Voices From Exile, By Joss Shawyer
Death by Adoption
When my book, Death By Adoption was published in New Zealand in
1979, it caused quite a stir. There were many reviews, some supportive,
others downright scary, but one that stayed in my memory was printed
in a Catholic publication. The reviewer berated me for what was
described as my "angry and bitter" stance against adoption,
that sacred cow that had always been off limits to criticism. You
would have thought that I had burnt the national flag or otherwise
committed an act of unforgivable sedition, instead of simply exposing
the traffic of adoption for what it was; a wholesale oppression
of unmarried women and the children born to us outside of formal
marriage.
Five years previously I was asked to address a group of social
workers to present my views for single mothers and against adoption.
By the time I finished speaking, some of those social workers were
on their feet and screaming at me. One even cried real tears as
she tried to process what I had said. I could see how very disturbed
social workers were as a group and what a vested, very personal
interest they had in adoption. But then they were almost like God,
really - in the powerful position of giving away other people's
children. And of course, they had never been challenged.
But in those days women were not supposed to think or say things
that were remotely political. That was the territory of men. Women
certainly never told the truth - about their own lives; about unwanted
or unplanned pregnancies, about being a battered wife perhaps, or
about having been raped. 'Good' women, that is, women that men approved
of - were essentially passive women. They kept their mouths shut
about the crimes committed against them, and especially about the
traumatic life experiences that were the lot of all fertile women.
And then, with the advent of women's liberation the entire social
climate changed.
It seemed that overnight women were speaking out, rejecting the
terrible, damaging passivity that men had enforced in order to maintain
gender control for so long. What a relief it was to be a woman who
did not give a toss what anyone thought about what she thought,
or said. It was a wonderful freedom to be oneself and there would
be no going back.
I became one of those outspoken, stroppy feminists tired of being
oppressed, in my case because I was a single mother. One who had
rejected adoption as an acceptable solution to a pregnancy other
people found inconvenient. My experiences of serial oppression perpetrated
on me throughout my twin pregnancy gave me the wonderful gift of
understanding that the condition of single mothers being oppressed
by every man and his passive hand maidens was universal. What had
happened to me was happening to all women in the same situation.
I began to seek answers. That led me to the obvious starting place;
sexism and social policy. I began to research adoption. It gave
up so much information, the quest for the truth turned into a book.
People still ask about the title and why I chose it. Here are quotes
from the book in explanation as to why the term 'Death By Adoption'
summed up the mothers' collective suffering for me, and still does.
"Death by Adoption is the death experienced by the real mother.
The baby she carried can actually die for her at either the moment
of birth or as she signs consent. It would be more bearable if the
child really did die, for then she could grieve and so recover from
the death. But although the child died for her, it remains very
much alive for someone else. And alive for her too. Or it would
be, if it weren't dead. Although some adopted children die in childhood
she will never know if one of them is hers and will continue to
look in hope (when there is no hope) that one day her child will
try to find her. From the moment her child is gone, she must hide
the stretch marks and pretend she never had a baby. We do not allow
her to grieve and even if we did and she understood why she feels
the way she does the grief will always remain unresolved for the
simple reason that the child is not dead.
Some women recall vividly both the actual birth and the signing
of 'consent'. Although their pain has still not diminished, by allowing
themselves to feel the rage and hatred, they somehow found the strength
to face it at the time.Some women suppress their pain so successfully
that they cannot recall a single detail. They know a child was born
and subsequently adopted but cannot recall the date, year and sometimes
even the season of the birth. No memory of either hot or cold weather;
not a single event connected with the pregnancy or the birth, which
is still lying dormant in her mind.
Wanting her opinion on it as a possible dust jacket for this book,
I handed the official adoption consent form to a woman who clearly
remembered the birth in every detail. Her hands began to shake as
she realized what I had so casually placed in them. No recollection
of having seen it before. No recollection of signing it. She supposed
she must have gone to a lawyer's office, somewhere. For the first
time she experienced the loss of her death by adoption. There are
an estimated one hundred thousand adopted people in New Zealand.
They all had mothers, women who, by being made to believe they had
no right to love the babies they carried and birthed, were forced
to relinquish all contact.
How many are set free? How many remain trapped inside an emotional
nightmare with unresolved grief as a lonely companion. Only humane
legislation can ease the pain.
Alas, twenty five years after I wrote those words, the 'humane
legislation' that would permit a dual right to search, and also
allow a mother of a 'taken' child to have contact with that child
as of right throughout its early life, remains on hold.
While there have been legal gains to open records in many countries
for the adults adopted as infants, to enable them to locate their
natural mothers and through them, their fathers, the mothers themselves
remain locked into the pain of what is a terrible, irresolvable
grief, into reunion and often beyond.
The mothers of the children taken into what is now seen as a form
of slavery, whereby an infant is stripped of all its legal rights
to identity, including the loss of its entire genealogy through
falsified birth records, continue to suffer. Even in reunion, the
symptoms of the various psychiatric conditions directly caused by
forced adoption haunt the mother whose 'cure' depends on the resilience
of herself and her now grown infant, to forge a healthy relationship
based on the mutual trust and affection that has been denied them
since before the birth itself.
