The Art of Giving
featured in San Diego Magazine - May 2008
A cradle is defined as a small bed for infants, but look further in the dictionary
and you'll find another definition: "the place where anything is nurtured during
its early existence." Since 2003, San Diego nonprofit organization La Cuna, Spanish
for cradle, has aimed to be this place of nurturing for the area's most vulnerable
population: foster children ages 5 and under.
"I founded La Cuna because my history has been working with older children; by the
time older foster children are able to speak about their needs, they have almost
no hope," explains Rachel Humphreys, founder and executive director of La Cuna.
"The statistics are so grim: Eighty percent of those incarcerated are former foster
children. We're creating a whole cycle of broken people, and the heartfelt answer
is to take care of children when they need your help—between 0 and 5 when it's the
most critical."
Adding that the majority of babies in foster care never find a stable home, Humphreys
has made it her mission to change the statistics and reverse the downward spiral
caused by infant and child neglect, abuse and abandonment. La Cuna serves as a foster-family
agency training foster parents and focusing on a specific segment of the population:
babies.
Since placing its first foster child in 2005, La Cuna has placed 65 children in
foster homes and seen that 94 percent of them are staying in that home until they're
reunited with rehabilitated family members or adopted—a success that Humphreys
is thrilled to share.
"We're breaking the odds for these kids and increasing their likelihood of growing
up healthy and happy," she says.
La Cuna relies on the community for support in many ways.
"I like to tell people that they can take home a baby, but if that's too difficult,
they can sponsor us instead," Humphreys adds.
Privately funded, La Cuna needs financial support to maintain its services. The
organization also needs volunteers for office work as well as to arrange donation
drives for diapers and other practical new items for babies. A career opportunity
is also currently available for a social worker. No matter what capacity in which
one chooses to work with La Cuna, Humphreys assures it will be a move worth making.
"It's incredibly rewarding to work with this population," Humphreys concludes. "You
can work magic on a child when they're so young and malleable and open to the world.
The window of time is so finite and we can do so much damage, but we can also do
so much good. At this age they still have a fighting chance to grow up and go to
Harvard and have a family, but they're not going to be okay unless we pay attention
to the fact that they're in crisis. This is very critical work."
For more information, call 619-521-9900 or visit www.lacuna.org.