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Minggu, 30 Januari 2011

Adoptees kept in the dark in India

Half a life: Abandoned, adopted, abandoned


Manisha (name changed) is 15 and brighteyed . She might be the regular teenager . The adults in contact with her say she is polite and disciplined and is always ready to help anyone in trouble. But Manisha is not a regular teenager and hers is no ordinary story. She lives in a home run by an NGO in Gurgaon for abandoned or abused children or those with special needs. She is the helpless victim of inter-country adoption gone terribly wrong.

Six years ago, Manisha was adopted by an American family from a centre in Mumbai. But soon enough, they were unwilling to keep her, blaming Manisha's newly apparent hyperactivity, mood disorders and depression. Rejected and abandoned all over again, Manisha was sent across the seas and has been in the children's shelter from early 2010.

Should it be this way? Almost all her young life, Manisha has been a victim of the system — and all its faults. In 2003, she and her sister were found abandoned at Mumbai railway station. Both children were placed with an NGO, the Family Welfare Centre (FWC), by the Child Welfare Committee (CWC). In 2005, the CWC declared that the children could be adopted because no one had come forward to claim them.

Soon enough, an American couple expressed interest in taking both sisters. The FWC, coordinating with an adoption agency in US, completed the formalities. The girls were cleared for adoption in April 2006 by the Central Adoption and Resources Agency (CARA), the nodal body for adoption under the Union ministry of women and child development .

But within months, the American foster parents were complaining that Manisha had behavioural problems and insisting they would keep her young sister, but not her. Manisha's case wound up in the Indian courts. The Bombay High Court, which has been hearing the case, was informed that the link adoption agency (in the US) had placed Manisha with another family, but things didn't work out and she was repatriated to India in June 2008. She was admitted to the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences in Bangalore, her adoption revoked and her guardian now is Nigama Mascarenhas, director of the FWC. The high court said the American couple who adopted Manisha cannot be absolved of responsibility and they are still liable for financial support for the child's treatment and needs. The court has sought sixmonthly updates on Manisha's progress.

So how has all of this left an innocent child, flown across continents and rejected twice-over - once by her birth parents and then by her adoptive father and mother? Her guardian, Mascarenhas says Manisha seemed to be settling down when she visited the home in December 2010 , she is now trying to find a foothold in life. Staff at the home say the child is endearing and participates in every activity . Apart from attending a special school that is helping overcome her learning disability, she is undergoing therapy with a psychologist and a psychiatrist . Counsellors say Manisha has potential to do well in say, the hospitality sector.

If Manisha is indeed fine, she is one of the luckier ones. There are no statistics of the number of Manishas all over India — abandoned children, who were adopted overseas and then turned out like a troublesome puppy. Significantly, the Bombay High Court has used Manisha's case to ask CARA, India's nodal adoption agency, to plug gaps in the system.

The court asked CARA to create stringent inter-country adoption guidelines, as well as a system that makes foster parents financially liable if they seek to revoke an adoption.

Activists like Anjali Pawar, of the NGO Sakhee, say this is badly needed. Pawar, who works on issues related to inter-country adoption in Maharashtra , says, "The existing norms call for monitoring of children adopted by families abroad for five years after the adoption. But what happens to the child after that, no one knows. The monitoring should go on till the child attains 18 years."

All of this is urgent. The latest data on CARA's website shows that in 2009, 666 Indian children were placed with families abroad. When contacted , a top CARA official said that an expert committee had been constituted to frame stringent guidelines for inter-country adoption. He claimed that the committee's report has been sent to the law ministry, denied there had been delay and insisted the revised guidelines would come into effect soon.

But Bharti Ali of the National Coordination for the Campaign Against Child Trafficking, who has been part of the stakeholders meetings on the drafting process, contradicts the CARA official's claim. She says it's been three months since the stakeholders heard about the status of the guidelines and the draft is anyway "not as tough about protecting the rights of the child if one reads between the lines."

