Showing posts with label Haiti adoption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Haiti adoption. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2013

It was time to find the truth: a beautiful end to an ugly beginning



In April 2012, when my husband and I traveled to Haiti, we were matched with R and W. I mentioned W briefly in my first blog post (here) . The day we met W we were at Giving Hope Rescue Mission creche. He was brought to my husband and I by Heather Elyse. She brought several girls and a couple of boys for us to meet with. W is such a handsome boy with a beautiful smile. He won my heart, so my husband and I ask to spend more time with him. He and R came back to our hotel and Heather encouraged them to spend the night with us. The next day we told Heather we would parent both children. See our blog post here


Heather told us a story of horrific abuse. She said he was, "beaten, neglected, burned with cigarettes, starved and left outside naked and alone." She also told us when he was brought into care he, "had scabies, open sores on his body, and had intestinal parasites." Our hearts were broken for this boy. We returned home and ask our church to pray for him, I spent countless nights praying for our boy, and our children to this day pray for W. We started paying our monthly child support payments for him through Room For Grace International, and started raising money to pay his adoption fees. We also submitted our dossier to adopt both R and W.


One month later I received this message through facebook:



I never received a phone call, and was worried about the outcome of this situation. My husband feared that something just wasn't right. After much prayer we sent this email to Heather on 6/7/12:

Good Morning Heather,
I hope all is well with you! 

I just wanted to be transparent with you and felt %100 positive I NEED to share our thoughts and feelings regarding sweet [W].

Jeremy and I have an overwhelming since of fear and trepidation. We're not sure why we feel this way, but we have been praying like crazy. We both have such a uneasy feeling about his adoption. We prayed together last night and can't determine if it is just fear brought on by the news of his family causing problems, if it's fear of loosing him, or if it's a sense that God is closing the door on his adoption. I don't know what is going on, but I know I need to share with you. You are his mommy right now and I know how much you love and care for him. 

We also wanted you to know you can be %100 open and honest with us. I know you pride yourself in being upfront, but I don't want you to be worried about our feelings.  [W] is WAY more important than our feelings. 

My spirit is in a state of unrest. I am however, trusting the sovereignty of our Lord. 

Much love and prayers,

Kimberly


Her response: 
Heather <heather@givinghopehaiti.org>
6/7/12



to me

Thank you for sharing your heart with me.  I wish I was in the states so I could talk to you via phone.

I do however consider his adoption high risk now after meeting with his bio family. What a mess they all are!!! They basically don't care about him and  don't want him to be happy or adopted--- it's honestly the saddest thing I have heard! His whole family admits to neglecting and abusing him but seriously doesn't  want him to have a chance at life. His family is extremely dysfunctional. extremely Uneducated and drug users. I am seeing if I can get abandonment papers on him since he was truly abandoned.

I will keep you posted. God is sovereign.

I know God is in control.

His family at one time signed off on him and agreed to adoption. Now they went before the judge and IBESR and changed their mind.

I will fight as if he is my own.

Love ya
Sent from my iPhone



Just two weeks later we received this communication via email:

 
Heather <heather@givinghopehaiti.org>
6/14/12





to meTimMichelle

With great sadness and a heavy heart I write this.
I wish their could have been a different outcome.
There is no pretty way to say this ...
So I am just going to be blunt and honest.

Unfortunately.....


[W] was officially marked as UN adoptable by IBESR about an hour ago.


We feel as if we all just had a miscarriage and we are grieving deeply.


We were told in the beginning that he was 100% available for adoption. We would of never agreed to this adoption if we would have known the outcome. We are deeply sorry. We know how much you adored this precious gift from God.


I was 90% sure as of last week that it would all work out... I never in a million years saw this coming.


W was one of our original 12 children.... So we are all hurting over the fact he is going to have to live at the Creche possibly until we can pay for his college etc etc. figure out a solution for him and all our other future leaders of Haiti.


We know that this email is going to be quite a shock and pray that you can extend us all grace. This was completely out of our control and please know we fought to change this outcome.


We love you.


Tim

Wesmin
Heather and Michelle

Sent from my iPhone



Heather Elyse, Tim Rowe, and missionaries at Giving Hope Rescue mission are defending their organization and stating that all of the children in care at GHRM are adoptable. This was not the case for W. His parents never wanted him to be adopted. 

On May 7, 2013, 11 months after we found out that W was unadoptable and Heather said he'd need to live at the creche forever due to parental abuse, an email was sent to the staff of VOTO outlining which kids were in care and which had been sent home to their local families. Below is an excerpt from that email. 

On Tue, May 7, 2013 at 4:52 PM, Heather Elyse <heather@givinghopehaiti.org> wrote:
Greetings from Haiti!!!
I just spent most of the day with Wesmin, R V, S, J, and S (staff members). We went through both creche's and assessed everything. We also personally talked about each child and so I wanted to send my report to you all.
Currently in the MAIN creche we have the one house where the kitchen is attached used for missionary housing and the school. e are still utilizing the storage room for all the creche needs.
We currently have 49 children in the main creche.
The NEW creche which we all call our "underground creche" because we don't allow anyone to visit it and IBESR doesn't even know about it!!!!!!!!! We have 38 babies here.
So here are the final totals of where all our GIVING HOPE RESCUE MISSION children are:
49-Main Creche 38-Underground Creche 18-Elyse Foster Care Home 12-J Foster Care Home 6-V personal Home 3-***** Foster Home 3- Altagrace Foster Home 2- A W Foster Home 5- Cabaret Baptist Home 3- Annie Bon Samaritan Orphanage 2-Orphanage in Cap Haitian (Warren Girls) 4-W Orphanage 4-M/C 16-Cap Haitian Justice Rescue Project
A GRAND TOTAL OF: 165 children!!!!
We have a HUGE WAITING LIST of children that are sitting in hospitals abandoned, but we just don't have any room currently. Our numbers have dropped drastically due to the fact I gave several children back to relatives that could care for them.... I of course made sure the relatives were legit.
Those who are no longer with us: D W**** C N S J M C

*Names removed for privacy*


This was a disturbing contradiction to what Heather had told our family about "W's" family and ability to return home. Either Heather was lying about his family life or she returned him to incredibly abusive parents. You be the judge after you read the next part of this story....the beautiful ending to a very ugly beginning.... 

