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Adoption: One man's quest to find his identity

Adoption: One man's quest to find his identity

Tim Fredericks was born in South Korea, and adopted by an Australian family.

Tim Fredericks was born in South Korea, and adopted by an Australian family.

Tim Fredericks was adopted from South Korea as a baby. While he has had a loving and supportive upbringing, a lingering feeling of loneliness drove him to seek out his birth mother.

As a child, Tim Fredericks felt like every other kid – he went to school, played sport and hung out with friends and family.

“I felt normal like everybody else,” says Mr Fredericks, now 29 and a graphic designer.

“But when I tell people I’m adopted, they ask me a million questions and that makes me feel like I’m not normal.”

“I think the worst thing you can say to someone who is adopted is ‘sorry’. I know some people don’t mean any harm but I don’t feel like there is anything wrong with being adopted.”

Mr Fredericks was adopted from South Korea when he was three years old, and grew up in an ethnically mixed area on Sydney’s north shore.

Adopted into an Australian family of five that included an Australian adopted brother and Korean adopted sister, Mr Fredericks says he grew up in a loving and supportive family.

Yet, Mr Fredericks always felt lonely.

"I felt like I was born alone,” he says.

“That loneliness lingers on throughout life. It’s a little bit like identity crisis, not knowing your roots.”

“You only know what you look like in your own reflection but you don’t know the roots to your reflection.”

Mr Fredericks said he had used this as a source of strength in his life.

“I didn’t really struggle with loneliness. I just used that as a strength to build myself. I make my own energy,” he said.

Having grown up in a multicultural neighbourhood with Korean friends, Mr Fredericks said he always felt proud to be Korean Australian.

“I like to say I’m Korean and I’m proud. I have Korean blood. I’m proud of it even though I don’t know much about the culture. I think it’s because of how I look,” he laughed.

“I see myself in the mirror everyday so I might as well embrace it.”

Mr Fredericks was 25 before he became interested in finding his birth family.

His only lead was a document provided at the time of his adoption. It revealed his single mother was forced to relinquish him to avoid the social stigma of being unwed, and it was hoped adoption would provide him a better future. The document also said his biological father was a married senior manager at a toy factory and his mother a young employee.

“I have some kind of resentment towards my dad cause of what he did to mum but I don’t even know him which is unusual,” he says.

“My fantasy dream is that if I become rich, I’d go back and save her, buy her a house and make her happy.”

“It’s kind of lame and I don’t know why I feel this way. It’s hard to say goodbye to someone and she wouldn’t have wanted to let me go. It’s not her fault. She just wanted what was best for me.”

Mr Fredericks has tried to locate his mother four years’ ago. However, his search was cut short when the NSW Department of Community Services (DoCS) who manages inter-country adoption processes implied she had moved on and started a new family.

“I’m not prepared to not give it another go just based on those words,” he said.

“It may sound like bullshit but it’s just this inner feeling I get, that she is somewhere out there, trying to find me.”

“What if DoCS was wrong and she goes to church praying to be reunified? That would be such a shame. I’m doing this for her as well.”

Mr Fredericks adds that he would be happy to just visit the orphanage from which he was adopted, as it would help him piece together his past.

“I want to retrace where I came from. I want to see the kids in the orphanage now. I don’t have my birth parents so it’s the only roots I have left,” he said.

Asked about recent changes to the intercountry adoption program in South Korea, Mr Fredericks says he's concerned about whether the government was acting in the best interests of children.

“I think it’s a sad thing the South Korean government is reducing the number of inter-country adoptions,” he said.

“I know culturally Koreans have too much pride and they hide the fact that their kids are adopted.”

“It’s a shame that they are not as open as they should be.”

