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  A letter from Mary Ferris in Romania  
             
 

December 1, 2003

Dear Friends,

As this is Thanksgiving week, I want to begin by saying thank you to God for this past wonderful year. Everything we do, every breath we take, God is infused into the fabric of every action. I know what Paul meant by praying without ceasing. Since I live in crisis mode a lot, God is my partner minute by minute, second by second.

With God’s direction and help, NOROC has truly harvested a bumper crop of young adults who are amazing in every way. I want to thank all of you for your diligent prayers, your faithful financial support, and your unflagging friendship and emotional backing. You have all remained beside me throughout every ordeal we face. I will highlight a few examples of the good year we have had, and close by asking for prayers.

At Cocorri, the baby orphanage, we just completed a wonderful two-day training with our grannies by Dr. Jones, who helped the staff institute a regime of using a nasal wash to prevent respiratory problems. Some of you remember the year before last, when four babies died from respiratory ailments. Dr. Jones’s simple treatment will be highly effective, if they use it. Also, the heating system seems to be working fully for the first year that I remember. Jerry Bozeman did a wonderful training session with the grannies on play therapy. This was a follow-up to session done last year.

The work of our grannies is so vital here at Cocorri. We now have two shifts working with the newborns—more needs to be done in this area—but we are making progress.

The older toddlers are starting pre-school in the community and are doing very well. We want to thank our speech therapist and our kindergarten teacher, both of whom come faithfully every week to work on speech development and readiness for school. The staff has undergone an amazing transformation here as well. There does not seem to be the “us versus them” philosophy, but more of a team effort. NOROC’s part-time psychologist, Cristina, does a lot to make this happen, and we count on the faithfulness of Florintina, the director of the center.

NOROC is no longer the only group coming to Tulcea from outside of Romania to help in Cocorri. The Danish, the French, and the English have all come this year. I think the readiness of the Romanian government’s Department of Protection of Children to allow other groups to have hands-on experience is directly related to the good will created by the work NOROC has done. All in all, things are better at Cocorri than I have ever seen them. This is a great cause for rejoicing.

Our program in Babadag with our club NOROC has remained faithful and steady, and very deep relationships are developing between the older children we serve and the grannies who work there. As some of you may not know, a year and a half ago they moved all the toddlers from Babadag to Cocorri and moved into the redeveloped center 35 older children who have families in the Babadag area. This meant NOROC and our grannies had to shift our facilities to accommodate the older children. We established a club for the children that offers a huge range of activities. We now have to provide our own heat to the club. This is difficult because of the inadequate wiring. I am confident this problem will be overcome, but it will mean an additional expense for NOROC each month. It is a good trade-off, because once the heat is working properly we will not be considered a financial drain on this center.

This summer they combined the boys home and the girls home in Tulcea. They accomplished this by drastically reducing the number of students in each center. Many of these children have been sent back to their families, and in most cases this is very good. Even if they are poor, being with their families is very important. In many of the villages they have opened centers to feed the children in the daytime and offered them places to come to do their homework. They call these centers “daycare centers,” but they are not for the working parents, only for parents who are destitute. It is a different concept than we have in America. Some children have been moved several times, from center to center, and this is creating a problem with some of them. However, I pray that most of the moving around is over. The new refurbished center for boys and girls in Tulcea, called “Speranza,” is nice and warm. The staff seems to be working very hard, and they have a good, tough director with whom we have an excellent relationship. We managed to maintain our “Big Hearted Teachers” throughout all this turmoil, so we can be very glad of this. There are increasing needs for more advanced tutoring, as more girls move into high school. At the other end of the spectrum, more children have had their education disrupted and are in need of special catch-up help.

Our Big Hearted Friends program is still a roaring success. It is easier now that there are fewer children and now that they are all together. However, the boys have lost their place to play soccer and their outdoor sports area, which was at the boys home, and this is not good. We have cooking and sewing classes every Saturday, recreational activities every week, monthly birthday parties, and small group activities every two weeks. These activities also provide the children an incentive for behaving, as we do not allow children who have skipped school or who have misbehaved to participate.

