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Silent Tears: A Journey of Hope in a Chinese Orphanage
 
 

Silent Tears: A Journey of Hope in a Chinese Orphanage [Kindle Edition]

Kay Bratt
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Irrepressible memories. Vacant eyes. A child being dangled from a third story window. A boy tied to a chair. Children sleeping in layers of clothing to fight off the bitter cold. An infant dying from starvation. Some things your mind will never allow you to forget.

Silent Tears is the true story of the adversity and triumphs one woman faced as she fought against the Chinese bureaucracy to help that country’s orphaned children.

In 2003, Kay Bratt’s life changed dramatically. A wife and mother of two girls in South Carolina, Bratt relocated her family to rural China to support her husband as he took on a new management position for his American employer. Seeking a way to fill her days and overcome the isolation she experienced upon arriving in a foreign country, Bratt began volunteering at the local orphanage. Within months, her simple desire to make use of her time transformed into a heroic crusade to improve the living conditions and minimize the unnecessary deaths of Chinese orphans.

Silent Tears traces the emotional hurdles and daily frustrations faced by Ms. Bratt as she tried to change the social conditions for these marginalized children. The memoir vividly illustrates how she was able to pull from reservoirs of inner strength to pursue her mission day after day, leaving the reader with the resounding message that everyone really can make a difference.

Autorenporträt

Kay Bratt grew up in the Midwest as the child of a broken home and later, a survivor of abuse. Facing these obstacles in her own life instilled in Kay a passionate drive to fight for those that had been dealt an unfair hand. Upon arriving in China on an expatriate assignment with her husband in 2003, she was immediately drawn to the cause of China’s forgotten orphans. Moved beyond tears by the stories of these children, she promised to give them the voice they did not have. In 2008, she self-published her memoir Silent Tears: A Journey of Hope in a Chinese Orphanage to do just that. With the help of her readers, Kay continues to raise awareness and advocate for at-risk children. In China, she was honored with the 2006 Pride of the City award for her humanitarian work. Now residing in the states, she is an active volunteer for An Orphans Wish (AOW). Kay currently resides in Georgia with her husband and her daughter.

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Ambassador of Goodwill 27. August 2010
Format:Taschenbuch
In 2003, Kay Bratt and her husband left North Carolina for rural China as Kay's husband relocated their family there for work reasons. The Bratt family anticipated many changes, but not the major changes of helping Chinese babies who had been abandoned and relegated to overcrowded orphanages. Kay initially planned to volunteer part-time at a local orphanage for a few days a week, but the children she met at the orphanage convinced her to stay.

In addition to absorbing, appreciating and having respect for Chinese culture, Kay Bratt has made every good faith effort to demonstrate fairness and tolerance of all she enconutered. Granted, the conditions at the orphanage were appalling and horrific descriptions of outright abuse might even shock Dickens, but she soldiered on, despite her sometimes overwhelming despair.

Orphanage staff received very few supplies and barely enough food to get through the day. They had to inure themselves to their harsh surroundings and those of the children in their care. Many infants died from illnesses that were often untreated as proper medical treatment was not readily available. Food was a scarcity for the children in the orphanage. Malaria-bearing mosquitoes were always a threat and sadly, there were not enough nets to cover the infants. Sadly, some young charges starved. Infant casualties were not considered uncommon.

Fortunately, Kay Bratt was able to secure the trust of the women with whom she worked. In time, she and the staff mobilized forces to feed and protect the children in their care. She rounded up a group of volunteers to bring needed supplies to the orphanage. She was also instrumental in securing medical attention for the children.

Kay Bratt, by then familiar with Chinese culture knew all too well the challenge in getting the Chinese government to stop refusing her entreaties on behalf of the orphanage children. Her biggest fear, aside from abuse and neglect of the children which she witnessed was that the Chinese government might stop allowing American families from adopting the children. In time, she was disabused of her fears as the Chinese government lauded her for bringing the plight of the children to the world's attention via the media.

This is a truly beautiful book that might make you cry. Readers learn about the plight of many Chinese children in orphanages as well as the Bratt family's life in China. Like yin and yang, the balance between portraying both the Bratt family as well as the orphanage gives readers a balanced picture of life in China. I found learning about Chinese culture and the challenges as well as the triumphs the Bratt family faced very interesting and enlightening.

