Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Kazakhstan

Our second choice is Kazakhstan. This is for the simple reason their minimum age for adoption is 1. While we don't mind adopting at age 1, we would prefer younger. Kazakhstan, just like Uzbekistan, is well aware of the exorbitant prices the adoption agencies charge and prefer to work directly with the parents. Photo listings are illegal for Kazakhstan. The only way to be matched with a child is to go to the country and bond with the child. These countries are more concerned about the parents and child truly bonding than parents thinking a child is pretty and selecting that one. 


The children are of Asian, Eurasian and Caucasian descent, and usually, parents adopting from this country can choose to adopt a child of any ethnic heritage. Children are generally well cared for with only the usual health issues. The entire process takes less than one year. Children who end up in the orphanages of Kazakhstan are typically abandoned at birth at the hospital. This means a minimal amount of the birth parent history may be available, along with some of the child's medical history. These children are usually abandoned due to extreme poverty- because the birth family is unable to provide for them. Children in Kazakhstan are the same races as those from Uzbekistan. 

Picture from a family who adopted from Kazakhstan. Aren't they beautiful?


Kazakhstan has many more adoptions from the U.S. than Uzbekistan. We happen to also have a friend with family ties there which could possibly help us along the way. Just like with Uzbekistan, we will have to travel to the country, hire a facilitator who would help us with travel and language barriers, and stay there for 4-6 weeks while we meet a child and finalize the process. 




The indigenous Kazakhs were a nomadic Turkic people who belonged to several divisions of Kazakh hordes.They grouped together in settlements and lived in dome-shaped tents made of felt called yurts. Their tribes migrated seasonally to find pastures for their herds of sheep, horses, and goats. Although they had chiefs, the Kazakhs were rarely united as a single nation under one great leader. Their tribes fell under Mongol rule in the 13th century and they were dominated by Tartar khanates until the area was conquered by Russia in the 18th century. They gained independence from the former Soviet Republic in 1991. 









No comments:

Post a Comment