By CASSIE MCKEE, Four Points News
A local mom says she can no longer remain silent about the struggle she and her husband have faced to bring their adoptive son home from Africa.
Steiner Ranch residents Andy and Sherri Smetana are taking their frustrations to the United States government, calling congressmen and senators one by one and urging them to put pressure on the Republic of Congo government, which is refusing to issue an exit letter for their son Henry, who they legally adopted. They have joined forces with hundreds of families across the United States urging Congress to take action.
“We are done being quiet,” said Sherri Smetana. “We are ready to get our kids home.”

Recently, Steiner Ranch residents Andy and Sherri Smetana visited their adopted son Henry in Africa. Henry was born a year ago April 2 and found abandoned by a river in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The country is not issuing an exit letter for Henry to come to the U.S.

Andy Smetana holds adoptive son Henry, then 11 months, during a visit to Africa.
Becoming a family
In November 2012, Andy and Sherri, who are also parents to 4-year-old twin girls, knew they wanted to adopt and began looking into the adoption process.
“I knew Africa was on my heart,” Sherri said. “I knew I wanted to adopt from Africa.”
A friend of hers had just adopted a child from the Democratic Republic of Congo, a war-torn country in central Africa. The Smetanas started the process and completed their paperwork in December 2012. On April 5, 2013, they received a photo of the little 5-day-old boy with whom they had been matched. The newborn baby had been found abandoned by a river. They named him Henry. Continue reading →