Adoption
Adventure:
Leading hosting programs for Russian orphans
"A Walk of Faith"
by Kelly
Barbazette, The Gilroy Dispatch
ran Christmas Eve, 1999
They gaze at
their brightly lit Christmas tree through eyes that have never witnessed
a holiday of warmth in a home of their own. Spending most of their lives
in institutionalized care in Russia, this is the first year Eliseveta,
5, Vanya, 6, Tamara, 8, Svetlana, 9, and Lena, 12, are spending Christmas
together with their new mom and dad. "They're looking around at all
of this stuff," Dave Avilla, 45, said, his eyes sweeping over the
Nativity scene and the brightly wrapped gifts under the tree. "We
can't believe this is really happening." Avilla and his wife Kerry
adopted the five sibling over the past three years - a choice they call
their "walk of faith." Born into an impoverished family, the
children spent most of their years in separate adoption homes. Now reunited,
the children, who are quick to offer a shy smile, seem as if they were
never separated. "From start to finish, we're still in awe of everything.
We didn't know what was going to happen and the path just kept rolling
on and yet here we are," Kerry Avilla, 44, said.
In
the Beginning The
Avillas were acquainted for years, first meeting at their church in San
Jose. Their friendship blossomed in 1991. Kerry describes their courtship
as a whirlwind romance. "He just swept me off my feet," she
said. The couple were married in March 1992 and bought a condominium in
San Jose. David, who has two grown sons from a previous marriage, and
Kerry decided they wanted children of their own.
After a few years it was evident that they weren't able to conceive. Instead
of attempting costly fertility treatments, they opted for adoption. "The
goal I wanted was a family," Kerry said. "When it came down
to it, it was incidental whether they looked like me." She began
scouring the Internet in 1995 for adoption agencies and located an international
one that October. "We prayed and asked the Lord, 'We'd like a little
girl, about 2. We're not going to pick. The first one that fits the age
group, we'll accept. That one's from You," Kerry said. In August
1997, they saw their first picture of Lise, who was 2 at the time. The
adoption was proceeding smoothly, then Kerry got a phone call from the
agency in November, 1996. They notified the couple that Lise had four
siblings that were discovered after Lise's brother moved to the same adoption
home in Russia that October. By law, an adoption agency is required to
notify the adoptive parents of any siblings.
"When I hung up the phone, the first reaction I had was shock,"
Kerry said. "I likened it to being a pregnant mom with multiples.
I sat down and thought, 'I'm going to be the mother of five children".
Questions
Arise David
and Kerry said the reasons not to adapt all five children quickly surfaced,
including financial worries and possibly cramping their lifestyle. But
they said all of their reasons were based in fear. Instead of asking themselves
"How could we?" they began to ask "How could we not?"
"We didn't know how we were going to do it," David said. "We
thought if it was meant to be, God would open the doors and make it happen,
and if it wasn't meant to be, He would find a way to close them."
"We really believe that God brought Lise to us, and if we really
believe that, He had to know about the others and that He had a bigger
plan for us," Kerry added. Their family and friends gave them cautious
support. "No one ever said we shouldn't do it, but you could tell
they were concerned," David said.
On December 23, 1996, the couple received a court date in Russia for January
8th. The next two weeks were filled were a frenzy of activities as they
prepared for their journey. They credit their online support group of
other adoptive parents for helping prepare them for what to expect both
during and after the trip. "A lot of it was going into an abyss of
unknown," David said. "It was a complete adventure. You would
never guess what the reality was going to be like." On Jan. 5, 1997,
the couple left for Russia. The day they met their daughter is one they'll
never forget. "It was the most amazing day of my whole life,"
David said. "We didn't know what was going on. We were going to meet
this child. Our future would never be the same. It was magical."