.............

W is now at home with his parents and he is thriving. He was never relinquished legally and his parents never wanted to place him for adoption (according to investigators we sent to find him.) He was originally taken to an orphanage next to Giving Hope Rescue Mission to be treated for parasites and to receive health care. "W" was then taken to GHRM by a family member and wasn't returned to his parents. His father felt that he was receiving good care at GHRM, so he allowed them to care for him short term. Heather began to ask them for W's birth certificate, which the family refused to turn over. His family is poor, but they never wanted their son to leave Haiti. 

The beautiful part of this story is that our family is still a part of his life and we now get to see him grow and flourish with parents who care for him. We are sponsoring W to go to school. God has allowed us to see this little boy home, happy, and with his FAMILY. He is going to receive an education and hopefully break the cycle of poverty in his family. 

With their permission, I am posting these pictures. 

W is doing great and we share this story as encouragement to any adoptive family who have been given horror stories of their adopted child's history by Heather Elyse. We propose it is time to search for more information on each child....


Kim and Jeremy






Thursday, September 19, 2013

Brian and Anne's Story: Supporting a mother to reunite with her child

We found Heather Elyse and Giving Hope Rescue Mission via a comment/recommendation from a missionary on Facebook in late 2011. At the time Heather had a lot of strong social media.

We reached out to Heather and asked if she could give us more information about adoption. She responded that she would would connect us to Michelle See (cofounder) and that she would like to take us to lunch next time we were in Haiti. When Heather emailed Michelle about us she copied us on the email and told Michelle that she had been "stalking" our family on Facebook and had all kinds of flattering things to say about us...it was odd because we don't post very much on Facebook.


Brian and I were intent on doing things the right way. We volunteer with an organization in Haiti and would never want to be involved in anything that isn't above-board.


We began researching. Brian and our daughter visited the Giving Hope Rescue Mission creche in April of 2012. They visited the crèche the week that one of the VOTO staff who was also adopting was there and she had very good things to tell Brian about the crèche and Heather. (She has since quit working for VOTO.)
Heather and her husband Steve took Brian and our daughter to dinner at Club Indigo (the resort where they lived) but Heather had to leave abruptly to go to a hospital in Port au Prince because a child from the creche had a seizure related to a very high fever.


There was one major red flag during this trip that we unfortunately chose to ignore. A woman approached Brian in Haiti and said: "if you are talking about Heather Elyse my advice is to run as fast as you can away from her". We talked about this and searched online to learn more about Heather but couldn't find anything. (We now know that her last name had only recently been changed to Elyse approximately a year prior so we were not getting accurate search results.) Everything online about "Heather Elyse" looked fine.

We signed our contract with Voice of the Orphan, Giving Hope Rescue Mission's partner adoption agency from Indianapolis, that summer of 2012. We believed that Voice of the Orphan was a licensed adoption agency. Our main contact was Heather, the Vice President of Voice of the Orphan and co-founder of Giving Hope.


In Oct 2012 I (Anne) visited the crèche for a day and had lunch with the missionaries who had just moved there to work for Giving Hope Rescue Mission. Heather was not there and I was curious about her life between two countries while raising 7 children of her own. I asked the missionaries if the kids travel back and forth with her or if they stay put somewhere. Specifically if they stay with her husband when she is gone. The missionaries didn't know who Heather's husband was. It was very awkward. Apparently since the previous spring he was no longer in the picture.

In November of 2012 we received a phone call from one of the missionaries from the ministry we volunteer with in Haiti. There was a couple at the gate with a 17 day old baby they (baby's aunt and uncle) were trying to surrender for care. We were all very concerned about the baby as things can go terribly wrong quickly if a baby that young is not cared for. We called neighboring missions to see if they could help since we don't accept babies/children at our gates but no one had space available. 


We got in touch with the missionary working for Giving Hope Rescue Mission and he talked with Heather Elyse who agreed to take the baby. 
Ryan, the missionary, and a translator came the next morning and met with our Exec Director who happened to be in Haiti and the aunt and uncle. Ryan and Wesmin took the baby to Giving Hope Rescue Mission. 


We were concerned about next steps for the baby and asked a lot of questions. Would they send someone to investigate whether the baby was adoptable? (GHRM is a creche which means that children who live there are supposed to be in the adoption process. If she was not going to be adopted then we would need to look for another placement.) We also wanted to know if they could find the baby's mom and see if she was able to parent her.

 
Heather responded that that's not how they operate - they don't track down birth parents to ask them to parent their children. 



On Nov 20, 2012, at 5:17 PM, Brian (address removed) wrote:
Thanks Heather.  For the girl, we are wondering does the family plan to go to IBESR to fill out paper work? Do you have to bring baby girl to IBESR? How about her med exam -- do you do that at Giving Hope or do you have to take her someplace for that? Is she adoptable?  Has the family visited her?  What are the next steps for her?
On Tue, Nov 20, 2012 at 6:29 PM, <heather@givinghopehaiti.org> wrote:


Great questions. 

