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Hanya Bernapas

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Hanya Bernapas

Tag Archives: Childfund International

Last day in West Java

10 Wednesday Jul 2013

Posted by ShakabukuNow in Uncategorized

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Bali, Bogor, Childfund, Childfund Indonesia, Childfund International, Indonesia, Sponsor, Sponsoring children, West Java

 My last day in Bogor began as each previous, a soothing morning prayer reverberating my room, followed by a quick shower, a fruit plate, and a few eagerly devoured e-mails from my daughter (doing an internship at Sound Strategies SEO in New York), and my boyfriend (away working in Europe). I laugh when I read through the e-mail because I can never remember what day it is in each location, much less the hour. I sent out a few photos and found myself a little sad that my time with the boys was coming to an end so soon.  

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My eyes found the smiling faces of Anwar and Lisa (the dedicated Childfund faculty who had accompanied me throughout my visit), and my thoughts were set-aside for the time being as we began our adventure for the day.

On my third, and sadly, final day in West Java, Lisa was taking me to visit each of the programs that are funded through the Childfund foundation. It would be my opportunity to see the work they do in the community and for the villagers to get to ask me questions about myself or the U.S.

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First we arrived back where I had originally met Lutfi and his family. The small school was in session with prime number pyramids on the white board and scratched in careful pencil in each childs notebook. They were all very shy when I came in. I sat down with the children on the thin rug that was rolled out over the smooth cement floor. It was very warm and I could feel the beads of sweat rolling down the center of my back. There was only one small fan that, even though electric, seemed to offer little more relief than a hand-held attempt.  The children became more and more inquisitive as I showed them where I lived on the globe and simulated flying airplane noises to demonstrate how I came to be there in Java. With some of the children practicing their English and some assistance from Anwar we talked about their school and their families and their hopes for the future. Four doctors, six teachers, two police officers, and one football player later they all squealed and clapped ‘never give up!’ in Indonesian and I was ushered on to the next program site.

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Along with nutrition, pregnancy, and early childhood education, funds given to the community programs provide for music and dance that are deep traditions within the culture. Children learn traditional Balinese dance from ages 5 and up. I felt like some kind of royalty as I approached the second school and the children burst out to greet me. Whatever shy nature the first group of children displayed was made up is sheer joy and enthusiasm from this group. Over 35 children met me, hands stretched out hardly able to let the previous childs hand fall away before the next was grabbing mine and lifting it to their forehead. After the friendly formalities concluded, the music started and a group of the children raced into the large, open, plain white walled room with tiled floor. As I entered they had already begun their dance and I watched in awe.

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There were 4 performances in all, each with a different age group and a different traditional dance. They were insistent in my attempted participation, obviously not knowing my complete lack of grace. After the dances concluded we sat and I answered questions about the magical far off land named, “California”.

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Hysterically one of the older boys who spoke reasonably broken English said, “you Pamela Anderson.”

I couldn’t stop laughing long enough to be both flattered and insulted and I had to settle for a simple, smiling, “Tarima Kasih” Thank you.

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Our day continued with more music, drums, children, and laughter, before concluding with a shared afternoon with families from the community who conveyed their personal stories of how they and their children have been impacted by all the work being done in their community.  It was wonderful and powerful, and it was my great pleasure to be privy to a collection of such kind and humble people.

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Childfund International was an organization I just happened upon by coincidence really.  I hadn’t done my due diligence in researching the efficacy of the foundation or the nature in which they distributed their funds (although, luckily, they are quite ethical and responsible). I just spontaneously picked up a random picture, of a random child, that lived in a random place.

I have since come to know that it was my very good fortune to have done so.

