quarter. A bright morning like this could make anybody grateful.
Slicing through the center of these projects is DeKalb Avenue, with its run of single-family homes and middle-class aspirations. But that fall, one of these houses stayed locked up tight against the sunshine. The ten kids, most of them teenagers, werenât allowed to go outdoors. In that house, in that family, outside spelled temptation, and besides, it was the Sabbath. So the kids, sequestered in their jewel-colored Nikes and their tight jeans, had to swallow their frustration and excess energy like a belly full of bees.
The house on DeKalb had a history. One hundred and twenty years before any Nike sneakers thumped up its three long staircases, and sixty years before the projects rose across the street, the place had been an evangelical âHouse of Rest.â Such houses dotted the East Coast at the turn of the century to provide divine healing along with rest, teaching, and âspiritual quickeningâ for the sick or the wayward. In a way, the essence of the place had reemerged. In a way, beyond the stone lions that flanked the stoop and behind the beveled glass front door, a kind of holy crusade was revving up.
Bruce Green, a tall black man of forty with round cheeks and a quick smile, had bought the house on DeKalb in 1999. He grew up in the Roosevelt projects on his block, and most of his children are foster kids, raised on the same rough street diet he wasâin Brooklyn, or Queens, or the Bronx. His wife, Allyson, is from Belize, and, although she may be more stridently religious than he is, they both wanted a large home to raise a large family, to protect their children against the many dangers of their city through the power of their God and their unwavering attention. What they didnât expect was that their children would come directly from the city itself, and that theyâd be embroiled in several battles that would test their faith in just about everything.
The latest and largest battle was over a baby, born to a mother addicted to drugs and delivered to the Green family, after placements with a few other foster parents, when he was just over a year old. When I met baby Allen that Sunday some years ago, he was two and a half, and his biological father, also a former addict, was working with the courts to win him back. And at the core of this battle spun the core questions of foster care itself: Who decides the
correct
way to raise a child? Who makes the moves on the moral chessboard where a familyâs right to privacy opposes a childâs right to protection from harm? And who should get to keep a child: the parents who nurse and tend him, or the parents who brought him into the world?
At the beginning, Allyson put the quandary in biblical terms. She told me the story of King Solomon.
In the story, two mothers are arguing over a single baby; both women believe the child to be hers. King Solomon procures a sword and offers to cut the baby in half so they can share.One mother agrees to the deal, but the second pleads: sheâd rather have the baby alive and with the other woman than dead. Allyson is this second motherâshe knows that if Allen were remanded to his birth father, destructive as this father may be, sheâd rather have Allen physically and spiritually alive than eventually feeling imprisoned with her. Plus, she knows all of her foster children understand that if they leave, they can always come back. Allyson will always be âMom.â She hopes, in fact, that some of the other birth parents orbiting the Green household can make bigger strides and do right by their kids.
âI was blessed to have four children of my own, that I gave birth to,â Allyson said, her thick Belizean accent pounding her harder consonants. Allyson is four years older than Bruce, and sheâs pretty; makeup rarely graces her chocolate skin, but her hair is straightened and highlighted and it falls in loose waves