A cold January afternoon in 2018 found North Carolina foster parent Peter Mutabazi fielding a desperate call: a 13-year-old boy named Anthony had been dropped at a local hospital by foster parents who never returned. Peter didn’t hesitate—he drove straight over, signed the papers, and told the frightened teen, “You’re coming home with me.”
Raised in rural Uganda, Peter had survived poverty and abuse before building a life in the United States; those memories pushed him to become the resource parent he wished he’d had. By the time Anthony’s call came, Peter had already welcomed several children and even sheltered a seven-year-old during the first COVID-19 lockdowns.
Anthony’s own journey was equally turbulent. First placed in care at age 2, he was adopted in Oklahoma, only to be abandoned again at 11—this time in a hospital corridor with a backpack and no explanation.
After just a few “temporary” nights under Peter’s roof, father and son realized they were meant to stay together. On November 12, 2019, a judge’s gavel made it official: Anthony finally had a permanent dad.
Their story soon rippled beyond the living room. Peter shared updates online, and viewers watched a shy teen transform beside a dad who understood lost childhoods. Donations and messages poured in, raising awareness of kids still waiting in the system.
When the new family moved to Charlotte, North Carolina, Peter resumed fostering—despite a pandemic that stretched background checks and home inspections to nearly a year. Anthony, by then thriving in school, championed the idea of offering another child the security he had finally found.
That chance came with a timid seven-year-old who needed emergency placement. Peter said yes, and Anthony slipped naturally into the role of protective big brother, calming first-night jitters with video games and popcorn.
National outlets soon spotlighted the trio. In a “Good Morning America” segment, Anthony explained why he started calling Peter “Dad” long before the paperwork: “He’s the first person I’ve ever felt safe with.” Clips of them cooking breakfast and roughhousing with the dog melted viewers’ hearts.
Today Peter juggles homework help, soccer practice, and speaking engagements, reminding audiences that single people can—and do—change lives through foster care. “I thought I was rescuing Anthony,” he often says. “Truth is, he rescued me right back.”