Sunday 27 June 2010

Baobei Babies...

I finally managed to find some volunteering (which doesn't involve paying money to do worthwhile causes - weird i know) with the Baobei Foundataion which basically involved poking a little orphan who is in hospital either waiting for or recovering from an operation.

The Baobei Foundataion basically works with orphanages all over China to fund operations for children mainly born with from some kind of spinal problems, like spina bifida and some other thing which i had never heard of... anyway the foundation organises for the orphans to come to Shanghai, they then pay for their operation and once recovered they try and place the baby in a 'healing home' - a foster family who look after the baby until they are adopted.


The Ayi and baby, 'Ke Xin' [可馨]
Often they try and get an Ayi (carer) from the same orphanage the baby is from to bring the baby to Shanghai and stay with the baby 24/7 during the baby's hospital stay. So I spent some time with Ke Xin (a 9month baby girl with spina bifida) to allow the Ayi to have a little break, like have a shower or go buy lunch.



Attempting to speak to the Ayi in Chinese, she said that many of the children from her orphanage (in HeNan province [河南]) tend to be adopted by americans, however some children, especially those with more serious disabilities tend to stay in the orphange long term. According to one of the ladies who works for Baobei Foundation, some of the children are found days after birth and some with no information on their birth or name, which leads to some babies having to have their birth date estimated from the state of their umbilical cord and names given to them by the orphanage.

You'll be happy to know that Ke Xin recovered very quickly from her little surgery and was discharged on thursday to stay in her foster home. Even the Ayi was impressed at how well Ke Xin had been doing and that she had put on weight since the operation.

Saturday 12 June 2010

Expo!

So we finally got to the Expo (after Tanya generously let us steal her tickets for a day - Thank you Tanya!). The place is HUGE, and we spent most of the day (and a bit of the evening) just wondering around the site looking at the pavilions, and considering the fact that most of the queues were 3-4 hours long, we only managed to go inside two pavilions: the first was the Netherlands - which had a very fast moving queue and the Phillpines which had NO queue on the account that the inside held almost zero cultural interest and looked like a cross between a night club and a trinket shop.


Israel had a very funky pavilion

...but it was apparently being held together by duct tape


[Left] There were people sleeping on benches (and on grass) all over the site, and after walking around for 4 hrs it started to look like a great idea.
[Right] Kids with Haibao dolls


Resting in the shade playing cards - please note the 'expo seats' which 90% of people were carrying around.

[Left] British Pavilion [Right] Korean Pavilion with a really cool facade made up of Korean characters

Italian Pavilion