We loaded up the back of the truck with a ton of souvenirs and moved on to the German international grocery store in Kigali. One of the ODU professors made friends with an artist who has a small shop next door so we visited him and bought a ton of his stuff…I think we’re done with spending money now that our suitcases are stuffed full. I guess there’s a subconscious desire to buy all of Rwanda in order to prevent the inevitable fading from our memories…
That night we had dinner at our host mother’s sister’s house. She’s a single Rwandan woman, very controversial, who travels the world dealing in Rwandan embroidery art. She has a 7 year old son whose story I feel compelled to share because it’s so beautiful. As a single woman, she had considered adopting a child- she’d had a very long ten year relationship that has diminished any desire for her to pursue marriage in the future- but she wanted someone to share her life with. One day, while she was at the shop she runs in town, there was commotion in town. Someone had found a baby, just hours old, abandoned on the street corner. She went to see what all the commotion was about and offered to take the baby to the hospital to ensure he was medically okay. In the end, they allowed her to sign paperwork that essentially made the child hers. She said the process is a little different than adoption because he was never entered into the system and he was just hours old when he was found- a tiny tiny 4 pound baby. He doesn’t know yet, but his name is Moses, and she uses the biblical story of Moses as a bedtime story for him to warm him to the idea that he was an orphan. She said that there are so many orphans in Rwanda, he will understand because he is not the only one.
In that same theme, we went to visit the family of our driver Ibrahim, who has also adopted the baby of a family member that could not care for him. Our host mother also has three of her brother’s children who was unable to raise them. It’s really inspiring that so many Rwandans welcome these orphans into their homes and raise them as their own. Our host mother even said after her own children are grown, she plans to adopt another baby. Tragic that there are so many orphans, but inspiring that there are so many open homes….