the word or donating time and/or money to help those who do want to adopt. Someone made the comment to me “Well, we can’t save everyone.” Which is true, but if we can make the difference in one child’s life, that is one child who will live knowing that they are loved and wanted. That comment made to me reminds me of the Starfish story where a man was walking on the beach after a storm and the shore was littered with hundreds of star fish that were washed up by the violent ocean. In the distance he saw a child picking up one starfish at a time and throwing them back into the ocean. The man approached the child and told him not to bother and that he could not save them all. It would make no difference. In response, the child picked up another starfish and threw it back into the waves as hard as he could. He turned to the man and told him that he made a difference to that one.

It does not matter what you do to help these children. The important thing is that you do something. If the whole world sits back and thinks that the task is too big. There is nothing that I can do. Then nothing will be done. It is our duty and human beings to help those less fortunate and to make the world a better place. Let’s face it. The world could use a little more love and concern for those most vulnerable to neglect and indifference.

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