| |
|
|
 |
|
 |
Please feel free to read and explore the materials in this section. If you are doing research and need help with something, we will try to assist you in any way we can. If you would like us to post something you have written, please contact us at : [email protected]. We will do our best to post all relevant materials; however, we reserve the right not to post your submission if we feel it is inappropriate.
Please note that anything downloaded from this site may not in any way be altered or reproduced without written permission from the author or artist. Thank you! |
 |
All | News Articles | Documents | Laws & Regulations | ASK Publications | Video | Misc.
|
|
|
|
| Name |
ASK |
|
| Subject |
Adoptions: Korean disgrace 20040818 |
|
To The Editor:
More than a week has passed since the Adoptee Gathering 2004 was held for the first time in Seoul. From August 4 through August 8 over 400 adult adoptees representing 15 nations returned to Korea, the land of their birth. Yet for the vast majority of the approximately 200,000 Korean adoptees dispersed throughout the world since 1953, they will never return. And for the scores of adoptees who have chosen to live and work here in Korea who did not attend the Gathering – whether by choice, lack of financial means, or working conflicts, the decision to be here is neither simple nor easy. And never will it be so.
Certainly we are small in numbers, but what we represent, what the product of our pasts reveals about this small peninsular country which in the 50 years since the end of the Korean War has become the 12th largest economy in the world, is a history that continues to allow itself to be marred by the unequal circumstances of poverty, social conservatism, political inferiority, missionary zeal, racism, prejudice, ignorance, the unequal status of women (hoju-je), and a lack of social welfare and sex education. The simple fact that South Korea continues to export its children abroad, at the rate of more than 2,000 babies per year, especially when the domestic birthrate is at its all-time lowest, is nothing less than a disgrace.
Now that the Korean press has filed away its reports, the television crews have packed up their bags, and the stories about “successful” adoptees, tearful reunions, and adoptees’ struggles with identity can once again be forgotten, what does that leave us, the adoptees, with? Now that the press, with the aim to assuage and indulge the guilty consciences of the public, has gone on to the next newsworthy item, what will be done as a result of all those editorials calling for the ceasing of international adoption? What changes will be done as a result of Koreans’ embarrassment and shame about the adoption “issue?”
I think nothing will be done – by Koreans, that is. Because if the government was going to do something about changing the policy of international adoption, it would have done so already, like it has promised to do in the past. Despite every obstacle we face, it is we, the Korean Adoptees, who are now taking the initiative to organize ourselves into a Network of like-minded adoptees and allies who aim to reform the practice of international adoption out of Korea. International adoption should not be an option.
Kim Stoker, Duksung Women's University, Seoul 18 August 2004
|

 |

|
|
|
|
|

|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|