Ilona Manzyuk, 2L
Policy Intern at the Congressional Coalition for Adoption Institute
In the midst of the hustle of a regular business day in
Washington, DC, I take a moment to reflect on what brought me here in the first
place and led to my internship with the Congressional Coalition on Adoption
Institute (CCAI). I feel so blessed when
I think about the various experiences and opportunities that have greatly
impacted the course of my life. It all
started with a desire to help orphans.
When I was a teenager, my church in California often raised
awareness of the issues faced by children without families in my native
country, Ukraine. These children were
orphans, living on the streets or spending their childhood in orphanages. It
broke my heart, and I set out to discover what I could do to help. In 2007, I joined a missionary group on a
short trip to Ukraine. We brought gifts and
conducted activity-filled summer camps for the orphan children to brighten their
days. My heart was captured by the
children I served, and I knew this experience would have a lasting impact on my
life.
Two years later, in 2009, I spent a summer working with
Agape International Ministries, a nonprofit that serves children in over 40
orphanages around Ukraine. The ministry organizes
summer camps, provides humanitarian aid, fosters mentorship relationships
between locals and the children in orphanages, and teaches the children about
the love of Jesus Christ. During this
trip, I had the opportunity to serve as a Russian and Ukrainian interpreter for
the director of a partnering nonprofit, Heart for Orphans, based in Williamsburg,
Virginia. I accompanied the director on
her trip to the orphanage that she had adopted three of her daughters from more
than ten years earlier. Hearing about her adoption story and how her children
flourished since their adoption was incredibly inspiring. After my experiences in Ukraine, I was
determined to pursue a profession that would allow me to assist prospective
adoptive families. This decision led me to the legal field because legal
counsel is often a necessary step in facilitating adoptions.
When I began applying to law schools, my friend Elissa
Polley informed me about an adoption symposium hosted by the Center for Global
Justice at Regent University School of Law. At the symposium, I met Becky Weichhand, who
is the current Policy Director of CCAI. It was inspiring to hear about CCAI’s work in
educating Congress about the important issues faced by our foster care system,
as well as the unnecessary barriers to domestic and international adoptions. This symposium strengthened my desire to
pursue a legal education. Also, learning
about the dedication that the Center for Global Justice has to child welfare issues
encouraged me to attend Regent University School of Law.
My first year of law school has flown by and I am grateful
to find myself interning for CCAI this summer. As a Policy Intern, I am constantly learning
about child welfare issues encompassing adoption and the foster care system. I track and review current bills written by Members
of Congress that seek to reform and improve the foster
care system and the adoption process, and to help birth families keep and
provide for their children. I am preparing
a report about the effects of the recent political events in Ukraine on
intercountry adoptions from Ukraine by U.S. citizens. I have had the opportunity to attend several
hearings by House and Senate committees related to these issues. I am also serving as an advisor to one of
CCAI’s Foster Youth Interns as he prepares a policy proposal. This proposal focuses on ways in which former
foster youth can overcome hurdles in finding employment and become
self-sustaining adults after aging out of the foster care system—and he will
present it before several Members of Congress in July!
I have learned so
much in these past few weeks, and I know that my work with CCAI is preparing me
to achieve my future goal of helping families adopt orphan children. I am thrilled and consider myself fortunate to
have the opportunity to learn so much about the policies that shape domestic
and intercountry adoptions, as well as our foster care system. It is an honor to be surrounded by people who
are dedicated to keeping these important issues on the forefront and make sure
our policymakers are fully aware of the need for reform so children in need of
families are not forgotten.
what an inspiring story
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