Not exact matches
This year, Hillary Clinton has better policy proposals to help improve the lives of women,
children, and families than Donald Trump,
whose pro-life convictions are lukewarm at best, and
whose mass deportation plan would rip hundreds of thousands of families apart,
whose contempt for Latinos, Muslims,
refugees and people with disabilities would further marginalized the «least of these» among us, and
whose support for torture and targeting civilians in war call into question whether Christians who support him are truly pro-life or simply anti-abortion.
And should we even consider the
children whose childhoods are being lost in the Syrian
refugee crisis?
... A young single mother trying to finish community college, and the baby swing that calmed her daughter so she could study... The
refugee family
whose limited beds were already filled with older
children, the crib that kept their new baby safe... A grandfather able to transport his grandson safely with a car seat after being awarded custody of him as a result of his mother's mental illness...
Within several years of arrival, dozens of the Somali families
whose children were born in the U.S. found themselves grappling with autism, says Huda Farah, a Somali - born molecular biologist who works on
refugee resettlement issues with Minnesota health officials.
The mishap that brought him there was related by association to the sad and angry Dr. Mouldy (Nicholas Farrell),
whose wife has just left him; among his patients is one Bosnian
refugee (Walentine Giorgiewa) bearing a war enemy's
child.
«We have a collective responsibility to ensure education plans take into account the needs of some the most vulnerable
children and youth in the world —
refugees, internally displaced
children, stateless
children and
children whose right to education has been compromised by war and insecurity.
Children's literature that addresses real and fictional
refugee experiences can expand readers» understanding of the people
whose lives are uprooted by war.