If you thought that ethnic cleansing was something for the history books, think again...
Book One |
In the last few days, I checked the book reviews in the UK (England) and was so happy to read this great honest review for Two Worlds by Yassmin. She gets it! (read her quote above and the review below)
The writers in the first anthology Two Worlds (Book 1) broke new ground. They told their story in their own way in their own words. (I like to tease them and call them rock stars.) We are the pre-ICWA adoptees - before the federal law was signed, preventing adoption to non-Indian parents and thereby supporting kinship adoption when children remain in their tribal community.
For these adoptees, it takes real courage to think about the past and try to make sense of it. Many of us adoptees thought we were the only one... I know I did.
Many of us felt alone, isolated, confused.
Then we have to look at the reunion aspects of our journey with relatives and parents, and doing that we reconnect to our sovereign nations again. Maybe we were already enrolled, maybe not. Maybe we have land to inherit, maybe not. (The purpose of these adoptions was to erase us, end our rights, take our land and erase "the Indian" us off the BIA books.)
Book 2 (40 adoptees +) |
Can you see how widespread this is (in Canada and the US) and how it's a growing problem? The problem is exasperated by states with sealed adoption records and the Bureau of Indian Affairs who is not actively helping us adoptees rejoin our tribes.
The deception is obvious - their point was to not have any of us be Indian and enrolled!
1 of 1 people found the following helpful
Thought-provoking and moving
11 October 2012
Two Worlds - Lost children of the Indian Adoption ProjectsIf you thought that ethnic cleansing was something for the history books, think again. This work tells the stories of Native American Indian adoptees "The Lost Birds" who continue to suffer the effects of successive US and Canadian government policies on adoption; policies that were in force as recently as the 1970's. Many of the contributors still bear the scars of their separation from their ancestral roots. What becomes apparent to the reader is the reality of a racial memory that lives in the DNA of adoptees and calls to them from the past.
The editors have let the contributors tell their own stories of their childhood and search for their blood relatives, allowing the reader to gain a true impression of their personalities. What becomes apparent is that nothing is straightforward; re-assimilation brings its own cultural and emotional problems. Not all of the stories are harrowing or sad; there are a number of heart-warming successes, and not all placements amongst white families had negative consequences. But with whom should the ultimate decision of adoption reside? Government authorities or the Indian people themselves? Read Two Worlds and decide for yourself.
LINK |
We have documented new history in our own words in Three Books!
For me, that is all I hoped for, prayed for... I have been reunited with my own family over 20 years.
...and because I feel as I do doesn't mean adoption will ever change... it probably won't.
I am a voice in the wind... I just want to spare a child the pain of secrecy, lies, hurt, loss...
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