When my eldest, from India, was soon to graduate, I asked her how she would feel about remaining in touch afterward. She sounded very enthusiastic: "Please bless me for my entire life. I will remember you forever." (I did not give my contact info at that time since it is not allowed while the sponsorship is in effect.) I informed CI that I would like to remain in contact afterwards if she was willing. She left the program a little early (age 18) because she married and moved to her husband's house outside the program area, but, at last report, her husband and in-laws supported her plans to continue her college education.
I provided my regular mail address (I was worried that phone or e-mail might bring me contacts from strangers), and her address and phone # was provided to me. This was at her husband's home since "it was found that no one [at her college] could be contacted or relied upon" (!!) In her last letter to me (part of an SNG thank-you since I and others contributed to a fundraiser for her college) she thanked me for the support. Last I heard, she was in her second year of a 3-year course in Science with Honors in Mathematics.
In my first letter to her, I neglected to include the "PIN #" in the address, so it probably never made it there. I was confused because, here, a PIN number is for something like a bank account, to be closely guarded. But in India, it means "postal identification number" and is like a zip code here. So I re-sent her that letter once I figured it out, and sent a second one (this was several months later).
It has been some time since then (around a year) and she has not written. I hope that it is just that she is busy with a demanding course schedule and her new marriage and that she has not had time to write. I do not think there would be much of a language barrier, since she's in college, and Indian students have to pass a rigorous English exam to get in.
I hope that her new family does not object to her remaining in contact with me. My other concern is that some unavoidable circumstance might have prevented her from finishing her college education--in which case she might be embarrassed to tell me, since I put so much effort into raising the funds.
Hopefully I will someday get a letter from her letting me know how she is doing, and also what she thought of the farewell DP I sent: two books, The Woman Warrior by Maxine Hong Kingston, and Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury.
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