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Lutfiansaya is the first of several children I have sponsored and he is the first I have had the opportunity to visit. After such a wonderful experience here, I am very sure I will find a way to visit each of the sponsored families I have through the Childfund program.  I don’t fancy myself a spokesperson and I can’t stand sales pitches or pushy guilt trips…all that being said, if you have the means…this whole reaching out to help support families around the world, and finding ways to create new and wonderful connections, is worth far more than the $28 a month investment. I head back to Bali a far richer person than I was 3 short days ago.  My love and great appreciation to the Maulana family for their kindness and welcoming hearts.   www.ChildFund.org

 

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Families Born and Families Chosen

09 Tuesday Jul 2013

Posted by ShakabukuNow in Uncategorized

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Bali, Childfund, Childfund Indonesia, Childfund International, Indonesia, Sponsorship, West Java

My second day visiting the boys began with my usual 4:30am spiritual calling via loudspeaker permeating the walls to my hotel from the nearby mosque, with long low notes resonating the still air it seemed a much more soothing wake-up call than my usual alarm. I laid quiet in the dark listening to the prayer and wondering what it was actually saying.  As the almost eerie song climbed its way through my thoughts, I wondered if it left blessings there, in a language I could not comprehend, part of a religion I knew almost nothing about.  When I was young, I remember being told that I was being blessed as I impatiently fidgeted through a long Latin mass, maybe this prayer was wrapping it’s own best wishes for my wandering soul, as well.  With that reassuring thought I jumped up and headed to the empty (as usual at any hour, much less 4am) dining room to see if the internet was working.

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Four hours later I was pulled from my electronic chatter to find that the Childfund staff was there to collect me for the day. Unlike Bali, I had no resounding guilt about my wasted hours on my computer. With no near-by nature to speak of, and terrified expressions from hotel staff when ever I wander off the property to explore, I found it easier to just sit with my laptop, interrupted every few moments for a photo with another smiling member of the hotel staff or the infrequent hotel guests.  I’ve become accustom to the psuedo-stardom with people staring, pointing, and pictures coveted with the 5’9, white, blonde foreigner rarely seen in these parts. I figure I am deserving of the slight embarrassment and disruption considering the thousands of photos I have taken over the years in my travels, besides I think it is helping me get over my usual need to strike the most flattering ‘thinning’ pose I can in every photo. I mean why bother here? I am a giant in all aspects no matter which way I stand, “Radical self-acceptance” my friend Naomi always says!

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We drove away from the hotel towards the village. Today we were supposed to go to a large shopping mall and amusement park. I concealed my inner eye-roll behind a nodding smile and continued to listen. Arwan continued saying that unfortunately we can’t get there because the roads are filled with demonstrators. The Muslim practice or Ramadan was to begin in three days and the street were lined with people dressed in traditional wraps holding signs and chanting. It looked more like a picket line for a union strike than a celebration, but they were on every street, lining every sidewalk, and weaving through the traffic in the middle of the road.  If I were unaware of the spiritual practice that Ramadan is for the Muslim people, I would be expecting the energy to burst into riots and initiate the sheer mass of people yelling and calling out with such intensity into  levels sparking violence in the streets.    Instead, it just continued as a loud, and mildly unnerving, part of the bustling streets.

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Because much of the city was at a standstill they decided we would take the family to a local shopping area. I was pleased. I appreciate the local culture and was eager to see the day-to-day goings on in life here. After insisting that the boys aunt be included, grandma, mom, aunt, and two active 2 year-olds somehow fit nicely into the back bench seat of the minivan, leaving me and Arwan plenty of space to turn and chat with them. 

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Today they were much more comfortable.  They asked questions and expressed shock about my traveling alone. They shared that the boys father IS actually a fisherman (correcting my original doubt). They have fish ‘farms’ here, which looked more like swimming pool sized shallow mud ponds, where people pay to come get fish for eating. It is still fishing, in a more controlled environment, I suppose.  “It is Lutfi’s father’s job to ‘wait’ for people who want to fish and help them.” I creased my forehead in that place that always makes me consider getting Botox even though I’ve seen some terribly botched jobs. “He waits?” I asked, “How often do people come?” 

“Not so many,” Arwan translated.

