Challenges Faced by Orphane
INTRODUCTION
An orphanage is a residential institution devoted to the care of orphans—children
whose biological parents
are deceased or otherwise unable or unwilling to take care of them. Biological
parents, and sometimes biological grandparents, are legally responsible for
supporting children, but in the absence of these, no named godparent, or other
relatives willing to care for the children, they become a ward of the state, and
orphanages are one way of providing for their care, housing and education.
It is frequently used to describe
institutions abroad, where it is a more accurate term, since the word orphan
has a different definition in international adoption. Most children who live in
orphanages are not orphans; four out of five children in orphanages having at
least one living parent and most having some extended family. Most orphanages
have been closed in Europe and North America. There remain a large number of
state funded orphanages in the former Soviet Bloc but they are slowly being
phased out in favour of direct support to vulnerable families and the
development of foster care and adoption services where this is not possible. Few large
international charities continue to fund orphanages; however, they are still
commonly founded by smaller charities and religious groups
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