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November 14, 2007

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» NYT Adoption Blog Salts Wounds In International Adoption Community from Popehat
The New York Times recently launched a blog about adoption which so far focuses quite a bit about international adoption issues. As any adoptive parent could have predicted, its been a rough ride already. I think that people who are not themse... [Read More]

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Thanks Jae Ran for opening up your blog. These are illuminating and while it is sad that the readers of the NWT won't see them on their site, it's very helpful to see them here.

Pink

They didn't publish my comment either. I really thought it was very mild....I merely criticized Janowitz because she verbalized (to her daughter) her assumptions about what her fate would have been had she stayed in China. I wish I had saved my comment as well. I was very terse and all I said was that those particular words were cruel. That's it!

Thank you, JR, for opening up this important forum. It is so important to hear EVERYONE'S voices on these issues.

Thank you so much, JR, for being the superwoman that you are and maintaining your insightful, awesome blog while at the same time working, teaching, and being a wife and mother. And studying for the GRE! Whew! I'm so glad your blog is consistently here so that we can have a voice.

Thanks JR, for posting all of the comments and putting it all out here. I am so glad Harlow's Monkey is still here, and fighting for us.

Jae Ran,

I was glad to see that you got through today in the comments to Hollee's essay. But some of the other comments made me want to bang my head on the table.

Regardless of how smug or self-assured TJ might be, or how unresponsive the NYT might seem, I think we can be confident that the buzz and dissent that we have all helped create is more than enough to rattle them into at least doing *some* examination of what went down. I also encourage people to keep making noise about this, because what they would really want at this point would be for all of us to just go away. We won't!!

Thanks, Jae Ran, for hosting this!

Dear All,

Censoring articles and views regarding work of (critical) Adoptees happens worldwide. We have seen this in South-Korea for many years but also in Europe, and the States. Especially those media which has been by influenced by adopters and adoption parents directly or indirectly.

Unfortunally it’s an international phenomenon which is hard to counter as long policymakers and politics are closer to adopters as Adoptees. That’s why we – United Adoptees International Netherlands – launched a campaign last year to make the public aware of the ‘downside’ of (Intercountry) adoption (ICA).

We started to debate and discuss on all levels of media and institutes to get our message and opinion published and heard. With the on going adoption scandals globally we had the chance to become from underdog to serious partner in media regarding ICA and adoption in general within the Netherlands.

It’s possible to gain this position but alone and by organizing ourselves and to be present on different levels of the topic. This urges us to understand our personal adoptions first to oversee the necessary ‘helicopter view’ which is needed to get on the table of programmers and editors. This will solve the problem that our announcements will be seen as ‘personal’ memoirs of unresolved problems and traumas to a development on international scale and impact.

This necessary development is needed to encounter remarks like; ‘not sexy’, ‘no direct news value’, ‘badly written’ ‘till to complex and difficult. The need is there to get in the center court of the game and the only possibility to get there is to join efforts to create the necessary pressure and power worldwide. This blog is one of the very good initiatives but we have to want reach further.

Warm regards,

Hilbrand W.S. Westra a.k.a Jung Woon Seok
Chairman – United Adoptees International – The Netherlands
uai.hwestra@gmail.com

I too never had my comment posted. As an adoptive Mom, I was sick to see that comment. I actually re-read it several times thinking I MUST be reading it wrong. It's hard enough when our kids get this stuff from stupid strangers, but from a parent...I can't even imagine saying that to my daughter. In reality isn't everyone who doesn't have to work in those factories fortunate, and those who do, victims of their circumstances? I think about my daughter's birth Mom every day. Hoping she is well, knowing my joy came at the price of her loss.

Thank you for posting these. I winced several times reading TJ's article. It was a pretty useless and narcissistic article in my estimation. I certainly learn more from adult adoptees about how to parent my daughter than from many other adults, including "adoption experts". I want you all to know that, and thank you again for giving back to your younger brothers and sisters who were also transracially adopted. I am not opposed to transracial or international adoptions, I believe having parents is invaluable over almost anything else for a child. But there are many many issues which need to be addressed with adoptions, even to the extent that children are sometimes taken from their birth parents simply for a "better" (so called) Western style life, (as SG said above "we must comprehend that some of us have more choices than others")and those problems need to be brought forward and addressed, as well as the childrearing issues themselves. My daughter is not quite at a point to comprehend what many of you say, but I know I appreciate it and keep it all in mind to keep myself from making similar mistakes as TJ made in my comments and understanding.

Ann, IrishGermanFallenCatholicWhiteAmericanMom
of a lovely young woman (12) from China.

PS: just a note on my general comment about supporting them, that one of my concerns about international and transracial adoptions include
the determined continuance of some cultures which are so small their survival is at stake.

Thank you, for posting these responses and opening up your thoughts for commentary. The article you are responding to was a small-minded piece of work, but it's inspired me to start a folder full of clippings for my own daughter adopted from China to see when she gets old enough to begin her quest for self-identity.

I know I can't protect her forever from people's opinions, but a great way to help her to understand that she has a right for her voice to be heard is to read all the thoughts expressed here by so many caring, thoughtful individuals.

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Harlow's Monkey

  • I am a social worker who doesn’t believe that social work is just about "saving" people or "helping" people. Social work is about reform and empowerment, not about social control. I am attempting to be an agent of change from within the institutional structures that historically have been used to discriminate against those our society does not value. This blog was born in March of 2006 as a way to put down my thoughts about international and transracial adoption, foster care, race and social work from a point of view that is often missing - the adoptee themselves.

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  • © 2006-2009. This content on this web site is copyrighted. Content may not be republished, reprinted or repurposed without permission. Short excerpts and links are encouraged, but for permission to quote an entire post, please email me at the link above.