Please stop sending Korean babies for adoption to Sweden and
other countries. Why? From my point of view as an adoptee, I want to
emphasize several reasons.
The first is racism and discrimination against Korean women which, as an
adult woman with an East Asian appearance, I and other Asian women face on
a daily basis.
From Sweden, and other Western countries, there is a flourishing sex
tourism to East and Southeast Asia. Some travel agencies have specialized
in these kinds of tours and the horrifying business is affecting the
adoptees. We become victims of this tragic sex tourism, as we are
perceived and treated as prostitutes in Swedish society. Many Korean
adopted women have been assaulted by words such as "whore, go home to your
country," and some adoptees have even been attacked physically by Swedish
people. The racism among Swedes toward Asians is very strong. This
affects our lives and is a big burden on our sense of happiness and
quality of life.
Secondly, there is racism against Korean men. The majority of Korean males
are also victims of racism as most Asian adopted males in Sweden are not
married. Racism in Sweden includes an unwillingness to share their lives
with a spouse with a foreign appearance and Korean men suffer tremendously
in not finding a wife. As Koreans they are also shorter and they have
black hair and brown eyes. In Sweden the ideal is still the Swedish
appearance of tall males with lots of muscles and a Swedish blond,
blue-eyed appearance.
For the first time in Sweden, results of scientific research have also
shown that the rate of suicide among adoptees is five times higher than
among Swedes, and the adoptees are also more often treated at psychiatric
clinics.
There is also racism in the labour market. According to the latest
research, 50 percent of adoptees were unemployed during the past year. It
is well known that immigrants from Africa and the Middle East are rejected
on the labour market.
The bond between adoptees and their Swedish adoptive family seems to
become more fragile and full of conflict over the years. Maybe the lack of
a blood connection and our Asian appearance remind them of not having a
biological child. A lot of adoptive parents withdraw themselves from the
relationship with the adopted child when they grow up, especially in those
families where they already have their own biological children.
I have talked with many adoptees who have severed their contact with their
adoptive family because of mistreatment and abuse. It is a great strain
for them to take the decision to break up with their families. We adoptees
try to support each other but that is not enough. We want Korea to stop
sending more babies to the West. We do not want more Korean children to
come to Western societies just to suffer as much as we have suffered and
are still doing.
The only service adoption agencies in Korea provide that I think is
adequate is helping adult adoptees to find their biological parents or
roots. In my view, adoption agencies should, instead of sending babies to
the West, help children in their own country and help single mothers
provide for their existence.
I am pleased to hear that Korea is slowly changing its attitude regarding
single motherhood, but I am sad and angry that adoption agencies still
visit hospitals in order to persuade pregnant mothers to leave their
babies for adoption.
As long as there exists strong racism in the receiving countries, where we
adoptees face discrimination in our daily lives, and as long as there are
no adequate resources in the recipient countries to meet adoptees special
needs, I and other adoptees want to stop international adoption
altogether.
How many more suicides among adoptees will there be before Korea stops
adoption to the West? The suffering we are doomed to, as lifelong
outsiders and as a discriminated group in Swedish society, is larger and
deeper than
the suffering we would have faced growing up in Korea. The hardships
would, in that case, only be there during adolescence, but as adults we
would be married, living an ordinary life as good citizens helping Korea
in its development.
Korea is no longer a poor country, but a highly developed and successful
nation. There is no longer any economic reason for Korea to send babies to
the West. Korea needs its own babies who will grow up and help the country
in every area of the society. It is a loss for Korea to send its beautiful
and talented babies to the West to a life of huge suffering and with a
high suicide rate.
I would myself have preferred to stay in Korea instead of being adopted
and doomed to a lifelong status as an outsider, becoming a lifelong object
of racism and discrimination. Many other Korean adoptees share my point
of view.
By Susanne Brink
The writer studies theology in Uppsala, Sweden.
susanne_brink@bredband.net
