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tv   Documentary  RT  June 8, 2013 6:29pm-7:00pm EDT

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needs. while people die of hunger in other countries. millions of victims every year. where a meal is the most valued treasure. was . and is flood or droughts to blame. canada for as a bad year without a train. we couldn't plant anything on. there was great tongue there and some. i am always a good help comes too late and without good intentions. charity diplomacy and business for nothing.
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jenny and spent long to have eleven children nine of them are adopted seven of the adopted kids hiv positive along if jenny. he knew through new case it was our first adopted child. the only one that we chose personally. didn't select any of the others. didn't really consider it a normal. thing this isn't just shopping where you can go and take things off the shelves and. i think old children if you really should have a family tree it doesn't matter as it is healthy or sick pretty or ugly black hair all red hair or whatever all of them need a mom and a dad tom. this i have zone two girls are like their mother perfectly healthy. this i have to have a separate refrigerator filled with medicine. some take
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half some a quarter everyone has their own dose. the . stuff. at seven o'clock sharp every morning and evening the kids and their father take their medication yes science cannot afford to forget as their lives depend on it. i just wanted to help at least one person who you could say i felt that when i was having contractions before giving birth to anya a doctor came by and said oh that's the one with the husband who's a child the positive and then all the doctors suddenly changed and they started to protect themselves like they were going into space. ten facemasks fifteen pairs of gloves everything they had i was thrown into an isolation ward and my husband
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wasn't allowed anywhere near me. during most of the nine hundred ninety two it was a hospital that handed down their verdict. they diagnosed me with her weight order of the bed was smashed up or leave the mattress and i was just dumped on a rubbish we brought up and then they discharged me from hospital with a temperature of more than thirty nine degrees celsius. over to me and i felt like a complete social outcast where you know good morning everyone everyone i knew relatives neighbors friends. they all just turned their backs on me when you're doing if you're out of the water where i was devastated well for a month or two. i didn't want to talk to anyone and i wanted to be left alone you're not sure what you're on so i started taking drugs. that was my way to kill
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the pain to combat the depression. it was a really terrible time. when i was given a black guy in a fight. they hit me on the head with a hammer. and. that was when i understood i knew that i had to find some new direction to move in they are near enough and so that's how i found the church. ten years ago i saw an absolutely shattered life at my door seemed it was just a couple of steps away from the grave they don't even notice people like us in fact they want to push them away. i came here with a broken soul and a desperate future she didn't have a problem with drugs but she does have other problems they brought her to the rehabilitation center in handcuffs. thank you god for your sons and daughters forgive us and break the curse in these
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people's lives. break the devils call us and bless the. blood of. the rehab they fell in love and they came to me they said they were in love they want to start a family and i said no way i don't even want to hear about that you're a show be positive and she isn't so don't do that please but they came back again saying pastor we love each other we really mean it with us you know that if you're not there it was only after we saw him for the third time to ask him to marry us that he said ok guys it's your fate it's your decision you know and then he gave us his blessing and he married off. the first pregnancy was very difficult. for expecting twins and already had names for them. and you survived the boy died in childbirth after the tragedy expect law and asked her
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husband to adopt a child they decided to take one who was positive. after people learned about the adoption they were really shocked as it turned out it was the first official adoption of an inch any positive child in ukraine. children study in an ordinary village school laura supposed to protect those living with a child be from social discrimination but only their adoptive mother can protect them from ignorance. there's only did that fool her to both of you one day i received a phone call from the headmaster i was told that some of the parents there were causing a fuss my kids had hiv that could be passed on and they were worried about that i had to meet the parents and explain to them that for the virus to transfer my child would have to cut open their arm along with yours and rub the two together. only after that debate calmed down a bit but i still get looks from time to time. hit
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. zero. on. their children so they sometimes get into scraps and sometimes they bleed the main thing the parents were afraid of is that blood would get on somebody and they would catch the virus i try to make sure this doesn't happen i'm always with them. oh ah. yeah we. can do that but that's the we just asked not to fight fight or pinch one another not to eat from the same. but then the. saliva contains a small percent of the virus but this is so minute that infection from saliva is impossible to household objects like cups sporks and shared bathrooms and towels
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cannot transmit the virus. you know was a bit when we took iraq home she was fine she could run and everything was fine but last year she literally started to fall toward me and couldn't walk or jump and we sent her to the hospital for a checkup the doctors told us she was suffering from an overdose they said her medical treatment was all wrong. and then here are my family's hand friends. they said. there is mom. there was a dad and that's your right and the privilege did he mean she spent about four months in the hospital mostly on a drip from one of them want to they were trying to flush out all those chemicals which now we hope and pray and believe in america we ask god that chilled run again
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just the way she used to you know. now we've changed her treatment she needs to go through a series of massages. but the thing is that now we treat the virus but damage her liver. come here baby. what's wrong. when you have. your what happened. why are you crying. and i promise you i said that i had another tragedy in week thirty two or thirty three of the pregnancy i gave birth in which surely the boys died and it was the first one within five minutes the other within two days and this year they would have turned four.