No the family doesn't go to IBESR. 

The family goes before a judge in Montrouis, to relinquish their rights, and agrees to adoption. Specifically to you adopting her.

Then she is added to our crèche license. A birth certificate has to be created and archived. Then we start preparing her dossier.  

She has to have blood work done, and our crèche doctor has to give her a medical exam and certificate. 

As long as the family agrees to adoption- there should be no issue. 

On the Voto Facebook group - there is a file called what goes into a child's dossier. All those items will have to be created in order for an adoption to take place. 

Hope this helps.

H-
Sent from my iPhone


On Nov 20, 2012, at 6:24 PM, Brian (email removed) wrote:

Couple follow-up questions.  Did the family visit her on 11/15?  Also is Giving Hope going to see the family and inquire if adoption is truly the best option for everyone (baby and her family)? 

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: <heather@givinghopehaiti.org>
Date: Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 1:18 PM
Subject: Re: Donation: $2,500 McNeill Family Adoption
To: Brian (address removed for privacy)


The family did not visit her on the 15th. 
That is an optional thing that bio parents can do. Many just don't care, and they just don't visit. We will not be pursuing the family--- that's not how we do things. 

I have an organized system that is ethical - I don't go hunting down birth parents begging to sign over their child. 

Here are the steps: 

- the bio family is invited to an adoption training class by me and a Haitian attorney. 
- they sign an integrity agreement 
- then they have a court appointment 
- then the child is registered into IBESR for adoption 
- the child's dossier is completed 
- the birth parents meet adoptive parents and agree verbally to an adoption--- they ask questions galore
- bio parents fill out all kinds of paperwork 
- bio parents are welcome to visit on the 15th of the month 
- bio parents are included and invited to participate during the entire adoption process 
- bio parents have an interview with the US embassy 

Etc etc Etc etc 

I could keep going --- but hopefully that gives you a glimpse of the process. 

I handle everything from this end.... 

Now you are not allowed to worry! :) once an investigation is made and I can tell you 100% that she is adoptable - then we will send you an official referral. ;) so be on the look out! 

I promise you this.... I have your best interest at heart ---and keep in mind--- I'm here to protect your heart and the heart of your potential child's ----until adoption is final ! 

Let me know how else we can serve you or explain the process. 

H-

Sent from my iPhone

(We later learned that this information ie. "we will not be pursuing the birth family - that's not how we do things" is in direct contradiction to Eric Ludy's online "Defense of Heather Elyse" click for link.)


"The first condition was that the child genuinely did not have anywhere else to go. Taking in a child was always a “last resort” for Miss Elyse. Before she brought them into her ministry, she always searched for the biological family of the child (if they were alive) and attempted to reunify that child with family members, if at all possible. In many situations, Miss Elyse even financially supported the biological families of the children she rescued, in order to make it possible for the child to remain with family. But if the biological family was truly unable or unwilling to care for the child, Miss Elyse took the child, cared for him/her and sought to find a loving home for the child to grow up in."

We inquired if the baby's family ever visited or showed any interest in her and Heather responded with confusing information - no, they never visited. Then said they are dangerous people. Then said they are liars. 

Voice of the Orphan told us there was a window for submitting our dossier for adoption in early Jan 2013 so we rushed and had our dossier sent down then. We waited for our referral, waited for word of anything really. It was never clear what we were waiting for.


In April of 2013 we received and accepted our "official referral" for the baby that had been transferred from our ministry to Giving Hope Rescue Mission. We assumed that in that time the proper investigation into her adoptability had taken place and the proper paperwork was in place.


Brian was going to be in Haiti a few weeks later with our daughter for a baptism and they were given special permission to visit the baby. (At that point families were not being allowed to visit their children.)


By this time we had begun hearing some disturbing things about Heather and her operation via the missionary and expat community in Haiti. However, we had been matched with this baby and felt that she would have nowhere to go if we didn't adopt her.


Brian and our daughter arrived in Haiti and spent a few days in Port au Prince then went up to the resort where Heather was living to spend a weekend with baby girl. 


Sheena, one of the young missionaries working for Heather, texted Brian - "we are on our way, we just have to stop at the crèche and get the baby." 
Brian began texting me at the same time, updating me with what they were doing, how our daughter was reacting to the anticipation of meeting her baby sister, etc. While waiting Brian got another text from Sheena - "we're on our way, will be there soon."


Within minutes I received texts from Heather:









Knowing what we had heard about Heather and children disappearing from Giving Hope Rescue Mission, and already being hesitant and fearful about working with Heather, we were initially terrified. I texted Brian and told him to lock our daughter in their room and go see why the missionaries were coming if they didn't have the baby. He went down and met two scared women -- he said they were meek, scared and apologetic. We didn't understand why were weren't given this information in time to prevent Brian and our daughter from going all the way to Montrouis to visit.


In our opinion, knowing the control that Heather operates over the creche and volunteers, we find it highly unlikely that Heather had not been informed the night before when the little girl was removed....


We felt extremely concerned about the baby so we sent a Haitian friend to find the family and get the real story. Our friends found the family and the baby. The mother, who was young and had initially been afraid of parenting her newborn, said that she had decided to go to visit her daughter at Giving Hope Rescue Mission and they tried to give her the wrong baby. That was enough for the mom to know she had to get her out. She decided to take custody of her.