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I learned that the family’s only income is the money sent by Childfund, and the extra money that I send each month. They apologized for not getting the boys more toys and clothes with the money I send, but they have had to use it to buy food. They reassured me that when they “make more job” they will get the boys more ‘stuff’. I was suddenly acutely aware of the month I didn’t send extra money just because I had gotten busy with my life and casually thought that I would just send it the following month.  My nonchalance suddenly had a very real consequence in the lives of these amazing people. I explained that the money was for food and anything they needed, the boys seemed very happy, they were doing a great job, and I was very happy (which seemed to help them relax a little).

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We continued to talk and I asked questions trying to learn about each of the family members. They didn’t understand questions about ‘what they do for fun’ or ‘hobbies’. They said, “If people have money sometimes they make extra food and a friend can come to talk,” but it seemed to be spoken more ‘in theory’ rather than something they have done.

We arrived at the local shopping area and I was hit by a wall of chaos. It was huge, complete with escalators and ‘sale’ signs that seemed to go into infinity. There were people talking what seemed like auctioneer speeds through loudspeakers with their mouth too close to the microphone so it was just loud and muffled with no real annunciation of words. “This is small?” I asked. Arwan said, “yes, very good deal here. Other shopping very far away, very expensive. Ramadan sale. Very good sale for Ramadan.”

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After repeated explanations that I wanted them to each get something and not just the boys, they finally conceded. We walked away with new outfits and shoes for all the family. Thankfully, one of the benefits of shopping with people who never shop is exactly that…they don’t shop. They walk in, pick something up, and hand it up for purchase. As someone who doesn’t like malls and shopping this was a blessing, on the other hand, I really wanted them to get to enjoy having options. They seemed satisfied as they smiled and showed each other their new treasures, so we moved on to another arcade, jungle gym area located upstairs.

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The boys squealed and ran in to the blinking abyss. They played for a while and when it was time to go, I was amazed at the ease in which the 2-year-olds were corralled and redirected.  The Childfund staff lead us to the KFC (yup, fried chicken) and we sat eating chicken and rice with our hands. (Two side notes: one-almost everything is eaten with your hands, yet they have very little paper products, and two the KFC in Indonesia served rice in wrapped packages, but sadly no mashed potatoes or mac-n-cheese 🙂

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We made quick work of our lunches and I cringed a little seeing the boys gulp down soda, which I assume (although their dental work would suggest otherwise) that they don’t get very often.

As we left, I was again shocked at the size and urban nature of this place. Amazed that such small, poor, villages were tucked quietly in the shadows of its sprawling wings.

We arrived back at the village and everyone seemed comfortable and relaxed. The entire village piled into the small front room, spilling out the door, and peering from the outside with faces pressed against the dirt-smudged window trying desperately to be a part of the goings on.

We all sat and talked with Arwans help. They sat close, touching and bowing; the children taking my right hand and pressing it to their forehead in sign of respect. We laughed and told jokes, we talked of life in the village, of families, and relationships. We talked of different cultures and similar people. We talked and, for a moment, I was not white, and rich, and foreign…for a moment we were just sharing this time, sharing our lives, sharing laughter and joy…for a moment we were just friends who had long been parted and were catching up on the adventures in each others lives. 

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They begged me to stay and many offered for me sleep at their houses, but the staff said it was time to go and we would return tomorrow. This magical time was all too short, and the spell was broken as I stood and climbed noticeably taller than the tallest person in the room. They laughed and touched my waist, and hair, and butt. One woman kept patting my butt and saying something that made Arwan laugh and he was slow to tell me. Finally he said, “So big, so big.” We all laughed.

(and I repeated radical self-acceptance, radical self-acceptance *grin*)

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Harapan Jaya Village-West Java

08 Monday Jul 2013

Posted by ShakabukuNow in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Bali, Childfund, Childfund Indonesia, Childfund International, Indonesia, Sponsor, Sponsoring children, West Java

I began my trip to Java at a sold out Jake Shimabukuro concert at the Bankhead Theater in Livermore, California. Lutfiansyah (Lutfi) and I met over a table of hundreds of pictures scattered across a long table pressed in a corner of the theater out of the way of passing traffic. Loving any opportunity to be a ‘do-gooder’ and even more excited that it would be helping children, I eagerly shuffled through the Childfund organization’s sponsorship cards until Lutfi and I connected. Quickly jotting down my credit card info my pseudo-adoption was finalized. I spent the rest of the night chasing my boyfriend around with a cardstock photo of a foreign brow-skinned boy, asking him, “Why won’t you hold the baby?!?” He continuously reminded me that we did not adopt a child, we sponsored a family, and as always, he is right, but somehow it felt important to me. More important than just sending a check every month to some far off land, but a connection…a way to make the world smaller and come together.  

