Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Happy Chinese New Year!

Happy New Year!

This is the year of the RAT!


Chinese New Year starts with the New Moon on the first day of the new year and ends on the full moon 15 days later. The 15th day of the new year is called the Lantern Festival, which is celebrated at night with lantern displays.


We started our Chinese New Year with our favorite Chinese take out Thursday night.
After the kids being home for days with blizzards and below zero temps I was ready to go out and celebrate! Unfortuantly Brian, Ethan and Abbie were still hanging onto nasy colds so we stayed in. This weekend we will catch up on our taped Ni Hoa- Kai Lin episodes (Great new Chinese cartoon on Nick jr.) and make our paper lanterns.

Zach loves his Chinese food so maybe we will attempt a night out and try again . He informed me this morning before school that Audrey was MADE IN CHINA too and she will want lots of China food. He must not be getting enough!

No new news form China.......- Still Waiting.......

The Chinese tradition on New Year is to celebrate with family- I wonder If Audrey has ever felt like she has missed out . How she would feel years down the road as an adult without a family to celebrate with??? I feel Blessed that so much will happen for her, for us in the Year of the RAT-
Who would guess I would like rodents so much-

Friday, February 1, 2008

GREAT GIFTS! PICTURES!





One of the families adopting another ZHU HAI PRINCESS took these pictures Friday!!!
Here are the latest and Greatest of our waiting princess!!! WE are so greatfull to Lynn and Brenda for sending these pics all the way form Zhu Hai!!!

Audrey has the locket on that we gave her for Christmas......!

She also should be getting her Happy Chinese New Year Package Brian sent her last week. This time we included a build a bear that says I love you Zhu HAi Ping In English and Mandarin that Brian and I recorded, an outfit, socks, Candy , hair clips, more pens and paper, most important a letter explaining that we knew her friends were all leaving...and we would come AS SOON AS WE CAN!!!!! More on that subject later-

In the olden days there were no cell phones-

Tonight at dinner Nolan said out of the blue to Brain and I "Did you know in the olden days people had no cell phones?"

We laughed so hard!
Then we told him we had no computers in our home, no cell phones , no remote controls, no VCRS and no microwaves or DVD players in cars when we were his age. Even worse we told of the stories our parents had passed on..Something about walking a long way to get to school..Bare foot or something like that..WEll THAT was A LONG TIME AGO!!!!
I think he is still wondering what a VCR is . At five , he only knows we are always telling the kids not to scratch the DVDS...

We then continued on with our Friday night at home ritual of having dinner and a drink. We videoed taped the kids dancing, watched Ethan and his friend Ben practice levitating..PLEASE don't ask.....HE saw a u-tube video of Chris Angle floating and thinks he and Ben can do it! Hey if this keeps them busy and not getting into trouble - I say let them levitate!
Anyway Brain And I decided to check the blogs of our Zhu Hai group friends who are traveling to get their daughters. There was a flurry of posts on the board this was taken from one that hit hard. Keep in mind our kids had a snow day today from our 6 inches of new snow. But we were bundled up when outside and very cozy inside!

We will be in 2 of these provinces. We will do what we can to help
in whatever way we can. Molly's orphanage is one of these. We're a
little panicked at being able to get in and out, but what's to be
will be.
Check out this link of Gunagzhou!
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22946800


Please hold these orphanages in your hearts:

Welfare institutions in south and central China are having the hardest
time dealing with the weather disaster. This part of the country is
simply not equipped to deal with extreme cold or heavy snow and ice.
The
most common critical problems are power outages, lack of safe
drinking and
cooking water, lack of fuel, diapers and public transportation. In
many
places where buses have stopped running, our Half the Sky nannies have
been walking hours (in one case, 4 hours) along icy roads to get to
the
children. As conditions worsen, our nannies and teachers are
remaining at
the institutions day and night. They have given up the idea of going
home
to their own families for the holidays. They need quilts. They need
warm
clothing. They need coal, water, disposable diapers and food.

Here are the reports I have thus far, while in-flight. I will send
more
soon. Where you don't see a report, either all is well or I don't yet
have information. I will tell you when we've heard from everyone.
We've
also given all the directors an emergency number to call when/if the
situation changes.

Hunan Province –

Chenzhou has had no electricity or water for six days. They are
relying
on coal for heat and cooking. The supermarkets and banks are closed.
Staff is using personal money for baby food, diapers, coal and water.
Costs are rising due to shortages. They have a natural well which,
thankfully, is not frozen. Even the older children are helping to
fetch
water. They have perhaps six days of food remaining. The local
government is overwhelmed by the disaster and is unable to help much.

Shaoyang has seen heavy snow every day for 20 days. There is
sufficient
water and, for the moment, there is power, so the children are warm.
However, 5 of 6 power poles have been downed by weather. Only one
stands
and the institution fears it will fall as well, leaving them without
electricity. Much of the rest of the city is already dark. Children
and
caregivers continue to work and play together. High school students
are
cramming for exams and trying to ignore the cold. Everyone prays that
the
power pole will continue to stand.