Brian and I began to maneuver our way out of this disaster, quickly realizing that we had made a mistake in working with an agency and creche that gave so little respect to birth families. We were wrong to have believed Heather's stories about the baby's birth family being liars. 


We were contacted by another staff member (NB) of VOTO who told us "I don't want you to be too discouraged. This same thing happened to a close friend and Heather was able to work over the situation and now they have their baby"  and we were even more disgusted. Our eyes were opened to the way Heather operated and in our opinion this statement was evidence that Heather was coercing birth families.

We sent an email to Heather, Michelle, Tim and AM (former staff) to tell them that we believed that God was closing the door for our adoption and we would like our money back. Heather texted me and said that we should consider adopting from Columbia - she has a friend that does adoptions there and it only takes 9 months. We were not impressed at all. A speedy adoption was not our goal. We wanted an ethical adoption.

The mother of baby girl, since removing her from Giving Hope Rescue Mission, has done a great job with a little support. She has brought her baby to our ministry for church and to see our doctor regularly. We sent formula and the clothes that we bought when we thought we were going to adopt her. We have realized that with a little support this baby can be well cared for by her birthmother and she is very obviously healthy and very much beloved. 


She is a miracle to our family, she educated us, and we stand in solidarity with the birthparents in Haiti who want to remove their children from Giving Hope Rescue Mission and parent them.




Brian and Anne


Visiting baby girl and her birthmother.

Monday, September 16, 2013

Witness Story I: Things are not as they seem at Giving Hope Rescue Mission

Note from website administrators


We have been contacted by many people who wish to share their concerns about Heather Elyse and Giving Hope Rescue Mission. These are not currently adopting families but are witnesses to strange and disturbing behavior and circumstances who desire to stand alongside us.

Some of the witnesses have longer stories and some a simple sentence or two.

The over-riding message that this group of witnesses wishes to convey is that the adoptive families are not alone. There is a quite a long list of unconnected extra people who have seen serious red flags regarding Heather Elyse and the way she handles adoptions in Haiti. They have nothing to gain and no emotional investment in adoption whatsoever. No child on the line and no emotional attachments. But they wish to share their experiences and we will honor that here in this space.

We cannot vouch for every word shared. These witnesses are coming forward unconnected to our group and while some of what is shared is experience, other portions are feelings or opinions. That being said, we believe their statements are powerful enough and reliable enough to post to this website.

Witness Story #1 comes from Stephanie:


I have been employed at a licensed child placing agency in the State of Tennessee since August 2005. I have helped many families complete adoptions from countries such as Korea, China, Lithuania, DRCongo, Uganda, Guatemala, Moldova, Ethiopia, Russia, Ukraine, Bulgaria, Pakistan, Nigeria, Liberia, and Vietnam.  I have always strived to be very careful helping my clients choose a placing agency.  I believe in using an agency or facilitator that has a strong ethical background, as well as a proven history of placing children.  After my experience with Giving Hope Rescue Mission (GHRM) and Voice of the Orphan (VOTO), I will be even more cautious and hesitant when my clients decide to use an agency I have never heard of.  I will do more research on their behalf and I will never take a new agency at face value. Most importantly, I will listen to my gut when I see or hear things that send up red flags.

My history with GHRM and VOTO began in the spring of 2012, when clients of mine, Jeremy and Kimberly, decided to use the crèche and its partner agency to adopt a child or children from Haiti.  My concerns about their choice began immediately, because I had never heard of them.  

Kim described to me their referral process, which was unlike any I had ever encountered previously.  She said that once their adoption dossier was completed, they would fly to Haiti and be presented with children to consider/choose from... In April 2012, they flew to Haiti and Heather Elyse, founder of Giving Hope Rescue Mission and Vice President of VOTO showed them two children, "R" (a girl) and "W" (a boy) who they agreed to adopt.  

I asked Kim what type of referral paperwork on the children they received, and she said she saw no paperwork, only the children themselves, with very limited story about how they came to the crèche.  This was a major red flag to me.  I had never heard of an “agency” showing actual children or letting adoptive parents choose a child in person. Also offering no social history paperwork, no medical paperwork, no official relinquishment paperwork, nor birth certificate proving that the child/ren was available for adoption.  Kim assured me that this was just the way that Haiti and Giving Hope Rescue Mission did things (per Heather Elyse), though it never settled well with me. 

Admittedly, this was my first Haitian case, and looking back, I should have done much more research and asked many more questions.  A while after their return from Haiti, Heather told the family that "W" (the boy) was unadoptable and his birth parents were not going to allow the adoption.  Again, I saw red flags waving, because Heather should have already had his birth parents’ relinquishment in writing before making a “referral” and should have never introduced "W" to an adoptive family! Additionally she should never have allowed Kim and Jeremy to be paying monthly support for "W" if he was going to be unadoptable. 

It is standard procedure in any adoption not to refer a child who is not legally free for adoption and this situation concerned me greatly.

Kim and Jeremy assured me that they felt that this was a good organization still and I should consider adopting a child from Haiti too. I began advocating a bit for families to adopt from Giving Hope Rescue Mission because of these reassurances and Heather added me to the private Voice of the Orphan Adoptive families facebook group that she ran. During the time I was on the group I was able to see how Heather informed her clients of the progress of their cases, how clients received referrals, and how clients received updates.  

In seven years of working in adoption – and prior to that, completing my own Chinese adoption, I had never seen anything like the way Heather operated.  Everyone was informed about everyone’s case at the same time on this page without any confidentiality.  And when someone received a “referral”, it was posted as a picture on the private VOTO facebook page before the referral was privately presented to the prospective adoptive parents!  

