Sponsored Star for June – $2,000 Grant Available!
Meet Quinn, GWCA’s Sponsored Star for June!
Quinn is an adorable 2 and a half year old girl who was born with Down syndrome. While she has some delays that are associated with her need she is doing very well! She can crawl and stand by herself, and she’s learning to walk using a small chair for stability. Quinn loves to listening to music, looking at picture books, dancing and coloring. She is able to use her hands to hold small objects and pass them back and forth.
Earlier this year one of our matching specialists had the opportunity to meet Quinn during a trip to China, and she would be happy to speak with any families that have questions about her.
As our Sponsored Star, Quinn has a $2,000 grant available towards her adoption fees! If you are interested in seeing Quinn’s file or learning how you can be matched with her, visit our China Waiting Child Photo Listing or contact our China Matching Team today!
What is a Sponsored Star?
On the 1st of each month, Great Wall China Adoption will feature one of the kiddos from our Orphanage Partnerships as our monthly “Sponsored Star!” As our Sponsored Star, that child will be provided a $2,000 grant towards their adoption fees! Each of the kiddos selected will be a Special Focus child, meaning they have not found their Forever Family yet due to their age, or the degree of their needs. Together, we can find loving homes for these amazing kids!
We encourage any families interested in learning more about our Sponsored Star of the Month to visit our China Waiting Child Photo Listing, or contact our China Matching Specialists to learn how you can be matched today! Check back on the first of each month to meet the newest featured child!
Read More8 New Kids on the Block!
Mark is a cute little boy that is 1 and a half yeas old. Mark had a spinal meningocele that was operated on and removed, which led to his legs being paralyzed, and he also has cerebral palsy. He has normal eye sight, normal defecation and urination, and he seems to be doing well cognitively. Mark is learning to speak and is actively babbling. He knows his name and he will respond when you call him. He likes babbling with his caretakers and cuddling with them. He likes listening to music and playing with other children. He can grasp toys and pass toys between his hands. Mark receives rehabilitation and gets his lower limbs massaged regularly. Mark’s caretakers say that he smiles and laughs a lot!
You can contact the China Home Finding Team at Great Wall if you would like to learn more about adopting Mark. We hope we are able to find Mark his Forever Family soon!





Click Here to Watch my Video!Ruby is a sweet kiddo who is about to turn 12 years old in July! Ruby is cheerful, talkative, friendly and always has a ready smile. She is an active kiddo who loves to be around her peers. Ruby often helps take care of the younger children and she loves telling them stories. Her language comprehension skills are great and she can communicate well. Ruby looks forward to going to school everyday and has made great progress so far! She has great motor skills and really enjoys being active. She likes to running and playing on the swings in the summertime. If you’d like to learn more about Ruby, contact one of our matching specialists!

Charlie is a little shy when you first meet him, but he quickly warms up to you. He is very sociable and extroverted. He enjoys listening to music and singing. The GWCA staff member that met Charlie said that he is just a really sweet boy with a very kind heart and a warm personality. Charlie always seems to have a smile on his face and is very observant of the world around him. The GWCA staff member that met Charlie said she can’t believe that no one has adopted him yet because he is such a wonderful little boy!
Charlie is in 5th grade and is one of the top students in his class. Charlie has been chosen to be the Teacher’s Assistant in his class, which is a great honor and responsibility for him. Charlie has excellent self-care abilities such as dressing himself, bathing himself and eating on his own.
You can contact the China Home Finding Team at Great Wall if you would like to learn more about adopting Charlie. We hope we are able to find Charlie his Forever Family soon!
Read MoreAdorable Photos from Neijiang Partnership
Our China matching specialists have just received photos of 8 adorable kiddos from one of our newest orphanage partnerships in Neijing! We are so excited for the opportunity to work with this orphanage, and we are looking forward to finding loving Forever Families for their kiddos. As we are still several months out from receiving these kids’ files, it is unclear whether their files will be considered LID or Special Focus. However, due to their young ages, it is likely that their files will only be LID unless they have more moderate or severe needs. As such, their files may only be available to families that have their dossiers logged in.
Our staff from the Beijing office truly enjoyed their visit to the orphanage, and shared a bit about their experience with us:
If you’re interested in learning more about our China adoption program or learning how you get started with the LID track, contact our China matching specialists today!
- Learn more about adopting form China
- Contact a China Matching Specialist
- LID vs Special Focus – What’s the Difference?
12 New Kids Added This Week!
Tony is an adorable 5-year old kiddo in need of a forever family! Tony was diagnosed with PKU, but seems to be doing very well! His file indicates that he may have some cognitive delays as well, but we are working hard to learn more updated information. His caretakers describe him as a affectionate kiddo who loves to play with his friends. Despite having a digestive need, he appears to eat a wide variety of foods without issue. If you’d like to learn more about him, please reach out to Great Wall!

