logo
Peter Mutabazi was homeless as a child. He's now fostered 47 children.

Peter Mutabazi was homeless as a child. He's now fostered 47 children.

Washington Post14-06-2025

Peter Mutabazi does not have happy memories of Father's Day from when he was a child.
'Celebrating Father's Day wasn't even in the cards,' he said.
At 10, he ran away from his parents' home in Uganda to escape a difficult childhood, he said. He was homeless for five years. His described his childhood as being defined by hunger, poverty, loneliness and survival.
'I felt unloved and unwanted,' he said.
Now, at age 51, Father's Day looks very different for Mutabazi. He's a dad of six — three adopted children and three more he is in the process of adopting. He has fostered 47 children since 2017, and he has done it as a single father.
'I knew I could understand them and their trauma, because I had walked that journey,' said Mutabazi, who lives in Charlotte.
Mutabazi was born in a village at the border of Uganda and Rwanda.
'Life was really miserable because of poverty,' he said. 'I didn't feel hope. I didn't see it. For me, hoping was lying to myself.'
'I became a street kid,' Mutabazi said. 'Think of a stray animal, how stray animals are treated in some countries. That's how they treated street kids in Uganda.'
He said he learned to survive by helping people carry their groceries to their cars in exchange for food.
One day, he tried helping a man with his groceries, and 'that was the only day where someone didn't treat me like an animal,' Mutabazi said. From then on, whenever the man went shopping for food, he gave Mutabazi something to eat. After a year and a half, the man offered to send Mutabazi to boarding school.
'That changed my life forever,' Mutabazi said.
He went on to earn a bachelor's degree at Makerere University in Kampala and later moved to London to study crisis management at Oak Hill College. He moved to the United States in 2002 to study theology at the Master's University in Santa Clarita, California.
'I wanted to learn new things,' Mutabazi said.
He has since dedicated his career to child advocacy organizations. He started at Compassion International in 2006 and now works at World Vision as a senior advocate.
'I have always worked for charities that help children,' Mutabazi said.
But he wanted to do more.
'When I came to the United States, I really struggled seeing how much food was thrown away when I lost members of my family for a lack of beans and potatoes,' Mutabazi said. 'This person shared with me that there are kids in the United States that had no food, and he explained more about fostering.'
'I was like, wait a minute, I feel like I can relate to these kids,' he said. 'I thought I ought to do something for others.'
Initially, though, 'I thought I wasn't qualified because I was single,' Mutabazi said, adding that he started researching and learned that wasn't true. He enrolled in a licensing class for foster parents and fostered his first child in 2017.
Mutabazi said his goal with foster care is for the children to ultimately go back to their families.
'You're giving an opportunity for the parents to go through whatever they need to, and my belief is that the kids should go back to their parents,' he said. 'I will foster until the child has somewhere to go. If there is no one else, I want to be their final dad.'
Mutabazi adopted his first child, Anthony, in 2019. Anthony came to him in 2018 as an 11-year-old and was supposed to stay for only one weekend.
The first weekend they spent together, 'he looked at me and said, 'Can I call you my dad?' and I said, 'No, you can't call me dad because you're leaving on Monday,' Mutabazi recalled. 'He said, 'I'm 11 and I was told I could choose who my father is and I'm choosing you.''
Before long, 'I came to find he didn't have anywhere to go,' Mutabazi said. 'After knowing I was going to be his dad, his life really changed.'
Anthony Mutabazi, now 19, said he knew right away he wanted Mutabazi to be his father.
'I just had this gut feeling,' Anthony Mutabazi said. 'He has just been there by my side, helping to support me in finding myself.'
'Ultimately I want to follow in his footsteps and help others,' he said, adding that he also hopes to become an advocate for foster children. 'It's just amazing that he cares so much when some people care so little. … My dad has been a great influence.'