Every international referral I have ever encountered contains social, medical and legal paperwork on a child and is delivered directly and only to a prospective adoptive family to be reviewed by an international doctor before a referral is accepted.  

Kim began talking about going to Haiti on a mission trip to support Giving Hope Rescue Mission. Mission teams were invited to come and perform acts of service for the creche and children. Kim invited me to participate. At first, I had reservations about going because it meant giving a lot of money ($2,500 for food and water for the team) which I felt hesitant about at the time.  But, Kim convinced me and I finally said yes, as did 10 other ladies.  I told myself I was going for the children.

During the time I was advocating for Giving Hope and still on the VOTO private page, two of our clients decided to sign with them as well.  The "S" family and the "W" family.  I was the worker for the S family and my colleague Cindy worked with the W family.  

Communication with VOTO/Heather was impossible for the S family and for my co-worker, as emails were never returned. 

Additionally, Heather shared private and confidential information from the S family's homestudy with Kimberly. Heather told Kimberly that the S’s did not make enough money to care for a sibling group of 4, and yet still referred the family three children. Kim and I both found it odd that Heather would talk about other families' confidential income information but Kim and Heather had grown close so she did not dwell on it. 

The S family's “referral process” waved another huge red flag for me. It was a phone call with Heather, during which she told them their children’s stories.  Again, there was no paperwork, and photos were shared on the Facebook page with a group by Heather.  

Strangely at one point during the process, the children matched with the S family mysteriously vanished from the crèche, and the S’s only found out about it through a brief email from Heather telling them to pray, as well as a post on the VOTO private Facebook page.  

When the children were “found”, it was posted on the VOTO private page for everyone else to see, and this is how the S’s found out that they were safe. The days that the children were not at the creche and they were hoping for some kind of information, the S family were a nervous wreck.  They were scared, they were concerned and they were in the dark about what had happened and why.  

The drama played out on facebook instead of in confidential emails or phone calls. To this day they have no concrete idea what was going on or how the children were brought back to the creche except that it had something to do with the birthparents removing the children and Heather "rescuing" them back.

This is why agencies MUST have trained social workers on staff – to properly work with families in a crisis, to know how to counsel families through hard issues, and to have the social work ethics knowledge which states, “Do no harm”. This family went through hell with this situation and the lack of follow up.

On November 4th 2012, our mission team flew to Haiti, and on the morning of the 5th, Heather greeted us at the guesthouse/mission we were staying at near Giving Hope Rescue Mission.

She introduced herself with a long speech about who she is and how she came to Haiti.  In this introduction Heather said that orphanages (crèches) are not happy places, they are depressing and she doesn’t even like to go there to her own creche, Giving Hope Rescue Mission.  

She called Haiti a “God forsaken place”.  

She said that they (Giving Hope Rescue Mission and VOTO) had a “media” policy – we could take pictures, but we could not post them anywhere. I thought this was for the childrens' benefit. But actually she explained that every photo had to be sent to her or Michelle See so they could choose what adoptive parents could see. She said this was because her “crazy adoptive parents” would freak out if they saw the children in less than ideal conditions. She said to just “help her out” so that she wouldn’t have a bunch of explaining to do to adoptive parents.  

The ladies on the team and I had brought 12 suitcases filled with medicine, clothes, baby powder, vitamins, toys, diapers, and ointments.  We were told that they were always lacking in these areas and needed supplies.  Each of us spent hundreds of dollars to accommodate the crèche and help the children. Gladly!  We also spent $2500 as a group for the privilege of coming to the crèche – which included just water and lunch for the four days we were going to serve there.  

When we unloaded our 12 suitcases at the crèche, we were a little astounded to see that there were two rooms filled with supplies already.  One entire room was devoted to clothes – it was a closet.  Another room was like a huge medicine cabinet and diaper bin.  I do not begrudge giving supplies to orphans or orphanages, but I have to admit, I felt like we were being taken advantage of.  They did not appear to need anything, and in fact, I worried that there were expired medicines and other supplies sitting in the heat because there were so many not being used.  

We went to the Giving Hope Rescue Mission baby house first (the baby house is on the right of the compound, connected by walls with an empty compound and then on the far left is the house for the toddlers and older kids.)  

It was as Heather described - kind of depressing, babies sleeping two to three in a crib, flies flying around, babies with dirty diapers lying in the cribs.  But, this is also what I expected an orphanage “crèche” to be like.  It came as no surprise to me, as this is what I teach families to expect when they adopt a child internationally.  

In the baby house there were two nannies and a missionary.  The missionary was holding a young baby and the nannies were sitting down while all the babies were in their cribs.  Some were napping and some were not.  I saw a little boy "W" who I had loved in pictures who had some special medical needs sleeping and his diaper was so full of diarrhea, it was overflowing onto his sheet.  I changed him, and his sheet, and he woke up, reached for me and clung.  He would not let me go.  All the babies were that way.  

If we picked them up, they did not want to be put down.  They would cry hysterically, cling on to us and beg to be picked back up.  It was heart wrenching. 

However, Heather Elyse had always advertised Giving Hope Rescue Mission as a "boutique" creche. Her social media was filled with photos of children dressed beautifully and babies being held.

This simply was not the reality we encountered in November 2012.

The creche was depressing, the children lived in cribs, and there were not enough staff in my opinion.

In December after returning home I wrote a Facebook “note” and posted it on my private wall about the experience, only after getting permission from Kim and the woman who was in process to adopt little boy "W" to use their names and photos.  