Manisha's case has exposed another grey area. Is India careless about the psychological health of the children it puts up for overseas adoption? The Bombay High Court has expressed concern about information presented to it, which seemed to suggest that many Indian children adopted abroad have a disturbed childhood. But what if everything fails and an adopted child is sent back to its home country from overseas? Ali says it is imperative the Indian government "take responsibility for a child in case of a failed inter-country adoption."

Is anyone listening?

Jumat, 10 September 2010

Approved for Adoption

newsCineuropaprize_sa.fr
August 20, 2010
Boy traces roots from Europe to Asia in <i>Approved for Adoption</i>

Production – France

Boy traces roots from Europe to Asia in Approved for Adoption
Shooting is currently underway in Korea on French/Belgian co-production Approved for Adoption. This debut feature by Laurent Boileau and Jung Henin will be two-thirds animation and one-third live action.

Adapted from two volumes of Henin’s comic book Couleur de Peau: Miel (“Skin Colour: Honey”), the film traces the life of a Korean child who is adopted by a Belgian family. When he reaches adulthood, he decides to return to his native country for the first time.
(The article continues below - Commercial information)

Co-written by the directors, the film centres on Jung who was five when a policeman found him wandering the streets of Seoul. He is one of those 200,000 adopted Koreans, scattered across the world.

To resolve a deep inner conflict, he wants to return to the land of his ancestors and perhaps retrace his biological mother. This journey of reconciliation with his roots and with himself (filmed in documentary style) leads Jung to recall (in animation) the child he once was and the tortuous trajectory through which he grew up, until he met his wife, also an adopted Korean, with whom he has a daughter, now aged 14.

As soon as he arrives in Seoul, Jung sees himself as a child in the alleys of Namdaemun market, then he returns to the places known in his early childhood and read the archives at the Holt agency (set up by a wealthy couple of American Evangelists whose actions were seen as controversial) where he discovers his very brief adoption file.

Finally, Jung visits the demilitarised zone separating North and South Korea which reminds him of the history of his native country which became, in the space of a few decades, the main provider of adopted children for developed countries .

Approved for Adoption is produced for around €3.9m by Thomas Schmitt for Paris-based Mosaïque Films. The film’s budget includes co-production support from France 3 Cinéma and Belgium’s Artémis Productions, a €500,000 advance on receipts from France’s National Film and Moving Image Centre (CNC), as well as backing from the Belgian French Community Film and Audiovisual Centre, RTBF, Wallimage, the MEDIA Programme and PROCIREP.

The film will be released in France by Gebeka Films and in Belgium by Cinéart. International sales are being managed by Wide Management.

Fabien Lemercier

Senin, 23 Agustus 2010

Dutch teens arrive for reunion with family

Dutch teens arrive for reunion with family

Illegal Adoption Landed Them In Netherlands 14 Years Ago

Jaya Menon | TNN


Kanyakumari: A strong sea breeze whips through Kootupuli, a hamlet dotted with windmills and new houses built post-tsunami. There is much excitement in a cramped, brightly-painted house in the colony over a reunion. This is where two Dutch teenagers, Melissa, 19, and her brother Miquel, 18, will meet their mother, Dekla Selvam, a fisherwoman, after a gap of 14 years. In 1996, Dekla bid them farewell after visiting them in an orphanage in Chennai, promising a weeping Melissa a pair of anklets on her next visit the following week.
In anticipation of a reunion, the family waited all through the day as the teenagers, accompanied by a team of Dutch authorities and child counsellors, landed at the Thiruvananthapuram airport and later drove down to Kanyakumari. As news of their arrival spread, Kootupuli, a fishing hamlet 13km from Kanyakumari, ravaged by the 2004 tsunami and rebuilt in two years, rejoiced.

Dekla, 51, and her five children, Lily (28), Leo (27), Ditto (26), Dino (23) and Dismin (16),
cleaned and washed the house and dressed up for the occasion. The warm glow that enveloped the family as news was conveyed to Leo about the arrival of his siblings more than made up for the shabbiness of the house, which has a television to boast of and a few clay statuettes adorning the window sill.