Kay Bratt is truly an Ambassador on a Goodwill Mission. She plainly loves China and China loves her in return. She does not sugar coat things nor does she portray herself as being perfect. She rails against a system and some customs she disagrees with. She is very honest in her presentation and lets readers see the many faces of China and her many people. Also to Kay Bratt's credit, she kowtows to no one and stays true to what she believes is the right thing to do.

I loved the last chapter where e-mails from some of the parents of the children mentioned in the book are included. It really is a very uplifting part of the Bratts' quest to improve the quality of life for many children in China. I especially loved the glossary in Mandarin as a quick tutorial in talking to children just coming from China.

The Boy from Baby House 10: From the Nightmare of a Russian Orphanage to a New Life in America is a good companion book to this one.
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Von beberlin
Format:Kindle Edition|Von Amazon bestätigter Kauf
If you ever come to China, you will be sort of bewildered by the hatred many Chinese feel towards Americans. After reading this book, I kind of get their point. If the book represents the attitude of Americans after they lived many years in China, well... Not surprised anymore.

I have been many times to China and stayed in probably far "worse" living arrangements than described by the author. Nevertheless, she wastes a lot of pages talking about the hardship a (very well reimbursed) expat family has to endure in China (residing in a nice, comfortable home, with a private driver and regularly company paid trips to places such as Thailand.) Big boohoo, you have to pay your housekeeper with your own money. (Which, due to the affluence of work force in China, even today, years after Bratt left China, you can have for a max of 100 dollar on a daily basis even in big cities, let alone small towns.)

While I appreciate Bratt's effort to ease the fate of these children in a local orphanage, she is attending to together with a group of volunteers, it would be much easier to do so if it wasn't for her ongoing self praise on literally every page. Yes, Chinese have sometimes a rough way about life, yes, I believe it was dirty and cold in the orphanage, yes, it is cruel to see young babies dying of illnesses that could easily be cured. But just do your good deed, tell the people about these kids, take care of your family while you do all this: And period. I was hoping to find out much more about these kids, their families, the villages they came from and the places they went to, eventually and if they were lucky. Instead, I have to read through pages and pages of whining, that Bratt cannot buy the cereals and chocolate bars she knows from the U.S., and if they are available, they are oh so expensive. (No word that a lot of other things are oh so cheap in China, like any kind of service such as massage, tailor service, baby sitting, transportation...) To take the cake, she even dares to complain about the vet bills ("a lot of money"). How much can that be in a country where the average income at that time was about a cheap hair cut in New York city?

While the book is a good read in terms of page turning, all the mentioned self praise and whining really takes a lot away from that reading experience. To make it worse, she ads e-mails of adoptive parents in the end, again, oh wonder, praising Bratt. There is one in particular which really undercuts Bratt's intentions: An adoptive mom is writing to her about her new son, how he complains in broken English about his foster mom in China, and at the same time praising Bratt (nicknamed Ti-Ti). While I am absolutely convinced there is a lot of abuse in Chinese foster families and that this little boy has very fond memories of Bratt, this episode seems hard to believe if you know five year olds AND know anything about the psychological process of adoption. The little boy would never find words for these things in the way it was described in this e-mail, he would express it differently. It downgrades the entire book (even considering Bratt's good intentions), because you feel fooled.

If you want to read really good books about life in China, I recommend all of the works of Peter Hessler. He not only knows what he is talking about, he also puts the people he is writing about into the center of attention, not himself.
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116 von 126 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Thank You For Our Son 1. August 2008
Von Avid Reader - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Kay,
This is Le Men's dad. (Le Men was a heart baby in the orphanage described in this book.)

I wanted to write to you and let you know what an astounding service you have done in the publishing of your book. You have provided a glimpse into a world that many, including myself, are unable to fathom and terrified of realizing really exists. As the father of eight, I love my children more desperately than most people can comprehend. And so, it is difficult for me to comprehend situations of abuse and neglect like you describe. I would not have had the strength and determination that you showed to continue returning. I have great confidence in my skills and ability to succeed in many areas in this world. In the battle you faced, I am ashamed to say I would have failed. My love for children would not have been sufficient to overcome my weaknesses.