The international adoption system, blocked by bureaucracy. Only 2 minors are close to have a family

From: Vali <

valinash@gmail.com

>;
To: Vali <

valinash@gmail.com

>;
Subject: [Romanian_Adoption] The international adoption system, blocked by bureaucracy
Sent: Tue, Sep 18, 2012 9:57:56 PM

Commissione Bicamerale per l’Infanzia, presentata la proposta di Ai.Bi. contro la crisi dell’adozione internazionale

Data: 18-09-12

Autore: Marco Maccari

Roma: Commissione Bicamerale per l’Infanzia, presentata la proposta di Ai.Bi. contro la crisi dell’adozione internazionale. Sen. Serafini: “Un Paese che non crede nelle adozioni internazionali è un Paese debole!”

ROMA, 18 settembre 2012 – Con la presentazione in Commissione Bicamerale per l’Infanzia della proposta di riforma della legge 184/1983, elaborata da Ai.Bi. per più adozioni internazionali e più famiglie adottive, è iniziata la fase di confronto istituzionale sui sei punti della riforma.

La proposta presentata dalla delegazione di Ai.Bi. – composta da Marco Griffini, Presidente, dall’avv. Enrica Dato dell’Ufficio Diritti dei Minori e da Marzia Masiello, Relazioni Istituzionali – nell’ambito della indagine avviata dalla Commissione il 6 marzo 2012 circa lo stato di attuazione delle norme vigenti sull’adozione, è stata accolta con grande interesse e attenzione dai parlamentari membri della Commissione.

Statements of support regarding the subsidy discount for Fiom

18/09/2012-Category:Legislation,About Fiom

Jane Eales , late discovery adoptee living in Sydney

Monica van Berkum , director Pharos

Professor Jan Kremer (gynaecologist) and drs. Dana Huppelschoten (doctor-researcher) Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology UMC St Radboud, Nijmegen

Diana Veldman , director/executive director Rutgers WPF

Foreign government may take UK to European court over its 'illegal’ child-snatching

Foreign government may take UK to European court over its 'illegal’ child-snatching

The Slovakian government has such 'serious concern' over the workings of Britain’s 'family protection' system that it plans to challenge the legality of the policy in Strasbourg

The child protection system has torn another family apart

So disturbed is the government of Slovakia by the number of Slovak parents who have lost their children in Britain in recent years that its justice ministry has posted a declaration highly critical of Britain Photo: ALAMY

Christopher Booker By Christopher Booker5:23PM BST 15 Sep 2012

Improving child adoption management

Updated :           

9:56 AM, 13/09/2012

Improving child adoption management

(VOV) - The Prime Minister has approved a project on the implementation of the Hague Convention on the Protection of Children and Cooperation in Respect of Inter-country Adoption for the 2012-2015 period.

Under the project, the Ministry of Justice is assigned to build a database on child adoption in 2012.

Besides, the Ministry of Justice will coordinate with the Ministries of Foreign Affairs, Public Security and Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs to develop a joint mechanism for monitoring the situation of Vietnamese children adopted overseas and protecting them when necessary.

Between 2013-2015, the Ministry of Justice will implement a pilot program to organise home visits for Vietnamese children adopted overseas.

Gandhis vs a Swedish nurse: The murky secrets of international adoptions

Gandhis vs a Swedish nurse: The murky secrets of international adoptions

  by  10 September 2012

Why are the descendants of the Father of the Nation trying to keep an Indian adoptee from finding out who was her birth mother?

Mihir Srivastava’s cover story for Open Magazine about the tangled web of international adoptions tries to shed light on many dark family secrets but the story of Rebeckah Saudamini Arnes, a 34-year-old nurse from Sweden sticks out because of the Gandhi name.

Arnes was adopted by a Swedish couple but when she tried to find out about her birth mother she hit a roadblock. Her adoption was facilitated by Arun Gandhi, the Mahatma’s grandson and later by Tushar Gandhi, his great-grandson through the Mahatma Gandhi Foundation.

Arun Gandhi, who has allegedly threatened Rebeckah against trying to find her biological mother. Reuters.

But Arnes and her boyfriend Johann Berggren allege that the Gandhis have been less than helpful in her quest to uncover her roots.

The main issue, of course, is birth mother confidentiality. Arun Gandhi told her in an email that the father and mother have a right to privacy and that information cannot be divulged until they waive that right.