Mutabazi went on to adopt Luke and Isabella, biological siblings, in 2023. He started fostering them in 2020, when they were 5 and 6, after their grandparents could no longer care for them. Mutabazi is currently fostering three other children — Bella, 3, Zay, 21, and Jacob, 10 — and he is adopting all three. Bella is the biological sister of Luke and Isabella.
'I always want to keep siblings together,' he said. 'It lessens the trauma.'
Jacob is Mutabazi's most recent foster child. He arrived at his home about three months ago.
Although it was initially an adjustment when his father adopted more children, Anthony Mutabazi said he loves gaining new siblings.
'I have all these people that I can call family,' he said. 'It's been wonderful.'
Mutabazi said raising six children is challenging, to be sure. He also has two dogs — Simba, a 4-year-old goldendoodle, and Rafiki, a 3-year-old labradoodle.
'As a single dad, it's hard,' he said. 'Your whole life is about your kids, from when they wake up to when they go to bed.'
'Also, you're parenting kids with trauma, so you've got to learn how to truly be there for them,' he said.
Plus, as a Black man parenting White children, Mutabazi said he ha been stopped by police 11 times. He carries his foster and adoption papers with him.
People ask questions and make comments 'every day, everywhere we go,' Mutabazi said, adding that he takes in children of all races and ethnicities. 'They always say, 'Can you prove to us you're the father?' I've learned to not let that bother me.'
His focus is on the kids.
'I really feel it's a calling,' Mutabazi said.
Mutabazi has written two books — one about his life story and another about lessons he has learned as a foster dad — and his fostering efforts have been covered widely in the news media, including in local and national publications.
He has amassed a large following on social media, where he shares snippets of his daily life with his children in the hope of educating and inspiring prospective foster parents, and reducing the stigma surrounding foster children.
'The best way I could do that was to truly be open about it and share it,' he said. 'I wanted to show the positive side about how we can be there for kids who need us the most.'
Ken Maxwell, executive director of Seven Homes — the foster care agency that places children with Mutabazi — said Mutabazi has touched the lives of many children.
'I've had kids that Peter is probably the only person that could reach this child,' Maxwell said. 'He seems to have a knack for getting kids, figuring out what they need and then providing that … it's a life passion for Peter, and you can see that in his work.'
Maxwell said he appreciates that Mutabazi always prioritizes reuniting his foster children with their families.
'I've had him drive clear across the state multiple times so that a sibling group he had could see their mom, and that turned into a reunification,' he said.
Maxwell believes Mutabazi's childhood challenges shaped his approach to fatherhood.
'It gives him compassion for kids in similar situations, and kids that are in trouble, because he lived it and someone helped him,' Maxwell said. 'It's probably what has motivated him to continue to do this for many years.'
Holidays like Father's Day and Mother's Day can be tough for his children, Mutabazi said, so he does what he can to brighten an otherwise difficult day.
'We are going to go out and have fun,' he said. 'I'm going to take them to an amusement park.'
Mutabazi plans to broaden his advocacy work by training foster parents and working to improve the foster-care system.
'Those are the things I am passionate about that I would love to impart in the future,' he said.
He is raising funds to do bedroom makeovers for foster children to make them feel more at home.
Mutabazi said his life is proof that a painful past doesn't always determine the future.
'I know there's hope because I am the example,' he said. 'I overcame.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Stormwater floods Macomb County animal shelter, sends agency scrambling to financially recover
Stormwater floods Macomb County animal shelter, sends agency scrambling to financially recover