In the post I said nothing negative about Giving Hope or Heather Elyse specifically, but Kim and I received the following emails from Heather telling me to take down my post from my facebook page. Kim called me hysterical begging me to take down the post because Heather might cancel her adoption, and she didn’t want Heather mad at her. I felt sad that Kim was so scared of Heather.


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: <heather@givinghopehaiti.org>
Date: Wed, Dec 26, 2012 at 6:47 PM
Subject: Favor
To: Kimberly Williams <kwilliamscce@gmail.com>
Cc: Michelle <michelle@givinghopehaiti.org>, Tim Rowe <timrowe@voiceoforphan.com>


I need Stephanie Williams to take off her super inappropriate post immediately ! Thx.

H-

Getting way too many complaints.

No media allowed  - especially those that paint us in a negative light!



Sent from my iPhone
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: <heather@givinghopehaiti.org>
Date: Wed, Dec 26, 2012 at 6:58 PM
Subject: Your team
To: Kimberly Williams <kwilliamscce@gmail.com>
Cc: RFG <contact@roomforgraceintl.org>, Michelle See <michelle@voiceoforphan.com>


Can not make postings w/ out approval from us. All pics/ blogs- need to be ran through us for approval.

Anna or Michelle will send you our media policy.

If some adoptive parents read her post they would die...

I know I about did! ;) I about fell over. So disrespectful. I was so shocked.

Sorry for the short emails- beyond busy in Haiti.

... And my emails are blowing up from not so happy leadership.

H-


Sent from my iPhone


Email from Heather to me:

Stephanie,

I am not sure why you decided to post the following:

(this was my facebook post/note for my friends and family): My entire life, I wanted to go on a mission trip.  I wanted my life to count. I wanted to show God’s love to people who did not have access to church, Bibles, and abundance like we have in America.  I guess I thought that leaving my time zone would somehow make me more valuable to God.

So, when the opportunity came for me to go on a mission trip to an orphanage in Haiti (actually called a creche), I jumped at the chance.  The trip was the brainchild of (Kim) an HSC client who is adopting a little girl from the creche, Giving Hope Haiti Rescue Mission.  She led our group of twelve ladies, which also included our Executive Director (Denise) and Center co-worker (Sue).

We left on Sunday, November 4 at 3AM.  Some of us had little or no sleep, but we were all energized by the journey ahead of us.  Some of us knew each other well, and some knew hardly no one, but we were amazed by how cohesive the group was – as travelers and soon to find out as roommates. 

Twelve hours later, we arrived in Port au Prince, Haiti. 

We knew that our accomodations, L C, a mission that runs a sponsorship program, school, and medical clinic, would be somewhat primitive, though we also thought that we would have more rooms to share.  Nine of us slept in one large room with one bathroom, and three in the other room.  It was about 90 degrees and humid, and the only source for cool air was a small ceiling fan on the lowest possible speed.  The electricity went out at ten every night.  There was no hot water for showers, and we could not use the tap water for drinking or brushing our teeth.  Finally, we could not place toilet paper in the toilet, but in the waste basket beside it. As rustic as this sounds, it never caused a problem and no one grumbled at the inconvenience.  (Actually a cold shower after a long hot day was pretty awesome!)  

Our first day at Giving Hope was filled with awe and wonder at these precious little children who were so desperate for love.  We had been warned that while the small creche works as hard as it can to provide for 140 children, there are things that cannot be controlled, like flies at this open air facility.  The nannies, whom they call Mommies, try as hard as they can to care for the children, but because there are so many, it is impossible for them all to receive one on one love and attention for extended periods of time.  I knew this.  Of course I knew this.  I teach this.  I knew my daughter once lived like this – at least I knew it intellectually.  But it is different to see it, experience it, and be a part of it.  Now I KNOW, with a knowledge that is almost unbearable.  It has taken me this long to process it.

Back in April, Kimberly  was matched with her daughter R.  And as I am prone to do, I looked at pictures of other children there to see if, by chance, there was one that struck a cord with me.  And there was. His name is W.  I asked my husband if he thought we could adopt again, and he said he felt we were too old to start over.  While I tend to agree, there was just something about this precious little boy that captured my heart.  So, on the first day at the creche, when I saw him, my heart skipped a beat.  The ladies and I started the day by going through the baby house surveying any needs the babies had – diapers to be changed, babies to be held, noses to be wiped.  That’s when I saw him.  He was napping and had a dirty diaper.  So I changed him, and swatted away pesky flies, and told him how much God loved him.  When he woke up, he reached for me, and I picked him up.  We immediately became a duo, and I could see why his pictures had drawn me in.  He was even more precious in person.     
              
Besides loving on babies, we helped the creche in various ways.  We did laundry – by hand outside in wash tubs, gave toddlers communal baths, sang and danced with the preschoolers, did a vacation Bible School for the school aged children, painted the Mommies’ and childrens’ finger and toe nails, made dinner and served the creche missionaries one night, worked at a local school, changed diapers and crib sheets, and fed precious children.
                          
The creche also rescued an 18 day old premature baby girl, and allowed us to care for her at Life Connection while we were there.  A few of our ladies became very attached to her, and were very sad the day we had to say goodbye.  I am sure she will forever be in our prayers.  

 The longer we were there, it became obvious to all of us that the children were love starved.  The condition of orphan is not natural.  It is not God’s original design.  He designed us to be in families, with the love of a mother and a father. He designed us to need one another, to need love, touch, and attention.  These children, along with all children in institutional care, do not have these fundamental elements to grow and thrive. 