Since Jeremiah’s file is over a year old we are working hard to get some more updated information about him. You can contact the China Home Finding Team at Great Wall if you would like to learn more about adopting Jeremiah. We hope we are able to find Jeremiah his Forever Family soon!

Huck is babbling but he is not yet talking, and his hearing is normal. His caretakers say he is delayed cognitively, but it is unclear if he has any actual mental issues or if he is just generally delayed because he hasn’t had surgery on his heart or palate. Huck does like to imitate the words and actions of those around him.
Huck has an extroverted personality and is active. He is fond of listing to music and he really enjoys being cuddled by his caretakers. If he is upset, he will stop crying right away when he is picked up and cuddled. Huck can grasp toys and play with them.
You can contact the China Home Finding Team at Great Wall if you would like to learn more about adopting Huck. We hope we are able to find Huck his Forever Family soon!








Savannah has normal intelligence development and can read simple poems. She has a quiet personality and she is fond of playing with toys and listening to music. She gets along well with other children in the orphanage. She has good self-care skills such as taking on and off her own clothes. She speaks 5-10 word sentences and asks questions like “what is that?” Other than her heart condition, Savannah appears to have normal physical development.
Savannah’s file is brand new, so this information is very current. You can contact the China Home Finding Team at Great Wall if you would like to learn more about adopting Savannah. We hope we are able to find Savannah her Forever Family soon!

Christian is now able to sit, stand and walk by himself. He can use his thumbs and index fingers to pick up small objects, to take a block out of the cup and knock two blocks together. Christian has normal hearing and vision, so he can locate the sound source and follow a moving toy visually. Christian can some words and knows many people’s names and can call out for them. He can communicate with others normally, he understands the meaning of “no,” and he knows how to give the object he is being asked for to the person who is asking for it. He can wave goodbye and blow kisses.
Christian is able to cooperate with his caretakers when he is being dressed, and is able to put on his own shoes by himself. He is very happy when a caretaker he knows well comes in the room. Christian is quiet and shy, but he gets along very well with other children. He likes to listen to music and whenever music is turned on he lights up with joy. Christian’s caretakers describe him as a lovely child and they hope he is able to find a Forever Family soon.
You can contact the China Home Finding Team at Great Wall if you would like to learn more about adopting Christian. We hope we are able to find Christian her Forever Family soon!
Read MoreCelebrating 20 Years of Blessings!
Adoption reminds us to be grateful. Each day reminds us that for each parent, each family who begins their journey towards welcoming a new family member, that journey represents a child who will have a place to call home. A family, a home, and a whole heart is the blessing of adoption, and with each trip, the journey of an orphan ends and the journey of a family begins.
Today we are grateful to have followed the countless journeys of our adoptive families for twenty years. Today marks Great Wall China Adoption’s 20th anniversary! We have had 20 years to work with some of the most amazing families opening their hearts and homes to children in need of a family to call their own. This is 20 years of blessings that could not have happened without you! Today we are grateful for each and every one of the families who have adopted, followed our journey, or lent a voice to the children in need. You are the ones who have made it possible for us to reach this milestone! Here’s to an amazing twenty years, over 9,000 orphans home, and many more to come!
Visit our Waiting Child Photo Listing | Contact our China Matching Specialists | Learn More!
Read More8 New Kids on the Block
Oliver is a cute little guy that will turn 4 in July! He was born with Congenital Heart Disease but has not received any sort of surgery for his condition. Surgery for his heart is planned but not yet scheduled. Oliver is described as having an active personality! We received an update on him and his caretakers say that he is super talkative compared to his peers! His updated information also indicates that his cognitive development has been above average compared to his peers. He loves being around other children and always has a ready smile. Oliver is fond of playing games and listening to music and his caretakers say he is quick in reaction. He is able to go up and downstairs on his own and he can assist his caretakers in getting dressed. If you are interested in reviewing Oliver’s file, contact one of our matching specialists today!
Ireland is an adorable little girl from China that is two and a half years old. Ireland has cerebral palsy and esotropia of her eyes. Ireland’s file was prepared in February 2015, so all of the following information is from when she was only 16 months old. Ireland is receiving rehabilitation training and so she is learning to stand. Ireland can sit up on her own and stand holding on to things. Ireland is babbling and laughs happily when her caregivers speak to her. She can hold toys on her own and will turn her head when she hears her name being called. Her caregivers say she is very happy and cooperative when she is receiving rehabilitation training.
Since Ireland’s file is over a year old we are working hard to get some more updated information about her. You can contact the China Home Finding Team at Great Wall if you would like to learn more about adopting Ireland. We hope we are able to find Ireland her Forever Family soon!

