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Children of adoption: How families from Chile to Taiwan are made whole

1. Chile

More of Chile’s “stolen babies” are finding their biological families. Tens of thousands of babies were adopted illegally during the 1970s and 1980s under the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. Birth mothers were often told that their children were stillborn or were threatened into silence by government, church, and health care professionals who then facilitated foreign adoptions, in many cases to lower the national poverty rate.

Nos Buscamos (meaning “We look for each other”), which has reunited 400 families since 2014, is one of two organizations in Chile conducting searches to match these adults with biological family members. They begin by sorting through basic data like birthplace, the name of a hospital, or the contact of an adoption agency. Though information is often scarce, this helps narrow down the field for genetic testing.

Why We Wrote This

In our progress roundup, lawmakers and charity groups are expanding the meaning of family for children and adults. In Chile, adoptees born during dictatorship are being reunited with birth parents. And in Taiwan, LGBTQ+ couples gain the right to adopt.

Scott Lieberman, an American from San Francisco, was recently reunited with his extended family in Chile. “I lived 42 years of my life without knowing that I was stolen,” he said. “I want people to know … there are families out there that can still be reunited.”
Sources: Rest of World, CNN

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