CBS News

time19 hours ago

  • CBS News

Stormwater floods Macomb County animal shelter, sends agency scrambling to financially recover

A nonprofit animal shelter in Macomb County, Michigan, is struggling to recover from the cost of storm-related flooding at its shelter. "To say we are heartbroken is an understatement," A ReJoyceful Animal Rescue in Clinton Township related on social media about the circumstances. ReJoyceful focuses its efforts on cat and dog rescue situations, such as a cat that had significant injuries from another animal attack and stray dogs that were living outside amid the heat wave. The agency describes itself as a no-kill, foster-based organization, using short-term foster situations to help match animals to adoptive homes. On June 18, the building was flooded through at least two rounds of storms backed up a storm drain and that sent water rushing inside the shelter, ruining supplies, furniture and equipment. "We've worked so hard building up our shelter and making it comfortable for the animals we care for. In a matter of minutes, this was all destroyed," they said. In response to the disaster: Volunteers showed up to help push water out of the building. A flood recovery and restoration company was called to mitigate damage. The agency posted messages on social media for foster homes and foster-to-adopt homes, taking note of circumstances such as which pets should continue to stay together and which ones need to be the only animal in a home. Donations and ad hoc fundraisers, such as a T-shirt sal,e popped up to help the agency return to normal operations. Over $125,000 in donations have been raised. The community assistance is appreciated, as the insurance situation was not what they hoped for. The building itself is covered by the property owner's insurance; the agency is responsible for its own contents. The agency did have a renters' insurance policy, but ran into an exception on the policy that does not include certain water conditions. "Our insurance claim has been denied. There is nothing we can do," they explained. As of Thursday, the building is almost completely dried out, but there is still work and sanitizing to do. "We have contractors coming tomorrow to start on drywall, replace doors, replace trim, and to determine what more needs done. We are still in the process of sorting through what has been destroyed and needs to be dumped. The losses are immeasurable, we still don't have a number on how much this will actually cost us in the end as we're not even half way through sorting through the mess," the agency reported.

10 Years of Marriage Equality: ‘With the Stroke of a Pen,Our Lives Changed Completely'
10 Years of Marriage Equality: ‘With the Stroke of a Pen,Our Lives Changed Completely'

New York Times

time2 days ago

  • New York Times

10 Years of Marriage Equality: ‘With the Stroke of a Pen,Our Lives Changed Completely'

MODERN LOVE A decade after the Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage nationwide, we asked people from across the country to share stories of what the ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges has meant to them. By Miya Lee and Daniel Jones Illustrations by Derek Abella Clarksville, Tenn. Travis VanZant Hours after the Obergefell decision, Michael and I married in our home state of Tennessee, becoming the first same-sex couple to wed in Montgomery County. The next day, our story and pictures were prominently featured in a local newspaper. Michael and I were out to some close friends and family, but not to the wider world. I was ex-military; Michael worked construction in a rural area. While there was backlash to the article on social media, what surprised us was the in-person acceptance we received. Co-workers supported Michael. Strangers congratulated me. We felt free. Today, we live openly and are growing a family. Since 2020, we've fostered over 20 children, adopted four and are adopting our fifth. Obergefell empowered us to come out and build a full life. Denver Christina Baker On the day that the Obergefell decision was announced, my twin sons were home from college and getting ready for work. We cried, embraced and smiled. One son could marry a woman someday; one son could marry a man someday. I'm crying 10 years later as I write this. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

FAA investigating ‘engine issue' with American Airlines jet leaving Las Vegas
FAA investigating ‘engine issue' with American Airlines jet leaving Las Vegas

CNN

time3 days ago

  • CNN

FAA investigating ‘engine issue' with American Airlines jet leaving Las Vegas

An American Airlines jet returned to Las Vegas after reporting an engine issue on Wednesday. American flight 1665, operating on an Airbus A321, was heading to Charlotte Douglas International Airport at 8:20 a.m. local time when it had to return to Harry Reid International Airport in Las Vegas, according to the Federal Aviation Administration's preliminary statement. No injuries were reported, Like Nimmo, a spokesperson for the airport, told CNN. The flight reported 'smoke coming from the left engine,' Nimmo said. After landing, 'the fire department inspected the engine, and the aircraft taxied to the gate under its own power.' American Airlines said there were 153 passengers on the flight and six crew members. Previously, the airport told CNN there were 165 passengers. 'The aircraft taxied to the gate under its own power and customers deplaned normally,' the airline said in a statement. 'We appreciate the professionalism of our crew and thank our team who are working to get our customers to their destinations as quickly as possible.' American said the maintenance team found no evidence of a fire in the engine and the aircraft is being taken out of service and evaluated. The FAA is investigating. This is a developing story and will be updated.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store