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Less than a year later I stepped on to a questionable airline; headed to a city with a less than stellar reputation, to lay eyes on the family I have only known through translated letters that take months in transit.

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It was a little jarring when the staff showed up to my hotel to pick me up. There were three of them wearing very serious expressions and saying something in Indonesian, but all I got was ‘Lutfiansyah’, so I said “yes” nodding and bowing slightly in nervous respect. We sat down and the translator, who spoke fairly good English said, “we will visit the family of Lutfiansyah, but must first.” And he unfolded an itemized bill of the faculty member fees, translator, transportation, and various other expenses. It seemed like a huge number considering rupiah are 10,000 to $1US and I had been struggling with my ATM, but after a short while of concerned phone calls on their part the translator smiled, “It is good, no pay whole thing. Just today. It is good, yes?” I smiled, nodded and we piled into the car. We traveled, what I later realized was a very short distance, which seemed much further to me at the time, as my eyes could find nothing familiar to gage the passing terrain.

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On arrival I was surprised to find the family waiting outside a very nice dwelling, complete with a jungle gym for the children outside and a TV inside. The walls were brightly painted with a lot of open space, and I asked Arwan, my translator, if this was the school. He conversed with the Childfund faculty, and said “School and home.” I was impressed with their home/school, and what appeared to be what I refer to as, their ‘Sunday best’ (which is an odd comment considering it pays reference to a religion neither they or I practice). Lutfi is the eldest son, but only by a moment. He and his twin brother Lucky are the only children of the Maulana family as it is ‘suggested’ by the Indonesian government to only have two children and, I am told, many people comply. Today both Lutfi and Lucky were dressed in new white and blue button up shirts with gold patterning roping across the fabric that reminded me of a fancy Hawaiian shirt pattern. They each had new looking jeans and shoes that seemed clean out of the box. The clunky blue plastic watch that each boy brandished on his left arm, almost as big as his whole hand, struck me.  At just over 2 and a half years old I couldn’t imagine they were telling time.  The facility member said something and was gesturing to the children. Arwan translated, “They use the money you send for boys. Nice things for them.”

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My initial thoughts were confirmed as they were all picture perfect in their formal attire for my benefit. Their mother also dressed well, wore make-up and a dressy red blouse with fabric roses dangling from it, and grandma, less formal, in a white t-shirt.  There was another young girl off to the side, not initially introduced, and I asked who she was when I noticed she was crying. “She is the sister of Lutfi’s mother.” She appeared quite young and I learned she was only 11 and feeling jealous of all the attention the boys were getting. They ushered her away quickly and snapped many photos, each with the two boys shyly hiding their faces in the nearest protective shoulder or scowling, confused and probably frightened by everyone calling their names, “Lutfi smile, Luuuuutfi!”

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I realized that the expressions so often seen in the photos used to elicit sponsorship, big eyes and neutral or sullen appearances, are not actually sad and suffering the way they appear to our smiling-happy-conditioned expectation.  Most people I met here do not smile in photographs. First, this area is not a tourist destination so they are not familiar with lots of photographs. Second, I was told that smiling means you are ‘confident’. I wasn’t sure if that meant ‘arrogant’ and my translator was just being polite, but it didn’t prevent the staff from demanding smiles on every occasion (presumably believing that is what I would want).