But then it gets more intriguing.

Arun Gandhi wrote to Arnes: ‘You must remember: you are assuming that your mother lives in poverty and destitution. That is not so. Anyone who could go to a private nursing home for delivery has to be upper middle class.’

When she persisted it started getting uglier.

Tushar Gandhi to Arnes: I am going to write to the Indian embassy in Stockholm requesting never to give you a visa to come to India, and believe me they will listen to me.

And it didn’t stop there. Gandhi went on to call Arnes her birth mother’s “curse not her offspring” and a “curse on her fate since the day you took root in her womb”.

The Gandhi name jumps out of this story but what Srivastava is writing about are the enormous bureaucratic hurdles adoptees face trying to ferret out their history from within our paper raj. In a culture that often gives short shrift to privacy, adoption is still shrouded in so much stigma that privacy laws kick into high gear when it comes to protecting the parents’ identity.

The debate over whether the right to know is a right at all is a tricky one. But Srivastava’s article is worth a read because it points to some things that often get left out of adoption stories.

The international adoption story is usually written as the story of the child, almost always a girl child, born in abject poverty, abandoned at the doors of an orphanage who gets a chance at another life abroad. Srivastava complicates that story by suggesting, as in Arnes’ case, that sometimes a child is given up for reasons other than poverty.

The adoption racket, whereby foreign adoption agencies are accused of basically being in the business of legalized child trafficking has been getting quite a bit of attention these days. But activists say some of the government response has been counterproductive. When India’s Central Adoption Resource Authorty (CARA) bans third-party searches on adoption histories, who is it really protecting? The child who might want to know his family medical history or the agency that facilitated the adoption or the birth parents?

The Hague Convention on Intercountry Adoptions tries to address some of those concerns  by setting standards to try and create a clear bright line between adoption and trafficking. That might eliminate stories such as the one that happened to Cha Jung Hee. An eight-year-old Korean girl was adopted by an American family in 1966. Her passport said Cha Jung Hee but the girl knew she was not the person the family thought they were adopting. She had been switched since that girl had left the orphanage and the orphanage did not want to lose the sponsorship money, 15 dollars a month, the adoptive family was sending on her behalf. That girl eventually went back to South Korea as a grown woman to find out what happened to the real Cha Jung Hee and made a documentary about it. Adoption was so huge in Korea after  World War II there was a national programme on television trying to reunite missing children with their birth parents. That’s nowhere on the cards in India. But the bureaucracy that shrouded Cha Jung Hee’s case is as opaque as the one in India.

But tracking down a birth parent is often quite a traumatic experience for all sides concerned. In her 2010 novel Secret Daughter, Shilpi  Gowda traces the impact of a child given up for adoption on both the family that takes her in and the family which gives her up. When the child, as a young woman, tries to uncover the truth she is forced to question an old adage we take for granted. Is blood really thicker than water, especially the water you have grown up drinking your entire life?

However whether one is ready to actually know the answers one seeks is way down the road for the adoptees Srivastava profiles. As the stories of Arnes and some of the other adoptees in Open show, it’s not clear if  these Indian-born children even have a right to ask these questions in the first place.

You can read Mihir Srivastva’s entire article here in Open Magazine.

North Korea - House passes adoption bill

House Passes Adoption Bill

2012-09-12

US lawmakers vote to remove barriers for adopting North Korean refugee orphans.

AFP

Malnourished children in North Korea's North Hamgyong Province, June 20, 2008.

The U.S. House of Representatives has passed a bill aimed at streamlining procedures for American families wanting to adopt North Korean orphans, termed as “some of the world’s most endangered children.”

The North Korean Refugee Adoption Act, adopted on Tuesday, directs U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, in consultation with the Secretary of Homeland Security, to develop a strategy to “facilitate the adoption of North Korean refugee children” by families in the U.S.

The legislation also requires that the State Department issue a report to Congress on that strategy within 180 days of its enactment.

Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, the Republican Chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, said that while many North Koreans face extreme repression, malnutrition, and poverty, those threats often take the greatest toll on the country’s children.