Many of you have been following faithfully the fate of the private orphanage for the handicapped children/young adults—CRISP. Their beloved director had a stroke and probably will never return to full-time involvement. The staff has struggled, successfully so far, to keep everything going. The Department of Protection for children has decided that the center will no longer be allowed to house children under age 18. These children will all have to be involved in one of the state-run centers. This is not good news for these children. However, it does mean that now the center is solely under the Department of the Handicapped. Mr. Cabuz is still the overall director from the city council, but the Department of Protection of the Handicapped is under a very nice man, Mr. Marinov who is very good to work with. This will be a blessing, we hope. Thanks to the generous contributions of many of you out there, CRISP has managed to pay regularly on their bills and we hope that in January, the bills will be assumed by the Department of the Handicapped. This will be a true blessing. Many of our favorite young adults are finding a refuge in this wonderful center with their open-door policy, so this is a place to continue supporting and praying for. In fact, today, Georgita will go and take a small apartment they have for rent at CRISP. Georgita is a wonderful young man who is crippled in his leg from polio. He graduated from the boys home and has a bad job, with very little money, at the worst sewing factory in town. It was the only place that would hire him with his disability. Even with financial assistance from NOROC, he has been unable to find a place to live. No one wants to rent to people from the boys home, much less some one who is crippled. He has had four places to live in two months. The new director at CRISP, Daniela, has agreed to rent Georgita this small efficiency apartment until we can find a permanent place for him.

Most of my time is spent working with the youth when they leave the system. We have a wonderful “youth group” of these young adults, and this is a growing positive force. They are helping one another, and me, a lot. There is always someone in crisis from this group. Remember my “ I’ll Just Throw Myself in the Danube”—all four of these kids are doing fine at the moment. More and more of them want to continue their education. They serve as positive role models for the kids still in the system, as they see that hard work and honest behavior pays off.

Not every one of these kids is perfect, but there is marked improvement in most of them. As a whole, the group is doing great. We now have five young men enrolled in a university. NOROC is not paying for all of these young men, as each one is a different case, but we are emotionally supporting them, and they were all in our groups before they graduated. Without a doubt, except for Dragos, who would have gone to university anyway, the other four would not be there except for the help given them by NOROC. There are now five girls in high school from the girls home. This is a tremendous achievement. We also are supporting two other girls in boarding school who have been terminated by the department and are in high school. Ana Maria Ivanov was our first girl to graduate from grade twelve. She passed all her classes and now is working to pass her baccalaureate exam.

Of particular prayer concern today

  • Bianca is a very troubled young woman with a history of terrible abuse who is now on highs school and making very good grades. However, she continues to act up in the boarding school and is sometimes defiant of their rules and of all authority. We need to pray for her continued progress and that she will behave so she is not terminated from school.
  • CRISP. They are in limbo as to their status at the moment and, selfishly, I do not want them to close as we would not have a place for Aurel, Marius, Georgita, Dana.
  • Mihai Russo is having a terrible problem adjusting to the new center. The staff he was the closest to at the boys home did not make the move and he is having an emotional breakdown at the moment.
  • Carolyn White and all the board of directors of NOROC. Give constant prayers of thanksgiving and support for these wonderful, wise people. Carolyn especially carries the burden of the financial side of our mission. This she does without compensation, except for stars in her crown in heaven. She taught me the Lord is the Lord of all the gold and silver, so I pray enough of this gold and silver passes through NOROC’s mission to keep us going and to allow us to expand.
  • All the children. So many of them have passed out of the system without our noticing and I know God knows where they are. Many of the children I have grown to love very much are gone. They have been moved for one reason or another. Please pray that this shuffling around stops.
  • We have a real medical crisis we need to plan and deal with. Thirteen of the 19 boys at Speranza are now smoking. Most of the older girls also smoke. Some of these children are as young as 10. This is a mushrooming crisis. It has never been this bad. I do not have a formal plan yet, but be assured we will do something. Suggestions are welcome.
  • Continued health for all of us involved in NOROC.

This letter is too long already, so thank God for Jesus, my best friend and confidant and without whom we would not live or move or have our being.

Peace and to God be the Glory

Rev. Mary Ferris

Thanksgiving revenge

I finally got revenge on my Romanian friends who have all fed me to the point of death so many times. Anyone having visited here and having attended a Romanian feast knows what I mean. I fed them an authentic American Thanksgiving—turkey, dressing, mashed potatoes, gravy, etc. When we were about to eat the apple pie with whipping cream I commented that the only thing that would make this a complete American Thanksgiving would be to be watching football on television. Well, my guests perked up—there was a big Romanian versus Russian football (that is, soccer) match as we were eating but they were too polite to say anything. Needless to say the television was turned on and we got to see the Romanians crush the Russians.

When they left I know we had all gained five pounds, so it felt good to return the favor for all the times they have fed me.

The 2004 Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study, p. 318

 
             
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