Adoption Headline News: Blind Dad adopts blind son
Love is blind. This is the amazing story of Pandu, the 5 year old miracle boy from India. If you are interested in learning more about adoption… don’t miss this video! Their journey is captured this month in People Magazine and CBS News. I want to hear your comments.
People will adopt older kids. They’ll adopt disabled kids and neglected kids. Kids who can’t read, kids who can’t talk – there are people willing to adopt. But all those things in one child? CBS News Correspondent Steve Hartman reports there are few who want that.
Born blind, Pandu was dumped at a hospital gate in India. At the orphanage, he was the one child who was there year after year, until last year. That’s when the 5-year-old got swept up by a Denver couple who said he was just what they were looking for: a little boy with his father’s eyes.
Jason Fayre teaches blind people how to be self-sufficient. So when he and his wife Lalena, who can see, decided to adopt they chose not to just give any child a home, but to give one special child a real chance – a chance he would have never had otherwise.
“I think we can offer something to a blind child that maybe a lot of other families can’t,” said Jason.
Pandu is so much better than when they got him. After 5 years in a crib with virtually no human contact, they say Pandu was almost wild. But a year later he’s in a mainstream preschool, and he’s beginning to speak for the very first time. He’s even learning the finer points of picking out a pumpkin. Of course, he chose a Braille one; like father like son. “Pandu and him have always kind of had this connection,” said Lalena.
Although it’ll be years before Pandu can fully appreciate the enormity of his good fortune, there’s no doubt he understands something pretty special is happening to him.
You don’t have to be a blind man to see that.
Fayre Family Blog
Kari, our little Vee is in the same children's home in India where Pandu lived. I so love his story. Older child adoption or adopting children with special needs is of course uncertain, but there are so many uncertainties with ANY child–biological or adopted. I pray Pandu's story stirs hearts toward children that might otherwise be overlooked.
Thanks for posting!
Uplifiting story. Thanks for sharing! The Lord has really placed a BIG burden in our heart for special needs kids.