Gay Couple in Netherlands Helps Raise 100 Children
May 09, 2008 06:00 AM
by Shannon Firth
25
years ago, Aad and Ron Dissel de Boo, a gay couple living in Holland,
became foster parents to two abused boys “almost as a gesture of ill
will” by the Welfare agency. They have since fostered more than 100
children.
Public acceptance of gay parents appears to be on the
rise. A 2007 Pew poll stated that 46 percent of respondents believed
gay and lesbian parents should be allowed to adopt, compared with 38
percent in 1999. The American Psychology Associationsupports same-sex
couple adoption, and in the past two decades at least 15 studies of
more than 500 children showed that children of gay or lesbian parents
are not disadvantaged.
However, many social conservatives like
Dr. James Dobson disagree, claiming: “[T]he majority of more than 30
years of social-science evidence indicates that children do best on
every measure of well-being when raised by their married mother and
father.”
An ACLU press release rejects old rhetoric like
Dobson’s, stating, “Children without homes do not have the option of
choosing between a married mother and father or some other type of
parent(s).”
by Dheera Sujan
24-04-2008
Aad and
Ron Dissel de Boo tell the story of how they once went to a conference
in the USA to talk of their experiences in raising children. Before the
spoke, a woman came up to them and told them forthrightly that she
didn't agree that homosexuals should be allowed to raise children,
because it went against traditional family values.
Aad and Ron
And
then they went on the podium and told their story. Later the same woman
came to them in tears to apologise for what she had said earlier. "And
then she wrote to us later," says Ron laughing in his booming bass.
"She said that she had our photo on a notice board in her office with a
sign underneath it that read ‘they opened my heart and my eyes.'"
It's
a telling anecdote. And after having spent an afternoon in their
company, I know exactly what caused such a radical transformation in
that woman. 25 years ago, Aad and Ron decided that they had room in
their hearts and in their lives to adopt a child. The Dutch Child
Welfare Agency demurred. A young homosexual couple with a child went
against the accepted wisdom and in the Christian conservative Holland
of that time; there was no precedent for it.
First and second child
1st
and 2nd childBut they persisted and eventually, almost as a gesture of
ill will, the Agency pointed them towards Huup. He was 14 years old,
mentally handicapped, had been severely abused, and had gone through
several foster homes. But Aad and Ron took him in and brought him up.
Huup, now 27, lives with them still. After Huup had been with them for
a while, the couple decided they wanted a younger child, so they went
back to the Child Welfare Agency and were again met with protests.
Nevertheless, they were then assigned Michel, a mentally disturbed
9-year-old whose parents had kept him chained in a closet for six
years. Michel was incontinent, couldn't speak, and needed to be taught
the basics, like a giant toddler.
With two kids in the house,
the couple decided that they couldn't both work outside anymore. So
while Ron earned the family income, working in a hospital, Aad became
the stay-at-home dad. "When the kids come home from school, they should
see that my papa is home," says Aad in his soft voice. "When they are
crying I'm there, when they're smiling I'm there, when they go to bed
I'm there - they should never again feel alone."
Third child
3rd
childWhen Michel was 11, Aad and Ron decided they wanted a baby this
time. The Agency reacted predictably: "A baby needs a mum," they were
told, but Ron replied: "I can be a mum." And so they got Michael, a
one-and-a-half year old, mentally challenged and also with a background
of abuse and neglect. When they got him, Michel still hadn't been
introduced to solids, so he drank only enormous quantities of milk. His
inadequate diet meant that he couldn't really move his lower body, but
Aad and Ron fell in love with him immediately. He's now a hulking
17-year-old who also lives at home still.
Fourth child
4th
childAfter Michael, Ron said it was such a men's family that he wanted
a girl in the house. The Agency was unhappy about the idea of a girl
brought up by two men, but had no other option for Paula. The baby of
two drug addicts, Paula had been taken away from her prostitute mother.
What the Agency neglected to tell Aad and Ron that Paula was born with
her parents' addiction and when they got her, she was in withdrawal.
Because
she was still a toddler, there were no drugs to help her physical
symptoms, so Paula cried every night, all night for months. Aad and Ron
laugh as they remember how the boys hated having a screaming baby in
the house. "But she was so lovely," says Ron, and every night, the
length of the crying fits reduced gradually from 12 hours, to 11, then
10 until she finally normalized. "Her eyes were like flowers," he adds,
still a besotted father.
Fifth, sixth and seventh child
5th,
6th and 7th childAfter Paula, Aad and Ron didn't need to go to the
Welfare Agency anymore - the Agency came to them. Paula had a
biological brother, Fons. After Fons, came Kelly, another biological
sibling. Her mother, still addicted, still a prostitute, gave birth at
home, two months early and was then unable to stand the pressure of
caring for a new baby, abandoned the newborn. The baby was discovered
only because neighbours complained to the police about the crying. She
was dehydrated, starving and suffering from exposure, but Aad and Ron
were waiting at the hospital to take her home. She is now a healthy
freckled nine-year-old who loves horse riding and sports.
After
Kelly came yet another biological sister, Hannah. By that time Aad was
wondering if they could take in any more children, but when Ron heard
of Hannah's birth, he ordered Aad to get her immediately. "I told him
not to come home without the baby." Hannah is an angelic five-year-old
girl now with a sheet of shining hair down her back, the pampered
princess of the family.
More children
More childrenAad and
Ron decided that they could take in no more children in the house on a
permanent basis, but they do take in the most severely abused children
on a temporary basis, to provide a steady transition for them for a few
months before a suitable foster home can be found. They reel off a
heartbreaking list: there was Omar who saw his mother shot dead by his
father; there was one-and-a-half-year-old Quentin who had never known
family life, whose first foster family returned him after one night;
there was six-year-old Vinnie who was so abused by his parents that he
came to Aad and Ron from the hospital, his back covered in burns from
scalding showers.
More than 100 children
More than 100
childrenWhen I asked them how many children had come through their
house over the years, Aad scratches his head and says they've never
counted the exact number. "More than a hundred?" I ask them. "Oh yes,
more than a hundred," he replies matter-of-factly. Aad and Ron have
started a foundation called Twee Vaders, or Two Fathers. They live with
their family in an immaculate house in a small town not far from
Amsterdam. The children are housed in a warren of tiny but
individualized, neat bedrooms upstairs.
When they were told that
being near animals was good for abused or handicapped children, Ron got
over his fear of horses, learnt to ride and now all the children care
and ride the horses they stable nearby. Aad and Ron now work in
conjunction with the Child Welfare Agency to give parenting classes to
people who need them, trying to nip in the bud the problem of abuse or
neglect.
They are concerned that in this wealthy country, there
is a shortfall of good homes to some 10,000 kids. If there was a
physical way to do it, there is no doubt that they would gather all
these thousands of hurt and unhappy children into their protective
fold. They can't care for them all, but they haven't done so badly so
far.
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