“God has finally heard my prayers and has brought my children back to me,” Dekla told TOI, tears streaming down her face. Clutching a print of Melissa’s picture sent to her two years ago, Dekla, who relentlessly tracked down her children, said, “We have nothing
to give them but our love. When they come, we will hug them and take them into our fold.”

As the family waited anxiously, surrounded by a few relatives and neighbours, a mediator called Leo to inform him that he and his mother could come to a hotel in Kanyakumari, where the teenagers were staying, and take them home.
It was an illegal adoption that separated Dekla from her children. Trying to make ends meet by selling fish in Nagercoil, Dekla had confided in a customer, who was a frequent visitor to Chennai, that she was finding it difficult to look after her seven children with no support from her husband, Maria Selvam.
German NGO helped track teens

Kanyakumari: It was an occasion of great joy for Dekla Selvam of Kootupuli near Kanyakumari, who sells fish. Her children Melissa, 19, and her brother Miquel, 18, who were put up for adoption abroad 14 years ago without her knowledge. Unable to makes ends meet for her seven children, Dekla had told her problems to a customer, who was a frequent visitor to Chennai.

The man suggested that she leave her children in an orphanage run by the Malaysian Social Service. The adoption agency assured her that it would educate the children and send them to her when they were 18 years old. She gave up four of her children. While two were returned to her, Melissa and James Kapil, now Miquel, were put up for adoption abroad with
out her knowledge.

When a major scandal broke out in 2005, she learnt that the adoption agency had kidnapped and sold several children to couples abroad. The CBI is now probing the case. Dekla immediately rushed to Chennai, but there was no trace of her children. Tracking them proved difficult until Germany-based Arun Dohle of ‘Against Child Trafficking’ helped unravel the mystery. Their foster parents had separated legally and Melissa and Miquel were placed in a government-run home in the Netherlands

I am so touched to hear that you have been waiting for me all these years. I am desperately waiting to see you again. We are no longer with our foster parents. I go to college on a motorcycle everyday.
I am not too good at studies, but can read and write. Please send a photograph of yours. I love you very much and I am sending you kisses from me and Kapil,” the girl said in a letter to her mother.

A few weeks back Arun Dohle received a mail from the Dutch officials of the Centre for Agogische Zorg Zeeland (AZZ) informing him of their 10-day itinerary in India. “The goal of the trip is the reunion of the young adults with their biological parents,” said a representative of the Netherlands government-run organization in the letter. “It has been a traumatic experience for the woman. And it was very difficult for Arun to track the children with the government being so uncooperative,” pointed out Anjali Pawar of the Punebased Sakhee, an organization working on child issues.

Selasa, 25 Mei 2010

AUSTRALIA - ICASN, Lynelle has Resigned from ICASN/ICA involvement

Lynelle Beveridge

May 23, 2010 at 8:35am


Well, the time has come for me to say goodbye to the intercountry adoption community. I've created and been involved with ICASN since late 1998 and I now have other challenges and areas that need my energy. It has been a rewarding journey and I've been blessed to personally know many wonderful adoptees, adoptive parents, local birth parents, Govt professionals and non-govt professionals, and others involved in intercountry adoption. Thank you all for your contribution to making ICASN such a success!

The ICASN State Reps will still continue on in their state roles and can now be your central points of contact. I will no longer be updating or maintaining the ICASN website and it will remain in place up until early 2011, unless someone wants to keep it going and pay for the Domain registration.

I would like to take the opportunity to thank Mary Waterhouse/Frost from NMIT in VIC who has kindly hosted the ICASN website free of charge and provided technical support all these years .. without that, ICASN would never have grown from it's original 30 adoptee members in Australia, to today's 500+ in Australia and around the world ... and that's not counting those who joined via Facebook ....