Yueyang also has no electricity. The one functioning power generator
is
being used in the children's dormitory. They are relying on coal heat
but
the price has tripled in recent days. They are running out of food and
have applied to the local Bureau of Civil Affairs for funds to buy
more.
Our HTS nannies have been walking for hours to get to work, often
slipping
on the ice, "even though they try to be cautious."

Xiangtan has had snow for the past 10 days. The main water pipe is
"broken again." There is no water for cooking right now but they do
have
electricity, coal and blankets. They are still able to buy food but
prices have gone way up. Not all of the HTS nannies can get to work
every
day. They are keeping the programs going as well as they can and make
sure that at least five nurturing nannies are there with the babies
every
day, along with the institution's caregivers.

Jiangsu Province –
Changzhou has seen some heavy snows but the director reports that the
children are fine. The director says that he's doing his best to
ensure
that the children do not suffer. Public transportation is crippled by
the
snow and HTS nannies and teachers are waiting for hours to catch a
bus for
home or even walking home in the snowy dark.

Nanjing reports no problems at all despite the heavy snows. I tried to
fly into Nanjing yesterday but it was not possible.

Anhui Province -

Chuzhou has both water and power. Only public transportation has
failed.
HTS nannies and teachers are walking to work. They are leaving home
extra
early to be there for the children.

Guangxi Province –

Guilin has two broken HTS heater/air conditioners in the Infant
Nurture
rooms and they've asked us to replace. The rooms are very, very cold.
They ask for more soft matting for the floors and also snow boots for
our
HTS nannies who've been slipping and falling in the ice and snow as
they
come to work. They are so ill-equipped to handle severe weather.

Jiangxi Province –

Fuzhou lost power for a few days but now it is back to normal. The
snow
stopped a couple of days ago but now is falling again. The directors
and
HTS staff have gathered all the children into one big room to keep
them
warm. They've bought New Years clothes for the children and will have
a
party no matter how bad the weather. This year, however, the foster
parents will stay home to keep the children safe. The institution has
enough food and water. They want us to focus on those in more serious
trouble and ask us please not to worry.

Jiujiang says they've never faced such bitter weather. They
desperately
need disposable diapers. Washable diapers cannot be dried. They need
warm clothes, shoes, gloves hats quilts and warm mats for the floors.
They need medicine for infant coughs and colds.

Hubei Province –

Wuhan suffers heavy snows but they still have power. Heaters are
working
but there is no water for bathing. The local community has offered to
take children in for the Chinese New Year and the institution feels
this
may be the best decision to keep them safe.

Huangshi reports that the freeze is so severe that all heater/air
conditioners have stopped functioning. They need quilts and warm
clothes
for the children. They need disposable diapers. Several HTS nannies
have
fallen on the ice on their way to work and they need medicine to treat
cuts and bruises.

Gathering these reports together makes me think about how careful we
have
always been at Half the Sky to maintain our focus on nurture and
education
programs. Ours is not a medical or relief organization. There are many
wonderful groups who do that work. Probably the primary reason we've
been
able to accomplish so much and reach so many children is because we've
maintained our focus on our core mission -- providing nurturing care
for
children who've lost their families..

But a moment like this really cannot be ignored. The tragedy of
Hurricane
Katrina in the US taught us that no matter how wealthy a country
might be,
its vulnerable citizens (old, poor, ill, and orphaned children) are
the
ones who suffer most when disaster strikes. Even as China seems to be
entering the first world, a disaster like this is quite simply
crippling.
We know that orphaned children will be among those who suffer the
damage
most.

I say this because I think we should break one of Half the Sky's rules
and, if there are sufficient funds raised in the Little Mouse
Emergency
Fund, we should offer relief (water, food, diapers, quilts, clothing)
to
any orphanage where children need help. Let's see how this goes. If
people are as generous as I think they might be, we will work with the
provincial Bureaus of Civil Affairs in every hard-hit community, and
offer
assistance to all welfare institutions where there is need.

Please lend a hand, however you can. You can donate to the Little
Mouse
Emergency Fund by calling us in the US at +1-510-525-3377 or in Asia
at
+852- 2520-5266 or by visiting us at www.halfthesky.org. Once there,
you
can click on "Donate Now"
http://give.halfthesky.org/prostores/servlet/Categories?
category=Direct+Contributions
or go to http://www.halfthesky.org/help/docs/usdonation-orderform.pdf
to
download a form to mail or fax. Donations are tax-deductible in US,
Canada and Hong Kong.

Please forward this message and tell your friends and family.

I will be back with an update very, very soon.

Thank you!

Jenny

Jenny Bowen
Executive Director
Half the Sky Foundation
www.halfthesky.org

Half the Sky was created in order to enrich the lives and enhance the
prospects for orphaned children in China. We establish and operate
infant nurture and preschool programs, provide personalized learning
for older children and establish loving permanent family care and
guidance for children with disabilities. It is our goal to ensure
that every orphaned child has a caring adult in her life and a chance
at a bright future.


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HMMMM, Our olden days are their every day right now. Did you read the part about needing boots and diapers??? I am talking basic needs here.... See where your heart takes you. Can you give up MCDONAlDS , cigaretts, a cell phone call - Can you donate a small amount to make a difference?

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