But even in the 'best case scenario' where there is a successfully
bonded reunion, those lost years and that lost infant can never
be regained. Both are gone forever. This is crazy making stuff for
the mother.
There is no doubt that many, many adopted people suffer too - from
a lack of identity, from a lack of a feeling of belonging in the
'right' family i.e. their natural family, from a feeling of 'unnaturalness'
caused by being in a substitute home, often based on a lack of the
attachment that was always supposed to happen according to the trite
psychology applied by trite social workers to the children they
displaced. It was believed - wrongly - that babies would automatically
respond to affection from a stranger. It was also believed - wrongly
- that the adopters would feel an automatic attachment to their
new acquisitions.
Sadly, the two way attachment process happened far less often than
was publicized by social workers covering their tracks, or covering
up what they believed to be their own mistakes but were actually
just a side product of adoption itself. The inevitability of failed
adoption is inherent in the process of attempting to 'attach' people
never meant by nature to belong together in the first place, a process
destined to fail.
It is well known that when records open the adoption brokers panic.
In the mid 1980's, when it became apparent that the New Zealand
government would vote legislation to open birth records for adult
adopted people, there were rumors of dire action being taken by
social workers around the country. For instance, I was told at the
time by a reliable source that social workers at a public hospital
were keeping busy shredding adoption records.
Social workers were covering their tracks, including their illegal
acts. Destroying official records meant breaking the law as well
as professional ethics to obliterate records that would reflect
badly on themselves. That these were the same people entrusted to
place new born infants into sound homes with substitute parents
showed us just how flimsy and how dangerous adoption law and practice
actually is. It is unsound, unsafe, and totally unjustified.
The mothers of the children kidnapped for adoption during the 'baby
scoop' era of thirty to forty years ago, were so damaged by the
experience they are only now starting to speak out publicly about
the crimes committed against them by the adoption industry and that
happened with the full collusion of the state. Adoption has been
proven to be a failed social experiment that has left a trail of
destruction in its wake.
Stranger adoption should be considered a crime against humanity.
It is experienced as an emotional death by the mother who does not
recover;"(For) the saddest and most horrifying aspect of adoption
is the amount of emotional damage inflicted upon the natural mother.
To call her the 'birth mother' instead of the 'natural mother' allows
her only the physical birth and denies her those feelings she wasn't
supposed to have. By implication this makes the adoptive parents
unnatural, but secret adoption cannot be considered natural when
the real mother, the victim of this hit and run, is left battered
shocked and damaged. Nothing could be more unnatural".
Like everywhere else, stranger adoption North American style can
best be described as a 'hit and run', a non-accidental crash site
with two primary victims, mother and child. But unlike everywhere
else, it is apparent that what drives North American adoption is
the money made by the baby brokers, those heinous people and their
supporting organisations that traffic in human beings. They buy
and sell infants and children. They import and export, just as the
original slave traders did. Misery and mental illness are their
environmental side products that are polluting the lives of their
victims across generations.
One day there will be a reckoning. As North American adoption records
open - and it is inevitable that they will open - the truth about
adoption law and practice American style will find its way into
the public arena. And there seems little doubt that in the future
the mothers of all the children forcibly taken for adoption will
have their day in court.
It is also entirely probable that the Administration of the United
States will finally be forced to offer up a public apology to the
hundreds of thousands of American mothers whose children have been
redistributed for the purpose of appeasing the right wing faction,
that 'moral majority' that is actually a minority, but with a power
base far in excess of their actual numbers.But it is a certainty
that a 'third wave' of North American feminist theory will be crafted,
defined and taught by the first mothers of adoption slavery, who
will lead the 'new woman' in a wave of political action to outlaw
stranger adoption and restore families torn apart by domestic slavery.
This third wave of feminism will replace that tired old 'second
wave' of feminists who have failed their fertile sisters so badly,
so knowingly, so willfully by taking part so willingly in the terrible
crimes committed against them; stealing their children away and
failing to stop it from happening. "
The revolutionary woman must know her enemies, the doctors, psychiatrists,
health visitors, priests, marriage counselors, police-men, magistrates,
and genteel reformers, all the authoritarians and dogmatists who
flock about her with warnings and advice. She must know her friends,
her sisters and seek in their lineaments her own". Germaine
Greer, The Female Eunuch (1971)
Voices From Exile "Death by Adoption"
Copyright © 2004 Joss Shawyer
Read all of Joss's Column written for Origins:
Death by
Adoption
Touched by Adoption, with
a Blowtorch
Alexandra's Baby Not For
Sale
When
God Stuffs Up
When
Infertility Goes Shopping
African-Americans
- The Moral Majority of the Not-Adoption World
Nature v Nurture - The Mystery
Gene
The Baby Breeding Doll
The Perpetrators of Adoption
Crime
The Rocky Road of Reunion
Adoption "Choice"
is a Feminist Issue
The Empty Seat at the
Table
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