I wish you all well in your journeys and my one hope is that eventually the institution of intercountry adoption will come to embrace and empower the voices of birth families to be heard and have an impact on the policies and processes involved between sending and receiving countries - I see this as the last group who remain unheard & disempowered in the triad for ICA.

I have also resigned from my position on the Federal Government's NICAAG body and hope there will be many adoptees who apply for the position as it's important for our voice to be involved in all levels of Intercountry Adoption.

My email address will cease to exist by 30 June 2010. Both the Facebook & Yahoo groups will be moderated by the ICASN State Reps.

Many thanks
Regards
Lynelle Beveridge begin_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting

Founder/Director
Inter-Country Adoptee Support Network (ICASN)
http://www.facebook.com/l/1fd75;www.icasn.org/

Mb: +61 411 126 427 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting +61 411 126 427 end_of_the_skype_highlighting
E: icasn@bigpond.net.au
P: PO Box 6550 Baulkham Hills NSW 2153

-------

Dear Lynelle,

With great regret we have read your resignation of ICASN and also your departure from the Intercountry Adoption activities now we arrive at a new dawn of the history for Adoptees. United Adoptees International has great respect what you have done in Australia to establish a framework for Adoptees and the intervention on political and societal level.

Australia, but also the Adoptee world internationally, will loose with you, an important player in the field of intercountry adoption for the interest of Adoptees in many fields. Your efforts and your contribution to the worldwide dialogue of intercountry adoption in the best interest of the (adult) adoptees will not be forgotten.

We want to thank you for your support and outstanding cooperation and hope that for those who will take over your responsibilities and task, which is hardly to do in our opinion, will cooperate on the same level and with the same diligence as you did with United Adoptees International.

On behalf of the Board & Management United Adoptees International I want to wish you and your family all the best and happiness.

Hilbrand W.S. Westra

Managing Director UAI


Senin, 03 Mei 2010

CHINESE ADOPTEE GATHERING

Chinese Adult Adoptee Worldwide Reunion

We are a group of adult Hong Kong and Chinese adoptees and orphans here to support and to enjoy getting to know each other from the same homeland, to build ties with those who stayed home, and to keep ties with one another as older mentors for younger Chinese adoptees worldwide (see Chinese Adoptee Links). In future years, we hope other adult Chinese adoptees and orphans will join us to celebrate their future journeys home or to learn more about their experiences in their countries in the Pacific Rim/Southeast Asia.

We are planning our first adoptee reunion in Hong Kong this year, with the sole goal of bringing our sisters and brothers together in the place of our birth so that we can, as a group, share stories, bond, support, experience our birth city and cultures. As a Hong Kong Planning Committee, we have been very successful in linking with the local Hong Kong communities, for better cultural understandings, insight into our pasts and just a wonderful way to make friends with others with similiar backgrounds.

Our reunion dates and venue is set (with extra rooms to enable those who want their own mini-reunion because you’re from the same orphanage/sisterhood or even a member of the same global adoptee group). While we are starting to surge forward with the planning, adoptees from around the globe are linking with each other, organising themselves in their local community/country to see what we can do in spreading the word in order to help create what we believe would be an amazing experience. If you can help us spread the word through distributing our poster, we welcome your support.

Please feel free to explore the site and see how the reunion is developing, especially in Reunion Info Page. Even if you don’t think you will be able to join this reunion this year, we would still love to hear from you. Consider being part of our virtual Planning Committee, and maybe you can host a future gathering in your home country in the future?

First Chinese Adult Adoptee Worldwide Reunion 2010, Hong Kong

Theme: Journey Through Adoption

Tuesday, September 28 to Saturday, October 2, 2010

TO REGISTER

1. R.S.V.P. to attend in Facebook.

2. Download a Registration Form from the bottom of Reunion Info page, fully complete it and submit it to MailGuard('info','caawr.com') info@caawr.com by May 31 2010.