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well if they had been alone healthy we would probably never ever have europe you're also sure your. we didn't plan to have you ever actually we just thought i was going to have two boys and that would be yet. when they came to sasha's adoption but i refused to take her and even though they asked us to do so three times at that time i wasn't ready to make the decision either morally or psychologically she wasn't just him either positive like all the other kids. she also had stage four aids and tuberculosis. my dream was to have parents to have a mom and dad for them to come and take me home. there aren't many people ready to take kids like us. she would be like the dog who said she wouldn't be in this world
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for a long time i touched her head i had clumps of hair and my hand on the and every morning her pillow was covered with their own hair and i thought i had to buy a week for her we were told she was going to live about a year or two at most and i said ok let it be here or two but in a family let her feel it finally when i call children hiv flowers with the same as a flower you simply just have to water and nourish them that was what we needed to do we nursed her like a flower. it was the first new year's eve i spent with a family. i got a lot of presents. was it all and a lot of dress is. so huge and unbelievable to me
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i've never had something like that before. we got her better and she finally blossomed this year she's going to turn fourteen we draw always seeing we do gymnastics we can do it all. those fun. things that completely different no. treatment is a labor of the cells have grown up with that of the dog just shrug their shoulders they can't understand it i think it's all about the family when you're really fail at things can change quickly i think diseases can be treated with love affection.
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it's. just. that it's. always easy it's just that the odds are that he. didn't. have. good leverage or to mccurry was to build a new. fortunately dorna found anything mission to teach music creation and why you should care about humans and. this is why you should care only. the british stock.
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thank you john thank you everyone for that stymie of ation for the side of family. greats. to put that moment it was like a dream come true a dream come true because we're just ordinary people from a village. and it was so fantastic to stand there in front of the whole country and to hear the applause of the elite of the politicians and the famous athletes of
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ukraine it was amazing. but there is it's quite heavy. it's just good for cracking nuts and it's no good for anything else. just a lot of it cried and that was that. you know i'm a driver all the money i make mostly goes towards medication. takes a lot to get them back on their feet after chemotherapy you know. every time we leave the village we drive him finished house.
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well they promised us a good home for the kids every one of us to have his own room said one politician not he was a successful businessman. but he was just good enough to pull concrete for the foundations. i think it was a p.r. stunt to run up we've got to. look at what the front hole was to be here. and the lounge with a t.v. set. and a big terrace. to go to our second floor was going to have several bedrooms each for two people. michelle has two sisters they live one hundred kilometers away from us. never seen them though his mother found out that she was hiv positive when she was in the
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maternity ward and she immediately gave him up. a while later she had enough in prison his grandmother took the girls because they were healthy but misha had to go to an orphanage or. breakthrough or do it once he came back from school really upset he said he was never going to go back there ever again so i asked him what happened with him he said they told him professor i just burst out laughing he didn't understand yet so i told him if you're able to become a real professor i'll be completely happy to have a bright sun like that he thought it was a rude word to. me sure and were adopted right after the twins death the doctors tried to convince her that she would not be able to have children again at that point already had eight adopted children as well as their own daughter. everyone says were a bit crazy but i really felt something inside my heart something like if you was
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to take another two will be blessed so it happened like we adopted two children and i got pregnant mediately their daughter was born perfectly healthy. once a girl wrote to me she said she'd heard my story and decided to marry a man with hiv but things didn't go well she got infected and how to be positive child. i know that i don't have it but still sometimes i have thoughts that maybe i do but i know that i'm not in fact. that we are quite often those couples have healthy children the father cannot and the child the virus can be transmitted only by the mother. is the mother doesn't have it during conception it means the child is going to be one hundred percent healthy puts the little. yellow.
