He is Indonesian Hero ....
please forward to all Indonesian!

Go to: cnn.com/heroes
These remarkable individuals have been selected by our Blue Ribbon Panel as our 
Top 10 CNN Heroes. Now, you can help choose the 2009 CNN Hero of the Year.

Vote for Budi Soehardi
Budi Soehardi founded a children's home in one of the poorest areas of
Indonesia. Today, Roslin Orphanage in West Timor provides food, shelter and 
education to more than 45 children.

Full story
KUPANG, Indonesia (CNN) -- At Roslin Orphanage, children giggle through deep 
concentration as they try to master the "Chicken Dance." It's a far cry from 
the Indonesian orphans' earlier months and years.


Budi Soehardi poses with young residents of Roslin Orphanage.

"They are cheerful-looking and photogenic, but close to all have a very sad 
story," said Budi Soehardi, founder of the West Timor orphanage.
"Some of the babies come because a mother passes away right after delivery 
because of lack of nutrition. Others come from extreme poverty. Some come from 
families [that] just do not want the children and abandon them," he said. Vote 
now for the CNN Hero of the Year

Soehardi, a 53-year-old Indonesian pilot living in Singapore, and his wife, 
Peggy, look after 47 children at the orphanage. They have a personal 
relationship with each one, and consider them part of their family. The couple 
named many of the children since they entered the orphanage as babies -- some 
of them tiny victims and refugees from the conflict in East Timor.
Soehardi has three children of his own but says there is no difference
between what he supplies for his biological children and those living at the 
orphanage. They all get clean living spaces, vaccinations, food, clothing and 
vitamins from the United States.

"Mr. Budi is like my own father," said Gerson Mangi, 20, a resident at
Roslin Orphanage. Mangi, who came to the orphanage when he was 12 years old, 
had no means to attend school after his parents died. Now, thanks to the 
educational training at Roslin and a private sponsor, he is in medical school.

Soehardi, whose father died when he was 9 years old, can relate to these young 
people's hardships.
"Food was hard to come by and my school fee was very difficult," Soehardi said.
"The refugees just really strike me so badly and [I want] them to be better 
off."


Young victims of a fight for independence
A 1999 news report on the situation in East Timor inspired the Soehardis to 
take action.

Don't Miss
Get involved: Roslin Orphanage
In Depth: CNN Heroes

Soehardi was eating dinner and watching CNN with his wife and family at home in 
Singapore when he saw the plight of the refugees fleeing East Timor for West 
Timor, Indonesia. Families were living in cardboard boxes, children were 
wearing rags for clothes, and sanitation was nonexistent.

"It was devastating," Soehardi said.
The poor conditions were a result of conflicts in East Timor that surfaced 
after the residents voted for independence from Indonesia. Following the 
election, militias -- with support from Indonesian security forces -- launched 
a campaign of violence throughout the region. Hundreds of East Timorese were 
killed, and as many as 250,000 were displaced from their homes, according to 
the United Nations
High

Commissioner for Refugees.
The Soehardis had been planning on taking a vacation, but watching the news 
made them rethink their plans.
"[My wife and I] look at each other and we have a thought of our own. ... 'Hey, 
let's do something else. Why don't we visit the place ... to make a different 
kind of holiday,' " Soehardi said.
He began coordinating financial donations, food, clothing and supplies.
With help from friends and ground volunteers, the Soehardis navigated the 
conflict-ridden areas and delivered more than 40 tons of food, medical supplies 
and toiletries to East Timor refugee camps.

Soon the Soehardis determined West Timor could use a space for orphans.
"My wife was initially asking me to build three rooms. Then two hours later she 
[asked for] five rooms, and then later nine rooms and finally, the orphanage 
building."
They completed their orphanage building in 11 months and named it Roslin 
Orphanage, after a pair of Timorese women whom Peggy looked up to as a girl.
In April 2002, the orphanage opened and provided a home for four children.
Since then the residence has expanded to provide free education, clothing, 
housing and food for 47 children of all ages, newborns to university-age.
About half of its residents are younger than 8 years old. Watch Soehardi teach 
the children the alphabet »


An unexpected harvest

The orphanage was built on donated land that the Soehardis initially thought 
bore barren soil. But today, the rice they feed the children comes solely from 
their own land.
"We dared to take the challenge," said Soehardi of his foray into
irrigation. He and Peggy, who are not trained in agriculture, used two pumps 
and a generator to get water for irrigation.
Then they began planting rice. "One hundred days later, we were having our 
first harvest and declared ourselves to be self-sufficient on rice for the 
orphanage children," he said. Watch Soehardi explain how he made the land more 
fertile »

It's a fortunate cost-cutting tactic, especially with Soehardi losing his 
piloting job in November because of the struggling economy.
Soehardi, whose pilot salary goes toward maintaining the orphanage and
funding medical student Mangi's education, is hopeful that the end of his 
contract will not affect the children's well-being.

"To help these children is a privilege for me and my wife because it's
giving back to society ... giving back what has been blessed to us."

Pilot moonlights as father to 47
Story Highlights
Budi Soehardi founded an orphanage to help children in Indonesia
"Mr. Budi is like my own father," one resident says Soehardi and his wife 
harvest their own rice to sustain the orphanage's food supply

Vote now for the CNN Hero of the Year at CNN.com/Heroes

Voting continues until Thursday, November 19, 2009 (6 a.m. ET). There is no 
limit on the number of times you may vote for the Hero of the Year.

He is a pilot……………….. Poor Budi, his contract with Singapore Airline
has not been continued… until this november





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