[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 151 (Tuesday, September 19, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Page S5855]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
25TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE NYUMBANI CHILDREN'S HOME
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of
its founding, I would like to share a few remarks about the Nyumbani
Children's Home.
Marcelle and I have always enjoyed learning about and celebrating the
continued growth and successes of Nyumbani. Those successes are because
of the people who choose to dedicate their time, valuable skills, and
scarce resources to a noble cause--that of saving and improving the
lives of others.
We have been particularly touched and moved by the stories of the
children of Nyumbani. Despite confronting tremendous personal medical
and social challenges, these young people have been nurtured,
nourished, educated, and cared for in a safe and loving environment.
These children have also benefited from advances in medical and
therapeutic care that were unimaginable when this refuge was founded on
September 8, 1992. To know that many of the children raised there have
now grown into magnificent young people is a testament to the mission
of this center.
When the Nyumbani Children's home was founded, there was certainly no
assurance that these results would necessarily follow. The inspired
efforts of our friend, Father Angelo D'Agostino, or Father D'Ag, have
led to these successes. Father D'Ag was a man of faith who combined an
incredible work ethic with vision and an insatiable, indomitable will.
He was a man whose friendship I cherished.
Father D'Ag realized that the terror, stigma, and uncertainties
associated with the transmission of the AIDS virus was responsible for
a generation of orphans. Cruelly, AIDs also denied these children a
home because Kenyan orphanages would turn them away out of fear and an
inability to provide appropriate medical care, but Father D'Ag would
not walk away.
It began when Father D'Ag took on the care of three children who had
been abandoned and were destined to die alone. From that modest
beginning, the Nyumbani Children's Home became a forerunner in
providing care to those affected by the scourge of HIV.
In the decades since, Father D'Ag's vision has grown to encompass not
only the original Children's Home, but also an advanced diagnostic
laboratory, the unique Nyumbani Village, and an indispensable community
outreach program that provides medical care to residents of distressed
communities in Nairobi.
As a doctor and Jesuit priest, Father D'Ag innately understood the
principle that every life has value and dignity. His character and his
knowledge compelled him to act when others stood paralyzed by fear and
doubt.
Sharing his compassion and conviction from the outset was Sister Mary
Owens, Nyumbani's remarkable executive director since Father D'Ag's
passing in 2006. Each of us is enormously thankful for the work of
extraordinary people like Father D'Ag and Sister Mary. We are grateful
for the many lives that have been saved and all that has been
accomplished by Nyumbani over the past 25 years and look forward to
success stories in the next 25 years.
Nyumbani is a representation of what good can come when dedicated
people cast aside fear and doubt, bring forward the true human spirit,
and help those in need.
(At the request of Mr. Schumer, the following statement was ordered
to be printed in the Record.)
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