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can i pick up my test results what is your last name. when did you have the test yesterday. here is everything's fine at the negative yes thank you this is goodbye. please don't follow my example you know it can be dangerous for your health. and shoulders back boys dress right attention good morning good morning. i use the same cups and plates that the children with a choice do i was never afraid of that. but in the beginning i couldn't understand why all the officials didn't want to have tea when they came to visit people at some point i just realize they were scheduled they were afraid of getting infected
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so i want to say once again. people are like us a lot of them are amazing. both of your gnostic analogy has set up what's probably the biggest shelter for children in the whole of the former soviet union. these are kids who used to live in basements do you think they were addicted to various sorts of drugs. is the thirty second one i officially adopted. is number thirty two. but called for in the place where i usually put the number maybe i don't remember. if you watch the pasta was the first to tell us about the orphans and the homeless children. children should have their own family we started to get involved in that because of him we would see millions from the age of seven to nine i was living on the streets asking people for money i'd just have
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a bread roll for a whole day the rest of the money was spent on cigarettes beer and vodka. idea. because his own story we took him from the streets he ran away a few times he was a pickpocket and he was always up to something i got him adopted but i didn't even have my own place at the time right at that time your getting started his family shelter. one day of game he invited him to his place i was sort of worried the vitale would steal something right off but it was ok so in three days you have gagne told me to leave the boy and he did kind of well so we decided to leave it at that. sort of renting out my adopted son. at least a room. where
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getting ready for a bike ride we've already traveled about a. i'm kilometers across the whole of ukraine from my old bill to kiev through the border which we've also going to run most of russia we want to travel around the world and tell everyone to adult children he. dies. i want you to have a really good ride today you are a leader make at least fifty that'll make the bike to much easier. when you do we ride to carry the message about adopting children your main goal is to see that all of the orphanages are closed down. so that every child will have a place of their own. and i don't just mean good looking blue eyed ones i'm also talking about the handicapped kids with cerebral palsy the ones with aids or hiv. i
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think they get older regardless of how sick they may be here with. you brought your own home he was nervous in tattered clothes and looked like a wolf i opened the car door and saw him there he was filthy with lots of dirt under his fingernails there was a cell phone in this hands and he looked really scared i didn't know how to start talking to him i asked him if he wanted some sunflower seeds he said no i asked about ice cream i got no. well i've got some pictures here. this is what he looked like when i first brought him here in new. york it was his own father who beat him like this. take some pills he asked me if i did and i said no so he started to hit me.
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he didn't want to hear any explanations he just wanted a result being depressed and drunk he just. the boy was left to fend for himself. he didn't let me outside started to run away trying to make some money. through dumpsters looking for scrap metal. nobody wanted to make friends with me it chased me spat on me. give the boy let his father became sick we went to see him that he had his own money box and i wanted to give him some cash so he could buy a present for his dad but he said he was going to use his own savings so he broke open the box and went to a storm with the best things he could afford and some things that he probably never
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tried himself. this is my real father when i saw in the last time in hospital he was really happy to see me there i told him about my trips to the crimea. he told me to be a good boy take my medicine at the right time and look after my health. i saw that his father was almost crying. forgive him for everything. and i could see that the boy had forgiven him and they were reconciled. because old man died.
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just wasn't interested. he went down a couple of the slides. sounded and. i thought that he just probably didn't like it. instead go bad still he wasn't happy about that it wasn't happy about anything. he just came up to. he said he doesn't need any. except a. moment out. and i love. you know you have eleven kids. in eight years we've become the happiest parents in the world. we have managed to get into those lives. with money away your kids' lives that nobody's interested in children who are
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trying to spend their whole lifetimes in shelters around all finishes. and. they taught us to believe and trust people and i still need to learn more even at my age. about how to fight for one's rights in one's life the most important thing is to believe that's what a lot of grown up stuff to learn from them. the civilized world produces more food than it needs. well people die of hunger in other countries. millions of victims every year. where a meal is the most value trade.
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flood or droughts to blame. it was a bad year without a train. we couldn't plant anything that. we were dead of there was great hunger. was it that help comes too late and without good intentions. charity diplomacy and business model to. a. would be surely find him in the race to the very few. years old used to that but. there's a it is. a good. thing you mean i think that. seriously very little.
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late but. if it is. over here in the head and not was being negotiated in the market i didn't believe it. as you will. see. it is. these are the. corporations.
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spying on the country's citizens even. from. the major between the u.s. . trade.

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