| Johnny
Madrid is 22 years old and graduated in June of 2005 from Stanford
University. He spoke at the April 2004 National Convening On Youth
Permanence Conference and told the participants “the hardest
part of foster care was the loneliness”. He’s proud
of his achievements but admits he’s missing something essential,
a family who will be there when he needs a comforting word. He heard
his roommates talk to relatives on the phone and watched them leave
for holidays. He says, “it was hard to watch all that closeness
around him”.
The
vision of Connected For Life is to insure that foster youth are
connected for life to a loving, nurturing, committed family or
caring adult. Then, instead of feeling lonely and isolated, they
will know the same stability, love, unconditional commitment,
and connection to family as children from traditional families.
Then older youth in the foster care system will never have to
experience the loneliness that Johnny Madrid feels today.
Reads
Johnny's front page story entitled "Against all odds, student
triumphs" in the June 8, 2005 San Jose Mercury News. Other
articles linked below.
Madrid
wins Truman Award, aims to reform foster care
|