You asked in your book how God could let these children suffer. I believe in a loving and compassionate God. But, I also believe that we have free will and that nature will play its role of random change within our lives. The whims of men and culture created the situations you describe, not God. God provides the canvas and the paint. We provide the hand. He gently guides the brush when we ask Him.

As I read your book I started out with anger as I read of the suffering of the children. As I read deeper into your story I began to understand, as you did, that the staff in the orphanage were buffering themselves emotionally in a situation that was largely a no win situation. It brought to mind stories from the Civil War and Vietnam where doctors quickly amputated limbs to save a life because there were not sufficient resources, personnel or supplies to save limbs or lives of all those injured. Better to save something than to lose it all. But, it takes an emotional buffering to operate in such situations as you describe. I do not think I could have faced it.

Until I read your book, I did not understand the linkage my wife and I truly played in adopting our four lovely children from China. People tell us 'what a wonderful thing you have done'. We reply 'we did it out of selfishness, an overwhelming desire to have more children in our lives and our family'. I am sure many think we are being modest, but this is very true for us. We never approached adoption as a means of rescuing a child. We were driven by an incredible need to love children. Frankly, it was a need that neither of us fully understood then or now. We did not know of the desperation of the children other than through fleeting comments or inferences or rumors.

Now, I understand that God was guiding my wife and me in ways we did not recognize. We were definitely responding to your prayers without knowing of you or the influence your prayers were having in our lives. I know in my heart that God spoke to us and guided us even as you spoke to Him. So, have faith that God does listen to prayers and does work in ways we can not fathom.

Thank you for all you did for our lovely Le Men. He is truly an astounding boy and will grow into an amazing man. He is loaded with love and compassion and he continues to teach us and expand us each day. These are things that you made possible through your determination to save a child. We have purchased an additional copy of your book to keep for him until he is old enough to read it and understand your blessings, sacrifices and determination that made his life possible.

Thank you for what you have done and the sacrifices you have made. Your incredible determination resulted in simple acts of love and kindness that can change a world. I am sure the Lord will bless and keep you and yours.
43 von 45 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Great topic...average writing 17. Januar 2009
Von Young Bob - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
My wife and I have been blessed with a daughter we adopted from China. I saw this book on Amazon and was looking forward to reading it and gaining some knowledge of a Chinese orphanage.

I received this book for Christmas and started reading it almost immediately upon opening the gift. I made it quickly through the initial chapters but kept waiting for something that never seemed to develop. While the story is moving and the author should be applauded for her efforts to improve the orphange at which she volunteered, it is my opinion her writing style left a great deal to be desired. I guess I was hoping for a better written story with more depth and instead found myself reading a blog of her daily activities.

I would still recommend this book for parents of adopted Chinese chidren or for people with an interest in the story of an orphanage in China. While I'm certain my review will be unpopular, I guess I was simply expecting more and want to let others know my opinion.
44 von 47 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
A story that needed to be told 18. Juli 2008
Von reading mom - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Von Amazon bestätigter Kauf
As the mother of a child adopted from China, I was very interested in reading this book. When it arrived, I couldn't put it down until I got to the last page and yes, I cried throughout.

Kay Bratt tells an important story about the institutional environment so many of our children were raised in. Understanding the trauma they have been through goes a long way to knowing how to help them recover. While this is the story of one orphanage in one country, I imagine the scenarios could be true in far too many places. A must read for parents adopting from an orphanage.
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&quote;
A family is a family no matter what continent you live on; all you need to survive is love and a lot of patience. &quote;
Markiert von 33 Kindle-Nutzern
&quote;
Those who havent dealt with or dont understand depression think that the afflicted person can simply choose to be better and their mood will improve. Some think slipping into an episode is an act of cowardice. I know it is much more than that. I do not like gloom, misery, or feeling hopeless. I have spent my life trying to outrun those feelings. I dont want to be depressed. I want to be healthy and happy, a functioning part of my family. &quote;
Markiert von 19 Kindle-Nutzern
&quote;
The birth country isnt the point at all. If they could see what I see, or hold one of these children in their arms for a minute, theyd realize that it doesnt matter what nationality these kids are or what country they come fromthey just need a home. &quote;
Markiert von 18 Kindle-Nutzern

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