1. The child must be severely disabled — completely unable to walk, talk, feed, or care for themselves in any way.
2. The child must be truly orphaned or permanently abandoned — no family member willing or able to provide care.
3. The disability must be permanent and lifelong — not temporary or recoverable.
4. The child must be under the age of 12 at the time of admission.
5. The family must have formally relinquished all rights to the child.
6. The child must come from extreme poverty where the family genuinely cannot cope.
7. There must be clear evidence of stigma-driven abandonment — the disability itself was the primary reason for rejection.
8. The child must be medically stable enough to survive transfer and initial care.
9. The child must have no realistic prospect of adoption or foster care in their country.
10. Admission must be recommended by a local doctor, social worker, or orphanage with supporting medical documentation.
11. The child must not have any highly contagious or life-threatening infectious disease that could endanger the other children.
12. The child must be free from severe behavioral issues such as extreme aggression or self-harm that would require specialized psychiatric facilities beyond your home’s capacity.
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