Accessibility links
Skip to main content
Skip to main Navigation
Skip to Search
MORE
To Readers In Russia
Russia
Russia
Tatar-Bashkir
North Caucasus
Iran
Central Asia
Kazakhstan
Kyrgyzstan
Tajikistan
Turkmenistan
Uzbekistan
South Asia
Afghanistan
Pakistan
Caucasus
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Georgia
Central/SE Europe
Bosnia
Bulgaria
Hungary
Kosovo
Moldova
Montenegro
North Macedonia
Romania
Serbia
East Europe
Belarus
Ukraine
Visuals
Investigations
RFE/RL Investigates
Schemes
Systema
Newsletters
Wider Europe by Rikard Jozwiak
China In Eurasia by Reid Standish
Steve Gutterman's Week In Russia
The Azadi Briefing
Podcasts
The Week Ahead In Russia
Majlis
Current Time
Share Tips Securely
Bypass Blocking
About RFE/RL
Contact Us
Subscribe
Follow Us
All RFE/RL sites
Search
Search
Previous
Next
Breaking News
Moscow Children's Home #19
May 30, 2009 15:24 GMT
1
Many of the residents at Children's Home #19 are the sons and daughters of migrant workers.
2
Leon, who is five, is the son of an African mother and a Russian father.
3
Children of mixed ethnic backgrounds are harder to place with adoptive families, according to the home's director.
4
Some of the children were abandoned when one or both parents returned to their country of origin.
5
11-year-old Misha was taken into care after his father, an Azeri, was convicted of a crime and deported from Russia.
6
Children pray before dinner.
7
Akram, 16, is planning to record a rap album. He says he's proud to be from the children's home.
8
The home has placed 350 children in foster care or adoptive families in the past 15 years.
9
But a new law has abolished Russia's foster system, meaning the children can only wait for adoptive parents.
Moscow Children's Home #19
Related
Official Preparing Obama's France Trip Hit By H1N1
Fortunes Dim, Migrants' Children Get Left Behind
Back to top
XS
SM
MD
LG