Transforming Today's World Magazine Volume 2 Issue 6 | Page 55

Greater Grace: Rescuing Russian Orphans Continued from Page 50 public school as well as training in a trade school. This probably sounds just normal, but at this time the children who are orphans do not attend outside schools. Attending a school outside of the home/ orphanage will help the children to be a real part of their communities. We are working with church leaders, government officials, and concerned citizens of Russia. With the political conflict between our governments it is easy to write the entire populace off as “the opposition.” But, I can assure you, they are not our enemies. The Russian people are beautiful, sharing, compassionate, and yes patriotic just as we are. They have a wonderful culture, a rich history, incredible artists, writers, athletes, and musicians. They love freedom, but can hardly relate to freedom as we do because they have never really tasted it the way we have. Imagine living here in America and having our entire government as well as the current way of life completely thrown out the door, no employment, no method of confirming or establishing ownership of private property, no system of law and the whole world expecting you to prosper in your new “freedom.” I am an eyewitness to this. I went to Russia on mission trips and interacted with the people on many levels. City people, with their fast paced life, dependant on public transportation, lines forming before dawn at the bread store, the formerly beautifully landscaped streets and boulevards neglected and dirty, all waiting for the promised benefits of this wonderful dream called “freedom.” Country people, dependant on agriculture, accustomed to communal farming, heavy handed delegation of duty, ownership of a tiny plot of land and a small “summer home” called a Dacha where each family raised their own food, often one family member would work at a factory that built in the center of the community such as a bottle making factory. But the communal farm was now abandoned; the factory only barely functioned because the materials needed to make the bottles no longer arrived on time, if ever. The employees did not receive any pay because the government no longer owned the factory. Out of desperation the government began to sell literally everything, after all, this “privatization” is what the West recommended for a successful economy. Well, the new owners weren’t Westerners and the legal system didn’t protect the workers, and the government didn’t have experience in taxation so they had no way to fund any welfare assistance. It wasn’t long before the people became desperate, the fledgling government was made up entirely of people raised under Communism, and though many were eager for change, they were just learning to swim, so to speak. Often it appeared they were drowning, and anyone who tried to help would get overpowered and go down with them. Since that awful time, change has come; oil has begun to fill the government’s empty coffers. President Putting has restored a sense of dignity to the office which Yeltsin had tainted with carelessness and fooli ͠