3. Join our CAAWR Facebook page for updates and keep in touch with each other for the future.

Rabu, 10 Februari 2010

I felt sick. My whole life had been a lie

guardian.co.uk home Adopted – but we didn't know

How does it feel to discover as an adult that you were adopted as a baby? We talk to four people who came to terms with finding out later in life.

adoption kept secret

Hilary Moon found out she was adopted 12 years ago. Photograph: David Sillitoe

Hilary Moon, 60, was 48 when she discovered that she was adopted. She is divorced.


"I was at my uncle's funeral when my cousin's husband wandered up to me and said, 'I've been wanting to meet you, because we're both adopted.' It was a huge shock – how could it not be? On the other hand, I had an instant explanation as to why I'd always felt like a square peg in a round hole when it came to my family.

"I once said to my mother, 'I've always felt like I was found on a doorstep.' She got terribly upset, and I later learned that was the point at which she confided in my cousin's husband. She chose him because he's a vicar. She assumed he'd keep it to himself.

"My mother had died by the time I found out the truth, but my father hadn't, so I asked him about it. He was an unpleasant man and simply said, 'Well, nobody else would have you.' I threw a cup of tea at him, said that at least it meant I wasn't related to him and we never spoke again.

"Was I angry? Of course I was. I had been advised not to have children because my mother and brother had both had severe diabetes and had gone blind and died early. To learn I wasn't blood-related to them means I made an enormous decision based on fiction.

"I've mellowed now. My mother had such a bum deal in life – a husband that had affairs and a son who died young – that it's hard to feel anger towards her. She and I got on well, and I'm thankful for that. And although I still have negative feelings towards my father, who is now dead, I think that's probably more to do with how he treated my mother.

"About eight years ago, my biological sister sought me out. She put me in touch with my birth mother, to whom I look incredibly similar. I've met others in the extended family, too, and I even changed my full name to what it was before the adoption. With all my adoptive family dead, and a large birth family still alive, it just made sense to me. But, actually, they're a funny lot and I can't say I feel any great bond with them.

"The whole situation has left me feeling neither part of my adoptive nor my biological family, and the lack of a sense of belonging in either can make me feel lonely if I let it. When people ask me who is my next of kin, I say, 'I haven't got one', because that's how it feels."

> read more <

Senin, 25 Januari 2010

Adoptees of Color Roundtable

Statement on Haiti

renardrouge | January 25, 2010 in statements | Comments (0)

This statement reflects the position of an international community of adoptees of color who wish to pose a critical intervention in the discourse and actions affecting the child victims of the recent earthquake in Haiti. We are domestic and international adoptees with many years of research and both personal and professional experience in adoption studies and activism. We are a community of scholars, activists, professors, artists, lawyers, social workers and health care workers who speak with the knowledge that North Americans and Europeans are lining up to adopt the “orphaned children” of the Haitian earthquake, and who feel compelled to voice our opinion about what it means to be “saved” or “rescued” through adoption.

We understand that in a time of crisis there is a tendency to want to act quickly to support those considered the most vulnerable and directly affected, including children. However, we urge caution in determining how best to help. We have arrived at a time when the licenses of adoption agencies in various countries are being reviewed for the widespread practice of misrepresenting the social histories of children. There is evidence of the production of documents stating that a child is “available for adoption” based on a legal “paper” and not literal orphaning as seen in recent cases of intercountry adoption of children from Malawi, Guatemala, South Korea and China. We bear testimony to the ways in which the intercountry adoption industry has profited from and reinforced neo-liberal structural adjustment policies, aid dependency, population control policies, unsustainable development, corruption, and child trafficking.

For more than fifty years “orphaned children” have been shipped from areas of war, natural disasters, and poverty to supposedly better lives in Europe and North America. Our adoptions from Vietnam, South Korea, Guatemala and many other countries are no different from what is happening to the children of Haiti today. Like us, these “disaster orphans” will grow into adulthood and begin to grasp the magnitude of the abuse, fraud, negligence, suffering, and deprivation of human rights involved in their displacements.