The first visit-and consecutive ones for the next three weeks-are chronicled
on video tape. During their first meeting, a shy Lise wearing a red-checked
dress stands stiffly, watching David intently. She turns one cautious
eye when Kerry kisses her cheek. By the end of the visit, she's cuddling
on David's lap. Her smile is quicker and brighter as the visits continue.
A
"Hard Life" Lise
had been in the "baby home" from three days after she was born
to age 2. She was relinquished at birth-not an uncommon occurrence in
Russia and other eastern European countries where there aren't foster
homes, said Marge Talbot, executive director of Growing Families Worldwide,
an international adoption agency based in New Jersey. Most children, particularly
ones living in Eastern Europe, are given up because the parents are so
impoverished, she said. "The life over there is so hard," David
said. "People literally live in shacks. The houses in this area here
were barely inhabitable. It's a hard life. The weather is tough. What
that does is create an absence of hope and choices that aren't always
wise."
David and Kerry stayed for three weeks in frozen Russia in the dead of
winter. The couple said they could feel their friends' prayers during
their stay that they describe as "a charmed existence". Most
of their time was spent at the orphanage, visiting with Lise and other
children at the home. They also were able to visit Lise's brother, Vanya,
whom they planned to adopt next. "It was neat to be in her environment,
getting to know her and her caregivers," David said. They said they
not only left Russia with their child, but also with a greater appreciation
for their own lives. "You go over there and you come back humbled,"
Kerry said.
Faith
in God The
couple says their faith in God and their trust that He would find a way
has helped them through the past few years. The couple had financial troubles
in the past and the adoption bills were stacking up. An overseas adoption
costs approximately $20,000. With one child and the hope of four others,
their worries mounted. "There wasn't a day that went by since January
1997 that we didn't ask ourselves 'How do we get from here to there?"
David said. Then, suddenly the resources started surfacing. David, a software
salesman in San Jose, got a few sizable commissions. They began searching
for a larger home-a former weekend pastime. They found a model they liked
in Gilroy, but it would be another year before they moved in. In the meantime,
Vanya's adoption was finalized in August 1997. In September, he joined
the growing family. The couple said they could feel God smiling down at
them during those months. "I believe if you take a step in the direction
of your heart, God will provide for you infinitely. We've seen it happen
time and time again," David said. After they moved into their new
home, the adoption for Lise's three sisters, whom were living in a different
children's home in Russia, had been finalized. The girls arrived in Gilroy
with their mom and dad in March of this year.
Making
Adjustments The
three older sisters hung together for a couple of months, then began to
play with Lise and Vanya. "Now, you would never know that they weren't
together since birth," Kerry said. David and Kerry said the children
have adjusted well - emotionally and culturally. The couple watched their
children carefully, relieved to discover that they didn't develop any
side-effects that adoptive children from Eastern European countries have
the potential of developing, including learning disorders and post traumatic
stress disorder. "I really feel we've beat the odds five times,"
Kerry said. All the children but Elena, 12, didn't speak English until
they arrived in the United States. But they all picked up the language
quickly. The simplest things such as car washes, department stores and
elevators left the children awestruck. For Tamara, "everything"
was scary at first, including "big stores," she said shyly.
Mom and Dad also have adjusted, the biggest change being loss of time.
"There's no time for the fun stuff. The icing, hobbies," Kerry
said. "We signed up for this life. We have to carve out a whole new
one." A former insurance broker, Kerry has taken on the task of homeschooling
their children. Used to tackling pages of "to do" lists, she
said she has learned to take the pressure off herself and do what she
can. "I'm just not requiring as much from myself because my plate
wasn't as full before and I just have to be happy with the small bites
I can get." The couple finds time for themselves on Sunday evenings,
or "date night", when the children are at kids' Bible club.
They also block out time to spend with each child. David takes turns running
errands or playing a game in the evening with a different child that the
children fondly refer to as "dates with papa". David and Kerry
say they have no regrets in the way their family came together - only
joy. "I have something now that I didn't have before. It's really
precious," Kerry said.
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