Chester likes to listen to music and watching TV. Chester can understand his caregiver’s instructions and can respond to them. Chester speaks some basic words, although his pronunciation is somewhat unclear. Chester imitates his caretaker’s words and actions. Chester is not potty trained yet, but that is not uncommon for a child his age with Down’s Syndrome.
You can contact the China Home Finding Team at Great Wall if you would like to learn more about adopting Chester. We hope we are able to find Chester her Forever Family soon!



Check out my NEW video! Marshall is an adorable kiddo who is 4 years old! Upon coming to the institute it was discovered that he has syphilis. Marshall is described as being a timid kiddo but gets along great with other kiddos. He has delayed physical and cognitive development but it is unclear whether these delays are a result of his syphilis diagnosis or his institutional environment. Marshall is fond of listening to music and playing games with other children! He can follow instructions and help his caretakers with simple tasks. Marshall’s file is a little outdated so Great Wall is working on getting some updated information. Contact one of our matching specialists to review his file!

New Orphanage Partnership in Sichuan Province
GWCA Partners with Orphanage in Sichuan Province!
We are thrilled to announce that GWCA has just signed yet another Orphanage Partnership, this time with an orphanage in Sichuan province! Our China Matching team had the opportunity to visit this new orphanage during a visit to China earlier this year, and we are so excited to work with them to find loving Forever Families for their Waiting Children!
If you’re interested in learning how you can be matched with one of the Waiting Children from GWCA’s Orphanage Partnerships, contact our China Matching Team today!
What is an Orphanage Partnership?
GWCA’s Orphanage Partnerships work directly with our agency to prepare children’s files so that we can place them with loving Forever Families as quickly as possible! Once a child’s file has been prepared by one of our partner orphanages, it is given directly to our agency rather than being placed on China’s Shared List. This means that our families have the opportunity to be among the first to see these children’s files when considering if they would be a good fit for their family. If you’re interested in learning more about the kiddos from our OPs, contact our China Matching Specialists, or visit our China Waiting Child Photo Listing today!
Read MoreMeeting GWCA’s LID Girls
The last orphanage I went to during my two week trip to China was in the Guangxi province down near Vietnam. This would be the orphanage visit that would impact me the most out of our entire trip. I’ll get to that more in a minute.
While the buildings at this Social Welfare Institute (SWI) were rather large, only one small hallway was devoted to the orphaned children at this facility. The rest of the SWI was focused mainly on care of the elderly. The orphanage section consisted of three small rooms that were connected by an open passage.
The first two rooms were lined with metal railed beds and cribs, while the last room had a mat on the floor for playing, a rocking chair and a television mounted on the wall.
I was looking forward to coming to this orphanage because I knew there were four little girls under 2 years old with more minor needs and I was looking forward to meeting them. Three of the girls had pre-op cleft lip and cleft palate, the fourth was a little younger and was born very premature. I had a feeling that all four of these girls would be LID when their files were prepared.
LID stands for Log In Date or Logged In Dossier. LID children, also known as Non-Special Focus kids, are children that are considered to be the youngest children with the most minor needs available in the Waiting Child Child Adoption Program. For families looking for a young girl under 3 with very minor needs, the “LID Track” is usually what they will be doing. Basically to review files of LID children, you have to have your dossier paper work, including your home study, completely done and logged into China. At that point you will wait until our agency receives LID files from our orphanage partnerships, like the girls
I met at this Guangxi orphanage, and then you will get to review those files. Once you find a file of a child that is a good fit for your family, you will then get matched with that child and then you’ll only have to wait 3-4 months until you can travel to go pick that child up.
I can say that for my agency, Great Wall China Adoption, we don’t currently have many LID families because we’ve matched so many recently. So this is actually a great time for families to join our agency, start their paper work process, and get their dossier logged in and then get on the list to review LID files. If a family wants an LID girl, they’ll usually be waiting around 9-12 months after their dossier gets logged in to China before they find a match. However, it could be sooner than that since our LID family list is so short at this present time. It could also take longer than that if a family is only open to one or two minor needs and if they want to review many LID files before moving forward with a child. But the average time is 9-12 months after a family’s dossier is logged in.
To find a match of an LID boy it’s usually more like 4-8 months, as there are many more boys than girls available in China. Also many families looking for a younger boy with minor needs can often find one on the Special Focus listing, as China wants to give those younger boys every opportunity to be placed since there are so many of them. In general more families are looking to adopt a girl and there are much fewer girls available in the Waiting Child program, so if a family is open to a boy, they can get matched with a boy much faster than with a girl.