We uphold that Haitian children have a right to a family and a history that is their own and that Haitians themselves have a right to determine what happens to their own children. We resist the racist, colonialist mentality that positions the Western nuclear family as superior to other conceptions of family, and we seek to challenge those who abuse the phrase “Every child deserves a family” to rethink how this phrase is used to justify the removal of children from Haiti for the fulfillment of their own needs and desires. Western and Northern desire for ownership of Haitian children directly contributes to the destruction of existing family and community structures in Haiti. This individualistic desire is supported by the historical and global anti-African sentiment which negates the validity of black mothers and fathers and condones the separation of black children from their families, cultures, and countries of origin.

As adoptees of color many of us have inherited a history of dubious adoptions. We are dismayed to hear that Haitian adoptions may be “fast-tracked” due to the massive destruction of buildings in Haiti that hold important records and documents. We oppose this plan and argue that the loss of records requires slowing down of the processes of adoption while important information is gathered and re-documented for these children. Removing children from Haiti without proper documentation and without proper reunification efforts is a violation of their basic human rights and leaves any family members who may be searching for them with no recourse. We insist on the absolute necessity of taking the time required to conduct a thorough search, and we support an expanded set of methods for creating these records, including recording oral histories.

We urge the international community to remember that the children in question have suffered the overwhelming trauma of the earthquake and separation from their loved ones. We have learned first-hand that adoption (domestic or intercountry) itself as a process forces children to negate their true feelings of grief, anger, pain or loss, and to assimilate to meet the desires and expectations of strangers. Immediate removal of traumatized children for adoption—including children whose adoptions were finalized prior to the quake— compounds their trauma, and denies their right to mourn and heal with the support of their community.

We affirm the spirit of Cultural Sovereignty, Sovereignty and Self-determination embodied as rights for all peoples to determine their own economic, social and cultural development included in the Convention on the Rights of the Child; the Charter of the United Nations; the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples; and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. The mobilization of European and North American courts, legislative bodies, and social work practices to implement forced removal through intercountry adoption is a direct challenge to cultural sovereignty. We support the legal and policy application of cultural rights such as rights to language, rights to ways of being/religion, collective existence, and a representation of Haiti’s histories and existence using Haiti’s own terms.

We offer this statement in solidarity with the people of Haiti and with all those who are seeking ways to intentionally support the long-term sustainability and self-determination of the Haitian people. As adoptees of color we bear a unique understanding of the trauma, and the sense of loss and abandonment that are part of the adoptee experience, and we demand that our voices be heard. All adoptions from Haiti must be stopped and all efforts to help children be refocused on giving aid to organizations working toward family reunification and caring for children in their own communities. We urge you to join us in supporting Haitian children’s rights to life, survival, and development within their own families and communities.


Selasa, 19 Januari 2010

Adopters want themself to be shown as victims of Haiti

Childish behaviour of adopters irritate Adoptees



Now again another international 'babylift' operation has been conducted Adoptees from over the world criticise the swift decisions the 'forced' adoptions due to the fast track procedure which is suddenly no problem. Even when governments as in the Netherlands say that they act in good and sensible manner.



But it seems, that none of the governments has been studying the history of adoption and are not willing to listen to Adoptees, NGO's and professional relief organisations to put an halt to these kind of adoptions.



Now criticasters, and among them adult Adoptees, are reporting about the forceful pressure by adoption agencies and prospective adopters to get the children, worldwide the adoptionlobby launched a campaign to present the prospective adopters as the victims of the situation.



The international media show them as the awaiting good parents who wanted to rescue the children and are been criticised by doing so. It seems that the world is put upside down.



And of course no one was really interested about the comments from adult Adoptees. But the UAI would not be the UAI if it would not give attention to fellow Adoptees:

Whites Make Pact With God, Expedite Haitian Adoptions

The Wise family is adopting a little boy who currently lives in an orphanage in Port-au-Prince.

