These Children are Home, But Not Alone

The SOS Children’s Villages International continue to bring hope to orphaned kids around the world

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The SOS Children’s Villages International continue to bring hope to orphaned kids around the world

Driving through the bumpy dust tracks that were once the badlands of Faridabad, I finally arrive at a gate behind which lies an extraordinary village. It is a relief to escape the blinding midsummer sun over Greenfields and enter the house, where Molly Mathew and her five children live.

Their living room is dark, cool and neatly decorated—there’s a TV in one corner and a personal computer next to it; the sofas are lined with lace that brings warmth and grace to their cosy home. The aroma of delicious sambar wafts in from the kitchen, where, at a glance, I notice steel bowls arranged neatly in a pyramid. The walls of the living room bear a cluster of photographs—of children mostly, of varying ages, and an elderly gentleman they all call Papaji (see below). Molly, 56, has an infectious smile that spreads around the room quickly. Some of the kids step forward to say namaste; others, a trifle shy, silently clutch on to their mummy’s dupatta.

Molly used to be a nun in Kerala years ago, before she decided to move here. The children—born to a lesser god—were either orphaned or abandoned, and ended up alone in the world. It was the SOS village that brought them together. This is the space where Meenu*, Baby, Rini, Indu and their brother Romit feel loved and safe. The only place they know they can call their own.

The SOS villages’ goal is simple yet powerful: “When a child loses everything, SOS Children’s Villages International is there to give them a family and a home. We raise orphaned and abandoned children and provide them with all the things a normal family would: food, clothing, education, medical care, but, most of all, hope.”

SOS International has been nurtu-ring children, the world over—87,100 orphaned and abandoned children in 572 villages spread across 135 countries—for almost 70 years. In India there are 32 villages in 22 states where over 26,000 children ar...

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