They were starved for attention, and if we showed them a moment of attention, they clung to us as though their lives depended on it.  As the week went on, I began to wonder if we were helping or if we were hurting these children by being there.  To set them down, to walk away from them, to show another child attention only led to screaming, sobbing, clinging and tantrums.  Was their trust in others being eroded each time we left for the evening?  

Of course, I did not want to be a contributor to the very thing I know and teach others is so important for the emotional health of their children. 

I also began to think about my own Chinese daughter, and how she was when she first came home.  She acted just like these children.  Love starved.  And my heart ached for her - for not knowing everything she went through her first twelve months.  How many white people came and loved her for a moment just to walk away?  How many times did she scream for consolation, love or attention only to be ignored by passing nannies, too busy to give her time?  How many times did she lay in her own feces as she slept with flies and mosquitos swarming her little body?  How has her first year shaped who she is and I will never know or be able to heal her?  

And I felt guilty.  Guilty for doing this to other children and for being in Haiti, instead of at home with my own children, who God had already entrusted me to care for, righting the wrongs of their pasts.  And I realized: God has already given me a mission field.  My family, first and foremost, and then, my families at Heaven Sent.  

The very best thing I can do for the children of Haiti, or anywhere else, is my job. I thought these thoughts as I hugged and kissed W goodbye for the last time. I tried not to pick him up, and my heart broke.  I walked away from him, and heard him wail, with his arms outstretched, holding a toy we had given him.  Then, in defeat, his arms went to his side, he looked down and cried softly.  It was one of the saddest things I have ever seen, and I wanted to run away, full of guilt for being the cause of his tears.

On this last day there, we went to lunch and swam at the resort where the creche director and missionaries live.  The director brought her children and some terminally ill children who stay with her, one of whom I have known and loved from pictures .  I learned that his HIV has developed into AIDS.  As soon as I saw him, I scooped him up and held him.  He snuggled into my neck and held on to me and I sat rocking him for a long time.  His breathing was labored and wraspy, his nose was running and he had a fever.  But I just poured my love into him, knowing that in his short life, he needs to feel love on earth.  I sang to him and talked to him and prayed for him.  When it was time to go, a missionary placed him in his stroller (pictured here), and he was too sick to cry.  I, however, was again heartbroken.  

Giving a child the love of a mother, only to watch them slip back into being an orphan is against everything in my being.  It was emotionally painful, and I was ready to be home. 

In Haiti, I learned a lot about myself and the ladies I traveled with.  We spent mornings and evenings together in devotion and reading letters from home.  We gave our testimonies, shared our feelings, shed tears, laughed a lot and sweated even more.  God was with us, and we saw and felt Him in mighty ways.  Haiti is both beautiful and desperate.  The poverty and bitter smell of burning leaves and garbage juxtaposed with the lush landscape and majestic ocean is jarring.

But, there is also a richness in lack.  The people in Haiti work from the moment they wake up until they fall asleep – farming plants and animals, washing and hanging laundry by hand, making items to sell at market, cooking food over fires and walking or bicycling where ever they need to go.  They appreciate what they do have and take care of it with pride.  Those who know God, lean on Him in ways we do not know how – because they have to in order to survive.   And they are joyful.  Their lives are simple, and do not carry the stressful hustle and bustle of American life.
I am very thankful for being able to go to Haiti and for everything I experienced and learned.  I am thankful for my time with such wonderful women.  And I praise God for what He showed me while I was there – to serve Him does not mean I have to leave my country. In fact, I went all the way to Haiti to learn I already have a mission field at home.

(Heather's comment):

"I thought you were on the same line of work as me... Adoptions. Surely you can respect privacy and confidentiality.

When you were in Haiti, I made it very clear about media, and the struggle I have w/ adoptive parents etc.

I thought your post was lovely in all aspects, other then you basically are telling adoptive parents that their child is love starved. This is the wrong perspective to focus on. The fact that they are Alive and not dead is a miracle!!!! My adoptive parents do not need to read a depressing post as the one you posted. I thought it was 100% disrespectful to me, especially after I made myself super clear to you and the team.

If this junior high immaturity does not stop.... I will be CC'ng you in a letter to the state. I know TN takes confidentiality very serious.  They are a wonderful state who understands Hague. So I would please ask if you would please call me to discuss this like adults.  I am willing to hear your side and heart on the matter.

Thanks,
Heather"

I wrote her back, in part:


"Of course as a social worker and adoption worker, I realize the importance of confidentiality, and did not post any names or pictures that I was not given the express permission to use.

Everything I wrote was truth.  Children who are orphans in an institutional setting, no matter what country they are in, do not live in God’s original design, and they are, in fact, love starved.  It is the express responsibility of those of us in the adoption field to properly education adoptive parents on this reality, so that they will have the tools necessary to empower their children when they come home."
 
Heather never responded to this email.  

But, the next time she posted updated photos of kids, Kim's was not photographed.  I have heard from more than one person now that if an adoptive parent makes Heather mad, she will punish them by not posting photos of their children that month or threaten to cancel their adoptions. 

I found it interesting that the little boy I had held and written about, "W", died not too long after our trip there in November.  Once again, the entire VOTO adoption community was told of his “death” on the VOTO facebook page after his adoptive parents received an email telling them he was dead of unknown causes.   I believe that his disappearance, as well as the disappearance of Heather’s two children whom she claimed were murdered by their birth mother (for which she has told at least 3-4 different stories) needs to be investigated by someone outside of the GHRM/VOTO organizations.