Sifting through the adoption-related news media from the past week, I’ve encountered a deluge of stories about the devastating impact of the Haitian earthquake on, um, straight middle-class white people in the U.S., Canada, and Western Europe.

My inbox is infested with melodramatic stories of good straight middle-class Christian white people who’ve bonded with “their” Haitian children through pictures, orphanage visits, and on religious missions. The Washington Post announced, “Prospective parents grow more worried about Haiti’s orphans,” and the The LA Times declared, “Children are safe, but US parents’ adoption dreams are buried in rubble of Haiti earthquake.”

“Heart-wrenching,” “excruciating,” “tragic,” “anxious,” and “fearful.” These are the terms used to frame white adoptive couples’ emotional experience of the disaster.

The children are always “safe” and “unharmed” in these stories. The economic and political origins of the children’s availability to the adoption market are erased as the individualized and apolitical personal crises of privileged white couples command center stage. The verbal violence and erasure continue in adoptive parents’ testimony about “their” Haitian children’s current situation. The children are only “living” in Haiti. Their “forever families” are waiting for them to be sent “home” to Kansas or Illinois, Indiana or Montana...<read more at her blog>

Kamis, 14 Januari 2010

Adopted Haitians worried about situation in Haiti

Adopted Haitians worried about situation in Haiti

Dutch Haitians, for instance once adopted from Haiti, are concerned about the situation in Haiti. International media and rescue teams from several NGO's and countries arriving in Haiti to help and support Haitians fighting against the disaster which struck their country.

But besides this issue, adoptees from Haiti are worried about their families. Nevertheless western media mainly focusses on people in Haiti and adopters who are in the country to get a Haitian child or waiting for an child to adopt, do not realise that many adoptees from Haiti have still a bond with the country. Another interesting issue is that western media focus on adopters and adoption agencies instead of how the situation of the possible living (birth)parents are and their children once adopted.

A possible exception is the Netherlands. Foundation Haiti Contact, which is managed by Judy Bralds, adopted from Haiti received attention from Dutch media after referrals by United Adoptees International asking for attention from the point of view from adoptees.

National Broadcast Organisation NOS broadcast this morning an interview with a member of Haiti Contact and chairman Judy Bralds.

Haiti Contact is organising an meeting event coming Saturday 16 January in Amsterdam at 14:00.

Rabu, 30 Desember 2009

Voices from within the Korean Diaspora - 1:48

"1:48 voices from within the korean diaspora" #2 feat: Kim Park Nelson

"1:48 - voices from within the korean diaspora"

Guest: Kim Park Nelson
Reporting by: Kim Thompson
Interview conducted by: Steve Hatherly for TBS radio in Seoul


Rabu, 11 November 2009

Adopted From Korea and in Search of Identity




N
EW YORK TIMES

November 9, 2009

J. Michael Short for The New York Times

Kim Eun Mi Young in her San Antonio home with family photographs and mementos.

As a child, Kim Eun Mi Young hated being different.

When her father brought home toys, a record and a picture book on South Korea, the country from which she was adopted in 1961, she ignored them.

Growing up in Georgia, Kansas and Hawaii, in a military family, she would date only white teenagers, even when Asian boys were around.

“At no time did I consider myself anything other than white,” said Ms. Young, 48, who lives in San Antonio. “I had no sense of any identity as a Korean woman. Dating an Asian man would have forced me to accept who I was.”

It was not until she was in her 30s that she began to explore her Korean heritage. One night, after going out to celebrate with her husband at the time, she says she broke down and began crying uncontrollably.

“I remember sitting there thinking, where is my mother? Why did she leave me? Why couldn’t she struggle to keep me?” she said. “That was the beginning of my journey to find out who I am.”

> read full article <

> research beyond culture camp EBD Adoption Institute <

> response in media About That Piece on Transracial Adoptions in the New York Times...

Korean Adoptees <