The United States
arimidex for sale When I asked to hear about the journey that took them from Sudan to Kakuma, they stopped fidgeting and instantly grew more thoughtful. This was common among the Lost Boys I spoke with. While they can be strikingly unemotional describing the horrors of their pasts, they nonetheless seem eager for Americans to appreciate the plight of their country. Predictably, those who had been in the United States a month or more were the most comfortable reflecting on what they had been through, while newer arrivals often seemed overwhelmed. In this particular group, a rangy, slightly walleyed boy named William Deng dominated the conversation. He was dressed in a high-school wrestling sweatshirt and neatly pressed khakis. He carefully removed his baseball cap before beginning to speak in precise, practiced English.