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After a flurry of pictures (side note: I truly never thought I would meet my equal in rapid fire photo six-shooting, but Lisa of the Childfund staff put me to shame with the sheer volume of pictures she snapped and insisted on!) they asked me, “Shall we go?” I nodded ‘yes’ having no idea of the agenda.   As it turns out we were to go to an amusement park of sorts. Arwan told me that the children can never go here, “it’s very expensive.” Looking around it consisted of a few coin-operated rides that you might have seen years ago outside a grocery store when excitedly you would bound aboard a fire truck or a mechanical horse that played music while it rocked back and forth, and a plastic ball jungle gym so commonly seen at fast food restaurants in the states.

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I watched the boys break free from the formalities that had just passed and watched them fall into play.  Lutfi was discerning about everything. He observed the goings on from a distance carefully surveying. He did not like to be lead or coerced. Although, seemingly more shy than his brother, he was much more dominant.  His thin features accentuated the image in my head of a small rebel without a cause. He did not follow the other children or get drawn into their play easily. He was watchful, and where another child would bound down the slide and into several other children flopping all of them into the pool of rainbow skittle balls below, he would wait until the area was clear and slide cautious not to run into anyone. Although he became more lighthearted as the day went on, he was a powerful presence, both in his silence and in his authoritative nature.

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Lucky, easily distinguishable from Lutfi even though they are identical twins, has a round face and an easy smile. He was instantly sociable and obliviously giddy tumbling from one pile of giggling children to the next.  I noticed he brought a quick smile to the face of both mom and grandma and you could sense that he was the more compliant, and less challenging, of the two children. Lucky would race to the side of the play area to grin at his family and then spin around and topple laughing uncontrollably back into play.Image

I enjoyed watching the contrasts of their personalities, and couldn’t help but be drawn to Lutfi because he reminded me of the quiet, discerning, introverted nature that I so admire about my boyfriend. Although Lutfi was far from quiet! He had a quintessential 2-year-old voice, but he seemed much more determined and clear than other children his age about what he used his powerful scream to elicit. 

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In all the hours I spent with them I didn’t hear Lucky fuss a single time. He seemed almost like a baby version of the chubby Buddha representation.

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Hours passed, lunch, many conversations about the children and the US, and we were on our way back. We continued to talk and I asked about Childfund and why both children were not in the program.  They explained that only one child from a family can be sponsored through this program, but oddly they seemed alarmed.  I had brought gifts for both boys and the family and explained that my intention was to treat the boys the same and try to help the whole family.  Shockingly my comments were met with, “you don’t like? You want a different child for sponsor?” I was instantly appalled, and explained how wonderful Lutfi was. They continued with, “Lucky is more friendly, always smiling. You like smiling. Lucky is better for sponsor.” I was dumbfounded by the comments and the concerned expressions the family as they tried to hold out their second son for me to hold. I tried to smile and said, “I like Lutfi very much. He is a wonderful boy,” Arwan translating for me. They continued to hold Lucky out to me. I was perplexed and resorted to all I knew of their culture, “Lutfi is the eldest son. It is a great honor to sponsor him.” At this they seemed satisfied, they calmed, nodded, and smiled. It was all kind of jarring for me, but I found my anxiety melted away quickly when Lutfi fell asleep while I held him. His tiny warm body betraying the fragility his strong presence and stature denies.

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We arrived at the end of a long steep dirt pathway and I carried Lutfi with mom and Lucky near by. On arriving at the bottom of the path a swarm of children and families approached. I learned that the small concrete floored room we had arrived at was their actual home. The previous place was the school and home of a staff member. With no furniture except a small fan we all piled into the boys home, and sat easily upon the floor. There was a small attached room where the entire family slept and I saw nothing of a kitchen or bathroom.  Their home consisted only two small, nearly empty rooms and nothing else. There were no toys or amenities, but there were many curious playful children, and smiling welcoming villagers.

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We only stayed for a brief time, the faculty stating it was late (nearing 2pm) and we would return the following day. I handed out the remaining gifts that I had brought and bowed humble gratitude as we departed. I looked back to only find gracious curiosity, and kind waving. I wanted to stay. Repeatedly ushered, I joined the staff, and we found our way back the winding path and narrow dirt road that had brought us here.  

 

 

 

 

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