Lost boys.
As families throughout Mexico and Central America move northward in search of an escape from poverty, some children - many of them boys - are abandoned by their families. Other children are removed from their homes by Mexican government officials for their own safety. Finally, there are children who are truly orphaned: both of their parents are deceased.
Although some separations between children and parents are temporary, some are permanent. Regardless, many Hispanic and Latino children are in need of shelter.
Organized nearly twenty years ago, the Rancho San Juan Bosco (RSJB) orphanage sits on approximately three acres of land on the western edge of Tecate, Mexico. (Tecate is located on the U.S./Mexico border.) RSJB was established for boys only and at this time can accommodate up to forty children ranging from ages four to seventeen. Expansion plans are underway to increase their capacity to eighty children, including infants.
Rancho San Juan Bosco Orphanage is:
run by a director and staff members dedicated to helping abandoned and abused children in Tecate.
used to rehabilitate street children and reunite them with any existing family members or a new family.
providing Christ-centered stability in the lives of children by teaching them about the love of a heavenly father who will never abandon them.
providing educational and life-skills opportunities.
occupying a vision for expanding this project to include more children as the budget provides.
Although the orphanage is able to provide safety for lost boys in Tecate, it is not supported by the Mexican government nor is it affiliated with any national denomination or church group. Therefore, RSJB is completely dependent upon the generosity of others, both locally and in the U.S., to sustain the lives of these children.