USA
Everything happened so quickly. I was laughing, talking trash and
schooling kids on the basketball court in the gymnasium of my
after-school program one evening when I was suddenly asked to leave the
court and follow an administrator to a conference room. I was 12 years
old.
As we walked down the hallway, I couldn’t help wondering if
I was in trouble, since that was the norm. Instead, I found myself
walking into a situation that forever changed my life. I was met by my
social worker, who was standing in the room along with my two of my
siblings. She shared with us that we were not going to be returning home
to our mother, with whom we had been living for the past two years.
No explanations or goodbyes; instead, we gathered our book bags and
were driven to the Department of Social Services, where our belongings,
packed in duffle bags, were sitting in the middle of the floor, ready
for us to leave a situation that was all too familiar. This wasn’t my
first time being abruptly yanked out of my living situation, and it
wouldn’t be the last.
At birth I was abandoned by my parents, who
left me in the hospital as they struggled to escape drug addiction,
criminal activity and poverty. I was then placed in permanent
guardianship with my great-aunt, who raised me and my two siblings for
10 years. When I was 10, my mother was no longer on drugs and fought to
regain custody of us. By the summer of 1998, my older brother, younger
sister and I were moving in with her and my 16-year-old sister, of whom
my mom had previous custody.
I remember moving in and thinking
that things would be better for us; I finally got the mom of my dreams.
But those dreams quickly dissolved. My mother, who had suddenly become a
single mother of four, was trying to figure it all out with little
resources, guidance or support. She typically left us home alone while
she spent long hours at work just to make ends meet. She was overwhelmed
by the daily routine of being a mom, and she began to lash out with
physical and emotional abuse.
After two years, she felt it was
better to place us in foster care. What she did not realize is that the
system that had the responsibility to protect and “do no harm” became a
place where I experienced multiple traumas, including being separated
from her and my siblings.
As I grew older, I realized that my
story wasn’t unique. Many of my black peers also grew up in foster care.
How many black kids were being snatched from their homes because their
families simply couldn’t take care of them? We did not deserve to be
placed into state care but instead needed to have holistic support that
addressed the needs of our families.
Instead of being reunited
with my mother and siblings, I became this commodity, like countless
other young people who lingered in the system. At the age of 18, I was
told “See you later,” with my belongings stuffed into garbage bags yet
again. I was tossed out and had to figure out how I was going to
navigate life.
According to national data, there were
approximately 428,000 children in the U.S. foster care system in 2015.
Over half the children placed into foster care (pdf) that year were
children of color; black children made up 23 percent of those children.
In 2015, more than 20,000 foster children of color aged out of the
foster care system without reuniting with their families or finding
permanent homes.
Foster youths are also one of the most
disadvantaged groups in the United States. According to the National
Foster Youth Institute, nearly 20 percent of those who age out of the
system end up homeless, and nearly 60 percent of young men who grew up
in foster care have been convicted of a crime. Being in foster care,
separated from their families, also takes its toll on children:
Twenty-five percent of kids in the system will suffer from
post-traumatic stress disorder.
There are many theories as to why
black children enter the foster care system at much higher rates than
other groups. These theories include racial bias among social workers in
reporting, as well as institutional practices and policies that reek of
racism and lead to poverty and substance abuse and inflict physical
harm. Either way, it is important to highlight how the child-welfare
system is set up to penalize families instead of providing resources and
preventive services to preserve the family structure.
It costs
more, both emotionally and financially, to take children out of the home
than to keep them with their families and provide support. There must be
safety nets provided to families that are struggling, because the cycles
of abuse, abandonment, neglect, poverty and suffering will continue to
spill over into future generations. Institutional practices must also be
confronted and dismantled. Foster care is supposed to be a temporary
haven until families are in a place where they can care for their
children; during this process, it is imperative that dignity, worth and
compassion are preserved.
Being trapped in the foster care system
can feel inescapable and debilitating. Losing a child to the system is
equally challenging. I could easily have fallen through the cracks like
many other young people who leave care. The reality is that we will all
be affected by the adversity that young black people face in foster care
until society finds equitable ways of supporting black families and
their children. We must empower and give agency to families that are
often marginalized, unprotected and subjugated to racist practices,
while also holding the system accountable to ensure that every young
person can succeed.
By Amnoni L. Myers
28 May 2018
This piece was written in observance of National Foster Care Month to shed light on the adversities and challenges that thousands of children and their families experience, as well as to pursue hope. You can learn more at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.