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Nathan And Sheree Johnson - Reaching The Fatherless Of Russia
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© 2006 ROOF. Used witout permission.

Life in the Russian Orphanage System


=All the children of the world are one family=


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

An Overview of the System

It is difficult to imagine a complex system of different types of institutions operating in the West to take care of hundreds of thousands of unwanted children, where emphasis is on an the individual approach and on cushioning and solving personal tragedy. But we in the west are also very lucky that the general population of most or our home countries is wealthy enough to absorb the social shock that the system receives when children are left without anyone to care for them. In Russia, this is far from being true; at the moment there is simply no alternative to institutional care for the majority of orphaned children. In the long term, ROOF's main goal is, of course, to work ourselves out of existence. Optimistically, this could take 30 or 40 years-even with an economic upturn. Some older orphanage personnel are now working with their third generation of institutionalised children -- social problems run in the family and die hard. But many teachers and directors are completely dedicated to these children who are not their own. And many orphanage directors and staff think that adoption and foster care would be far preferable to institutionalisation. Negative and unhelpful attitudes among staff seem to arise more from feelings of desperation in front of an impossibly difficult situation than from a real belief that this enormous institutional child care system should continue to exist because 'it's better for the children.'


The first orphanages in the Soviet Russia were estates taken from wealthy landowners


Initiatives to develop adoption and foster care systems are slowly beginning to appear in Russia and the government does support them. In parallel with this development, ROOF is here to support orphanage personnel in their quest to help prevent today's orphanage population from giving rise to another one. If we are truly successful we will support the orphanages out of existence. But at the moment, the majority of children who find themselves without parental care are taken first to a Temporary Isolation Centre or Priyut (see below), and then transferred to one of the several types of child care institution that exist in Russia. If a child is separated from parents at birth, then he or she will go into a Dom Rebyonka before moving on to one of the types of orphanage for 'over-fives'.


Typical orphanage building of the only orphanage in Podol'sk


There are several types of institutions in Russia that we can refer to as 'orphanages'. These are some of the most common:

  1. Detskii dom -- Home for orphaned school-aged children (most often the children receive their schooling in neighbourhood state schools if they live in a detskii dom) School-Internat -- Also a home for orphaned school-aged children (often the children also attend school inside the School-Internat), Uchebnii-Vospitatelnii Kompleks (UVK) -- this is typically a large school, also attended by children in the surrounding area, which serves as a home to a group of orphaned children or children with other specific difficulties, Correctional Home -- this is an orphanage/boarding school for children with learning difficulties, Priyut -- this is 'safe haven' where orphans and victims of domestic violence and abuse are sent (usually for only a few months) before being sent to the Det-dom,
  2. Temporary Isolation Centre -- this is the wing of the Ministry of the Interior that picks up street children and runaways.

Orphans in the 1920's


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The number of children entering into the Russian institutional child care system has been constantly rising since 1991 and the fall of the Soviet Union. One of the major reasons for this is the economic depression which all of Russia is experiencing. Even parents who would rather not give up their children have had to because they cannot feed them. In addition, alcoholism and drug abuse, prostitution as a way of life and many other unhealthy lifestyles that result in parents being deprived of parental rights have risen sharply in the last 10 years; this is simply because people are depressed at a life that seems fairly hopeless. This is a crisis situation for the country at large, because children do not receive a proper education in the orphanage system, nor do they have access to anywhere near ideal conditions in which to 'adapt' to independent life in society. A lack of properly trained social workers to give care and attention to young children in institutions leads to misdiagnosis of mental problems at the age of 4 or 5 [Read about oligophrenia in the glossary]. If the state had the funds to pay orphanage employees properly there might at least be more hope of improving conditions within the institutions, but the average orphanage house parent is paid well under $20 per month in a country that has nearly achieved western price levels. The salary is inadequate and the work is gruelling and thankless. Under such conditions, it is often true that the only people who will work in orphanages are those whose entire life is dedicated to charity (a minority of orphanage staff) or those who cannot find work anywhere else (a majority of orphanage staff).

If there is any single great truth that ROOF has observed during the last two year of work, it is that conditions in any given orphanage depend entirely upon the director, his or her heart for the children, and his or her ability to attract useful help at no expense. Some directors are nearly saints, others are really quite the opposite.

© 2006 ROOF. Used witout permission.