Other concerns:  

While I was in Haiti in November, I noticed that although Heather had urged families to donate a large amount of money the previous summer for a generator for the creche (I believe between $12-15,000 was donated) I had hung clothes out on the roof, had been in the back of the building washing laundry, in the kitchen, and in all the other rooms of the baby house and toddler house. I had not seen a generator.  

I also noticed that there was no actual “Room for Grace”.  All of the rooms were alike. Room for Grace is a sponsorship program (founded by Heather Elyse) where they ask for $300 per month to care for children at Giving Hope Rescue Mission who are not already matched to adoptive families or who are terminally ill. This "room" is supposed to be a specialized program for special needs children.  I did see a terminally ill boy, with hydrocephalous, and AIDS, but if he was in “Room for Grace”, it’s one crib in a hallway. It is also my understanding that a little boy was transferred in the fall of 2012 from another orphanage to "Room for Grace", arriving with special needs but healthy at the time, only to die 48 hours later.

In general it did not feel like the staff to child ratio was acceptable. On one day we witnessed an older nanny trying to bathe 20 toddlers at the same time.

Another time I walked through the school age children’s bunk room and saw the children taking a nap.  A large number of children were sharing beds.

I noticed also that a lot of the children were sick with deep mucus filled coughs, congestion and fever. With all of the medicines in the back, I also noticed that none of the children were receiving any. I did not observe any specialized care for sick children or medical needs children.

On our second day of volunteering our team went to the crèche and it was like a different place.  The children were beautifully dressed – complete with bows and frills.  The nanny staff was doubled and all of the missionaries, who rotated days at Club Indigo – the all inclusive resort where Heather, her children and missionaries lived - and at the crèche, were there.  The orphan aid group Ordinary Hero was coming to look at the crèche, and the staff of Giving Hope Rescue Mission had been told to dress the children nicely.  

There was double the water supply and double the food, as well.  I found the little boy, W, with a fever, congestion and diarrhea wearing sweat pants and a thick heavy t-shirt in 90 degree weather.  So, I went to the baby clothes room and changed him into something cooler, and asked a missionary what they give the babies when they have this congestive fever.  She said she didn’t know.  So, as Heather led Ordinary Hero through the crèche, I asked her what she wanted me to give him, and she said a breathing treatment.  None of the nannies or the missionaries knew how to give this breathing treatment to him. So, I did my best.  I couldn’t help but think, “Adoptive parents pay $300 a month for their babies to be cared for here?  What does their money cover?”

While Ordinary Hero was there, Heather had her own little girl (adopted in the US) stand up and tell the crowd of strangers how she had been abused by her birth parents – made to live in a cage and eat feces, and how Heather had saved her. I could not believe it, as an adoption social worker and as a mother of two adopted children, it seemed to me like Heather was exploiting her child.  But why?  The second day looked like a production designed to impress Ordinary Hero. 

The third day, there was no food or water at the crèche for our team.  We had donated $2500 for food and water, and after two days of water and fruit, there was nothing.  The children were back in diapers, they were back down to two nannies in the baby house for 20-30 or so babies and three nannies at the toddler/school age house.  

Kimberly was worried for our team and sent an email to Michelle See asking what our $2500 had paid for?  She did not get a response, but the fourth day at the crèche, we were told that Heather was going to "treat" us to a lunch that afternoon at Club Indigo resort.  

Earlier in the week, she had told us that she would let us each bring a child from the crèche to the pool as a special treat for them, but then she changed her mind and told us we were going to each be assigned one of her children because she had not had much “one on one time with them lately”.  This lunch also turned out to be an appreciation lunch for the nannies that our $2,500 was apparently covering.  More nannies showed up this afternoon than we had seen all week combined.  At the lunch, Heather did not talk to any of the ladies in our group.  She avoided us.  At one point I overheard a lady walk up to Heather and say something about a woman threatening her for a large amount of money.  Heather said she was threatened all the time and it wouldn’t be the first time.

On Friday we left Haiti.  I left with a hollow, sad feeling, as though something was not right with Giving Hope Rescue Mission. Our group felt this way.

When I returned home, I heard from an adoptive mother, who wishes to remain anonymous. She told me that she speaks with five other Giving Hope Rescue Mission adoptive moms and what they do is “keep their heads low and do what they are told so that their children are not taken away from them.”  

I told the two families whose homestudies we were processing at our agency that I wanted them to pray and also to look at how other agencies run their Haitian programs before they proceeded with adopting through Giving Hope Rescue Mission.  I told them to compare the referral process, the update process, the contracts, and the time frame – as well as to look at the number of children they have actually brought home.  They did, and each pulled out of the program.       

It is my strong opinion that things are not as they are purported to be at Giving Hope Rescue Mission creche.  I feel that there is an enormous amount of control, manipulation, intimidation and fear that is brandished over Heather's clients despite her claims of operating as a Christian. 

I feel that there is no accountability – no state license for Voice of the Orphan (until June 2013) and a lack of social work background for the staff to ensure that clients are being worked with ethically, with support and with the correct amount of checks and balances.  

It’s Heather Elyse, fear and intimidation, and no one is allowed to question her, say or show anything negative about her or ask for what they rightfully and legally deserve to receive.  It is wrong.  I believe that there has been no accountability about children dying and disappearing. 

I believe in justice for orphans, the poor and the oppressed.  If I do not stand up and share this experience then I am complicit in the wrongdoing against these children and families.  Sometimes God asks us to do hard things for others.  I have seen and experienced the fear, intimidation and manipulation, both personally and through my clients.  I know there are other children and families who are still held captive by it, and it cannot continue.  So, I’ll speak for them too.  God is my fortress and my protector.