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- <text id=94TT1097>
- <title>
- Aug. 22, 1994: Society:Babies for Export
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 22, 1994 Stee-rike!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOCIETY, Page 64
- Babies for Export
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Despite a shortage of adoptable U.S. infants, hundreds end up
- in homes abroad
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by Ann Blackman/Washington, Massimo Calabresi/New York,
- Wendy Cole/Chicago, Scott Norvell/Atlanta, with bureau reports
- </p>
- <p> At first glance, Stefan and Birgit Wilhelmi's story seems routine.
- A thirtysomething couple with an infertility problem, the Wilhelmis
- decided to adopt a child. Certified in 1992 as fit to be parents,
- they signed with a private Pennsylvania agency called the Option
- of Adoption. In January 1993 the agency called to say that a
- nine-month-old baby named Traymont was available. Ten days later,
- the Wilhelmis took the child home. No heart-searing dramas followed:
- Traymont's birth parents did not try to reclaim custody; previously
- unidentified relatives did not surface to contest the adoption.
- Encouraged by the ease of the process, the Wilhelmis decided
- to adopt a second child. Last February, 12-day-old Sally joined
- their family.
- </p>
- <p> What's unusual about this tableau, however, is that the Wilhelmis
- are German. Home for this white couple and their American-born,
- black children is Flensburg, a city north of Hamburg and an
- ocean's divide from U.S. soil. Had the Wilhelmis been Americans
- from another U.S. state, they could not have removed the children
- from Pennsylvania without complying first with the terms of
- the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children. That means
- a review of their paperwork in both Pennsylvania and their home
- state, a process that typically takes up to two weeks. Instead
- the Wilhelmis had only to spend a day obtaining passports for
- the children.
- </p>
- <p> Most Americans would probably be surprised to learn that children
- from the U.S. are being placed in foreign homes. According to
- the National Council for Adoption, between 1 million and 2 million
- U.S. families would like to adopt. That demand greatly outstrips
- the approximately 100,000 American infants and children who
- are available each year for public and private adoption. As
- a result, prospective parents must either wait on average 2
- 1/2 years or look abroad, where Americans adopt upwards of 7,000
- children a year.
- </p>
- <p> Yet at the same time, adoption experts estimate that 500 U.S.
- children--most of them black or biracial--are being placed
- in homes in Australia, Canada and Western Europe each year.
- The number could be even higher: because the U.S. has no exit-visa
- requirements, the Federal Government does not keep count. Moreover,
- while all 50 states have procedures for domestic adoptions,
- the Federal Government neither regulates foreigners' adoptions
- nor follows up to learn how the children are faring. Though
- a State Department official says there has been talk among his
- colleagues of erecting safeguards, as yet nothing has been done.
- Says Susan Freivalds, executive director of Adoptive Families
- of America, based in Minneapolis, Minnesota: "It's shameful
- that we don't know how many there are, much less who they're
- going to and under what circumstances they're being adopted."
- </p>
- <p> The countries where the children end up may not know much more
- about the adoptions than the U.S. government. Britain's Department
- of Health, for instance, lists only one American adoption in
- the past year. Yet in 1992 the London Observer Magazine ran
- a cover story stating that "one of the most accessible places
- for intercountry adoption is, surprisingly, the United States."
- Craig Bluestein, a Pennsylvania attorney, says he has been receiving
- "a lot of England calls" lately. And while the Dutch government
- is aware of such adoptions, the Netherland's largest international
- adoption agency reports that there were "one or two cases about
- 10 years ago, but since then nothing." It took TIME just a single
- week to turn up six such adoptions that took place within the
- past four years.
- </p>
- <p> While there is nothing illegal or insidious about these adoptions,
- some experts regard the phenomenon with a mix of incredulity
- and alarm. "It's bizarre," says Joe Kroll, executive director
- of the North American Council on Adoptable Children in St. Paul,
- Minnesota. "We have families of all races who want to adopt
- children. Why are we going to other countries?" There are two
- main reasons: some lawyers and agencies find it easier and less
- time consuming to place black and biracial babies overseas,
- and some birth parents actually want their infants placed abroad.
- </p>
- <p> Steven Kirsh, a past president of the American Association of
- Adoption Attorneys who has placed seven biracial babies in homes
- overseas in the past four years, calculates that there are 80
- U.S. families waiting for every available white infant, five
- for every biracial baby, less than one for every black infant.
- "It's difficult to find homes in this country for mixed-race
- infants," he says, "and especially difficult for black infants."
- His claim is echoed by adoption experts from Atlanta to Beverly
- Hills, who contend that the number of white couples adopting
- black children has shriveled since 1972, when the National Association
- of Black Social Workers denounced transracial adoption as "cultural
- genocide." These same agencies and lawyers also complain that
- there is a paucity of black adoptive families.
- </p>
- <p> Others dispute any shortage of willing recipients among African
- Americans. "I have more families coming to my agency than I
- can possibly handle," says Zena Oglesby, executive director
- of the Institute for Black Parenting in Englewood, California.
- "In my 17 years in adoption, I've never seen a shortage of black
- families that want children. Never." What Oglesby says he does
- see is a shortage of families willing to pay adoption fees--which range from $3,500 to $50,000 for a private adoption. "You're
- talking about a race of people who were brought here in slavery,"
- he says. "Paying money for a child is akin to slavery." Instead
- of charging prospective parents a fee, Oglesby handles his expenses
- with donations from Hollywood entrepreneurs and the $3,000 that
- the government pays him for each foster child he places.
- </p>
- <p> Even if there were enough families--black or white--who
- wanted to adopt black children, there would still be birth mothers
- who preferred overseas placement. Some want the child far enough
- away to avoid any future encounter, either with themselves or
- with abusive birth fathers who might try to claim custody. Still
- others are illegal aliens who quietly place their children abroad,
- fearing that a domestic adoption might draw the scrutiny of
- immigration officials. Then there are those like 19-year-old
- Ami of Indiana who thinks that the biracial baby she will bear
- in September will enjoy an easier life overseas. "Crime and
- racial tension are not as bad in other countries as they are
- here," says Ami, a former day-care worker. Ami, who is currently
- considering two couples, is leaning toward a biracial Dutch
- couple. "She'll be able to travel and learn and see different
- cultures," she says of her child.
- </p>
- <p> No less than their counterparts in America, adoptive families
- in other countries have fought hard to add a child to their
- life. In Western Europe the pool of adoptable children is tiny
- because of the availability of abortion as an accepted form
- of family planning, as well as social-welfare benefits that
- enable single mothers to keep their babies. Canadian couples
- like Richard and Jennifer Lewis, who adopted three black American
- children, looked southward because the waiting time at home
- can be as long as 10 years.
- </p>
- <p> Last year an Italian couple took home a girl born to Trish,
- 24, a single black woman who works two jobs to make ends meet.
- Trish says she chose the couple after Family Partners Worldwide,
- Inc., of Atlanta persuaded her that she would have a difficult
- time finding a black American couple. "I can only hope and pray
- that the parents will allow her access to the resources she
- needs to discover her true culture," Trish says of her child.
- Trish has instructed the agency to put her daughter in touch
- with her if she should come looking 17 or so years from now.
- In anticipation of that day, Trish is thinking of learning Italian.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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