A Soda Bottle and Some Glue

November 19, 2009

Life on the Streets

Life on the Streets

Yesterday I was enjoying a typical lunch with some of Children’s Home Ethiopia’s beneficiaries of injera (Ethiopia’s cultural bread) and shoro watt (chickpea stew) at CHE’s Drop-In Center. As I sat there trying to converse with the kids in Amharic about school and life, I noticed a boy at the door. The boy wanted lunch so a staff member invited him in and gave him a plate. Henok was his name, and he plopped himself down and proceeded to cram the food into his mouth as if he was afraid it was going to be taken from him if he didn’t act fast.

Henok is a handsome boy of about 14 years, with a crooked smile that can easily be mistaken as a smirk. I watched him for a while and noticed that his eyes were bloodshot and glazed over. We locked eyes for a moment at which time I knew something wasn’t quite right. There didn’t seem to be any emotion, any thought, or any consciousness in his stare. It was like I was looking into the eyes of a dead person. I looked at his coat sleeve to see if my suspicions were correct, and was not surprised to see it bulging near the cuff.

In his sleeve was a plastic bottle that contained his cure to the many pains (hunger, neglect, cold, etc…) in his street life – SHOE GLUE. An occasional swig of those fumes simply make life a bit more bearable for Henok. After lunch he staggered outside to play foosball with some of the other kids. A staff member pulled him aside and asked him to give her the bottle of glue while he was at the Drop-In Center (one rule is no drugs at the Center) and she would return it before he left. Henok laughed and then I watched him wobble down the driveway and out of the compound with the bottle of glue never leaving his sleeve. We prayed today that he would come back soon.

While on the streets children, like Henok, are easily lured to things that will dull the hunger and other pains associated with street life. Smoking, drinking, drug use, and even gas or glue inhalation are some of the coping mechanisms children begin to employ. Such things produce momentary comfort, but can severely impair their capacity to mature into healthy adults.

The realities of these forsaken children’s lives are devastating and overwhelming until you embrace the fact that there is a Savior for them and it’s not you or me. My hope tonight is that Henok will know Jesus as his Savior and will no longer need the glue to dull his pains.

Pray for Henok.

Comments

2 Responses to “A Soda Bottle and Some Glue”

  1. Bonnie on November 20th, 2009 3:34 am

    Joe thank you for sharing today with us, it brings reality to me to read this today, I cry tears for Henok and am saddened, but most of all I will commit topray for him to come back to the center but especially that he will know the Love of Jesus. Praise God for safe places for children of our world. Our church will also be praying for Henok! my love mom

  2. Phil Nichols on December 21st, 2009 3:25 am

    Thanks for sending this out, Joe. We (SGBC) will pray for Henok; we will pray that he realize he is trapped in sin, particularly against the image of God in hurting himself; that God would send him a couple of the drop-in kids (or anyone) who are Christians, to tell him of Christ’s love; and that he might recognize that the people at CHE are the ones who can help him more than anyone on the street.

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