Thousands of North Koreans facing starvation and disease have fled the country and now live as refugees in China, Mongolia, Thailand and other Southeast Asia nations where they remain susceptible to human trafficking and are at risk of being repatriated and facing persecution.

“Imagine what happens when a child’s natural protectors—parents—are no longer in the picture. And imagine what happens when that child is born or orphaned inside China where the child lacks legal status, or dependable access to social services,” she said.

“Malnutrition, abuse, exploitation, lack of education—these are the horrors that are faced by orphans of North Korean origin who are effectively stateless and without protection.”

She went on to say that the U.S. is home to the largest Korean ethnic population outside of Northeast Asia and that many of the nearly two million Americans of Korean descent have family ties to North Korea.

“Numerous American families would like to provide caring homes to these stateless North Korean orphans,” she said.

The legislation “is a responsible first step towards making that possible.”

It was co-sponsored by Republican Representative Ed Royce and Democratic lawmaker Howard Berman.  A similar bill is being considered by a Senate panel.

‘At great risk’

Ros-Lehtinen said that the bill would require the State Department to “take a broad look” at the diplomatic and documentation challenges facing American families who seek to adopt the refugee orphans.

“Doing the right thing is not always easy. I especially want to applaud those adoptive parents—both past and future—who invest their own lives and homes to provide loving families for some of the world’s most endangered children,” she said.

Berman, the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said the U.S. has a moral obligation to help North Koreans suffering rights abuses.

“As innocent men, women, and children flee the repressive North Korean regime at great personal risk, we have a moral obligation to assist them,” he said.

“This bill, H.R. 1464, is not merely about adoption, but also an issue of human rights for the North Korean people.”

The State Department’s most recent annual report on human trafficking kept North Korea at the lowest ranking of all nations, citing estimates that as many of 70 percent of the thousands of undocumented North Korean refugees in China are females, many of whom are trafficking victims.

Most commonly, women and girls from one of North Korea’s poorest border areas cross into China and are then sold and re-sold as “brides.”

Aid workers estimate that there are some 2,000 "defector orphans" in China, with a possible total of 30,000 North Korean defectors living in hiding, mostly driven over the border to look for food and work.

"Stateless orphans," on the other hand, are born out of relationships between North Korean women and Chinese men, with their mothers subsequently deported to North Korea.

"Stateless orphans" are currently believed to number 10,000-20,000, and are unable to get an education because they lack official Chinese papers. Late registration of children without papers costs 5,000 yuan (U.S. $790), around three times the monthly salary of the average Chinese person, aid workers said.

Reported by Joshua Lipes.

Notice: Suspension of Services to U.S. Adoption Service

November 9, 2012

Notice: Suspension of Services to U.S. Adoption Service
Providers

The Ministry of Women, Children, and Youth Affairs informed the U.S. Embassy
in Addis Ababa that as of September 12, 2012, the Ministry temporarily suspended
services to International Adoption Guides and Adoption Advocates International. 
This suspension follows reports of abuse to Ethiopian adoptees placed with U.S.
families by these agencies.  This suspension of services applies to new cases
only.  While court hearings may be assigned, the suspension of services may
prevent a final decision from the Federal First Instance Court, or a final
decree from the Ministry, from being issued.  The Ministry indicated that this
action is temporary, and that a final determination will only be made once the
Ministry has sufficient opportunity to investigate the abuse cases and to review
the actions taken by the agencies to address the situation.

The Department of State will post further information regarding this matter
as it becomes available on adoption.state.gov.

Happily adopted

Sometimes life comes full circle — something 33-year-old Mousami Damle would fully testify to, after she returned to the

city she was adopted from in 1979, by Non-Resident Indian couple Vijay and Vidya Damle.

Mousami is now the Vice President (Human Resources) of a New York-based advertising company, but returning to the place

that was her home before she found a loving family, she could barely hold back her tears. Today, Mousami knows that she too

may adopt a child someday, and give him or her a happy home.