So back to what I was saying about these kiddos I met at the orphanage in Guangxi. When I first went to the orphanage it was early evening and the sun was setting.
Most of the little kiddos were already in their cribs, some tied to the railings so they wouldn’t try to climb out and get hurt at night. When I first came in all of the children were in shock seeing me because I was almost certainly the first non-Chinese person they had ever seen. I LOVE babies and so all I wanted to do was go up to each and every one of these little girls and pick them up and give them kisses, but I restrained myself because I knew that would probably terrify them and I didn’t want them to get upset.
After a little while some of the girls started to smile at me and you could tell they were definitely warming up to me. There was one little baby sitting in a bouncer on the floor who was definitely not a fan of me (she wasn’t one of the four girls I was planning on screening the next day) and she cried every time I looked at her. That’s actually a totally normal reaction for a little 8 month old baby to have, so I understood why she wasn’t a fan of me. I was excited to meet her though because I knew that I would probably be able to help find her a family in the future, even though it would probably be a while from now because she was still too young to get her file prepared. She will probably be an LID girl and her file will most likely be prepared in the next 6-12 months, so if someone was starting the paper work process now, they might be eligible to review her file by the time it it prepared.
I had to leave that night after I met the girls and then came back the next morning to screen them. I had the staff take them all out of their cribs and come play on the floor in the third room. At first they were all just sort of starring at each other and all of us. I think the experience of so many people looking at them and giving them so much attention startled them. I also don’t think they get as many opportunities to all play on the floor together. I have a feeling these kiddos, like many orphanages children in China, spend a lot of time in their cribs. I brought some bubbles with me from America and I started to blow them and the girls were all totally shocked by them. I can safely assume that this children have never seen bubbles before and so they were confused by how they were at once there, and then when they touched them they disappeared. It’s so odd to think that they don’t know what bubbles are as this is something we introduce to most American kids at a very early age. I definitely left my two bottles of bubbles at the orphanage after I left, along with several blow up beach balls I brought with me.
As I started screening these young girls, it became apparent to me how well they were doing compared to the other children in this orphanage, and many of the other children I had met during my entire trip to China.
Once you have screened 100 kids, which I did while I was in China, you can start to tell pretty quickly which ones are going to be LID and which ones will be Special Focus. It’s not that the Special Focus kids aren’t doing well, many definitely are doing well, but LID kids are doing really, really well and their needs are very minor and correctable most of the time, whereas Special Focus kids have needs that can range from very minor to more moderate and then even severe. LID needs that we see most often are things like cleft lip/cleft palate (this is the most common), minor heart disease, microtia, clubbed feet, clubbed hands, general developmental delays and preemies.
After spending a couple of hours with these girls I really started to get to know each of their personalities a bit better, and I found in my heart a real fondness for each of them. However, there was one little girl that I became particularly fond of. I will call her “my girl” for the purposes of this blog, even though she is obviously not mine. She was probably the tiniest of the three girls with cleft lip/cleft palate, and she seemed very shy at first, but she had this light in her eyes and this positive energy that just radiated out from her.
It was getting close to time to go and I decide to go ahead and pick her up and hold her for a few minutes, because again I love babies, and I realized that after this crazy whirlwind of a trip, this was the last chance I was going to have to get to spend time with these little kids before heading back to the U.S. She was surprisingly relaxed in my arms, even though she seemed very unsure about me just the night before, and so I got a few photos taken of us really quickly.
Then Veronica, our GWCA China staff member, said it was time to go, so I started to put the little girl back in her crib. Suddenly, without warning, she tightened her grip on me and pulled in her legs and wrapped them around securely. She started to get upset and started breathing quickly. Veronica needed me to sign something and so I tried to with the little girl still in my arms, but I couldn’t, so one of the nannies literally pulled her off of me and put her in her crib. She started crying so loudly, so I just signed the paper as quickly as I could, and then literally b-lined it for the little girl’s crib and picked her up. When I did she dug her fingers into my shoulders, wrapped her legs around me as tightly as she could, and laid her head on my chest. She immediately stopped crying and I could hear her breathing heavily, her head so sweetly resting on me. I kissed her head and told her I had her, that it was alright. In that moment I felt such a great rush of love for this child, such a sense of wanting to protect her, wanting to make sure she was safe and cared for. I wanted to hold her forever and never let her go.
I had kept most of my emotions at bay for the majority of my two week trip up to this point. I had to, because I couldn’t allow myself to feel all of the feelings I had for these kids. I had a job to do, I had to keep it together, I had to do what I was there to do. But after two weeks in China, after meeting 100 kids who all needed Forever Families so desperately, I couldn’t hold back my feelings any longer. Holding her I could feel all of the emotions that I had held back for two weeks flood over me and I could feel my heart breaking into a million little pieces.
Veronica told me that we had to go, we were going to miss our bus back to the train station if we didn’t leave right away. I could have stayed in that moment with that little girl forever, but I had to tear myself away from her. I held her in my arms for just one more moment and whispered in her ear, “I promise I will find you a family. I promise.” I didn’t say that to any other child while I was there, because honestly I don’t know how many of the children I met in China we, our Home Finding Team at GWCA, can actually help place. But this little girl, I knew that she was LID and that we could find her a family, or at least I was pretty sure. And I felt compelled to tell her that, even though she couldn’t understand a word I was saying, I just needed to tell her that.
The nanny pulled the little girl off of me, and I could feel her desperation as she tried to hold on to me with all of her might. I could feel her nails digging into my skin and her feet tightening around my torso. She began to cry so loudly that I had to walk away to the other room to compose myself. A rush of tears came upon me and I was shaking with sadness, less for me and more for her. She didn’t understand that I was there for a reason, to help her find her real forever family.
She didn’t know that hopefully in less than 6 months another woman would be coming to pick her up and take her home forever. Another women would be coming to call her daughter, to hold her for as long as she liked, and to give her the safely, security and love that she had always craved.
It was so clear in those few minutes just how little these children get held and how desperately they crave loving human touch. She was desperate for it. They all are. And not just the little ones with minor needs, but the older kids, even the 12 and 13 year olds that might seem too old to want to cuddle with a parent, but they totally do! The kids in wheelchairs, the kids with cerebral palsy, the blind kids, the deaf kids, the developmentally delayed kids, the kids with blood disorders and with all other sorts of special needs, they all desperately crave the love and attention and physical touch of a parent. These kids need to be adopted, all of them, because they are all sitting in these orphanages just waiting for someone to call them “beloved child of mine.”
Before we left I went over to the little girl’s crib one last time and held her hand and said good bye. She was laying down at this point, her face sad and defeated, with tears still streaming down her cheeks, breathing heavily from crying so hard. She is the last orphaned child I woudl see while I was in China. We left quickly from the orphanage, got on our bus, then to our train, and then the next morning I would be on a plane headed back to the United States. It would be days before I stopped feeling that little girls nails digging into my shoulders, before I woudl stop feeling the weight of her head on my chest, before I would stop hearing her cries. And not a day has gone by since I have been back that I have not thought about her. You will always be in my heart little girl, and my heart will always be with you.
So, the good news, because surely this post about these amazing LID girls must end with good news, right? Well it does! Only a few weeks after I returned from my trip to China we received the files for these four girls! Three of them are LID, one was Special Focus (don’t ask me why, sometimes China just arbitrarily says one child is LID and one is Special Focus, but the truth is they were all doing great and all had minor needs, so whatever). We were able to match all four of the little girls, including “my little girl” as I had started to think of her, within two weeks of receiving their files. Because LID families are already logged in to China, it usually takes them only 3-4 months to get their travel approval and to travel to China to pick up their kiddos. So each of these little LID girls with be picked up by families within the next 3-4 months or so.
I can only imagine what it will be like when “my little girl” gets picked up by her new mommy in just a few short months. At first I’m sure she’ll be scared and confused, and she’ll have to grieve the loss of the only home she has ever known. But soon she will be get used to her new mommy, she will get used to the love and one-on-one attention, and she will get used to being held for as long as she wants, as often as she wants. And someday soon she will even get used to her mommy putting her down for a while, but knowing that her mommy will come back and pick her up again soon. That’s what it will be like for “my little girl” when she is then her mommy’s little girl.
The day I found out that “my little girl” found her forever family, I wept with joy, right at my desk at work. It was one of the happiest moments I ever experienced at my job, and I have experienced a lot of them, but this one took the cake! This is what I live for, to help families find their children, and to help children find their families. It is what all of the people I work with live for, because it means the world to us, to know that we are really helping people have the lives that they have always deserved to live. I know that whatever I do in this life, I will always have helped this little girl, and many other boys and girls of varying ages and special needs, find the homes they have longed for. For me, there is no greater thing I could be doing with my life at this moment. This is what I love to do and this is what I hope to continue to do for a long time to come.
To read more about Heidi’s trip to China you can visit her blog at: https://chinaadoptionlife.