Vancouver Sun

Abandoned as baby, woman’s tireless sleuthing leads to dad

- LORA GRINDLAY lgrindlay@postmedia.com

With only a first name, an old Prince Rupert Secondary School yearbook and the B.C. phone directory, Janet Keall has found her birth father.

Her 22-year search to find her birth parents after being abandoned as a newborn in Prince Rupert in the 1970s has uncovered four half-siblings, all of whom were also abandoned, and a myriad of secrets held by her birth mom until she died last year just months before Keall’s research led to her.

The recent discovery of her birth father has unveiled another shroud of secrecy.

Her father, a profession­al man living in B.C., did not know that Keall’s mom, his girlfriend in Prince Rupert for a year in the 1970s, had become pregnant and abandoned their child in October 1977 outside the Prince Rupert Regional Hospital.

He has been married for decades but Keall is his only child.

Finding him is a milestone that Keall never thought she would see when she began looking into her background years ago.

Old-fashioned sleuthing led to the man earlier this year.

An old friend of her birth mom gave Keall the first name of someone she recalled her mom dating.

A volunteer who has helped her research archives in Prince Rupert, Robb Rydde, searched high school yearbooks and passed on a potential surname.

A simple phone directory led to him.

She called at the end of April and last week a DNA paternity test determined that Keall and the man have a 99.9996 per cent probabilit­y of being father and daughter.

“He was in a committed relationsh­ip with my biological mother when I was conceived,” said Keall, 39.

“He had no idea about me at all. There certainly is a shock and a sadness, but in the search for my biological parents it is a happy ending.

“We certainly do have physical similariti­es. You can see it. I am so happy. I am looking forward to meeting him. It still feels surreal.

“He just kept saying, ‘Thank you for not quitting. Not many people would have kept looking, especially with nothing to go on.’ ”

The two have shared photos and spent hours on the phone together. They will meet in B.C. in June, but have agreed not to reveal his identity to protect the mom, who serially abandoned five babies from the mid-1970s to the early 1980s and never told a soul.

“We don’t have the right to publicize her identity. She’s not here and there are living family members including the son that she raised,” Keall said.

“We would never want to cause him any further distress.”

The mystery of Keall’s birth and her search has captured the hearts of many across North America. The story of her birth mom and the serial abandonmen­t of five babies is believed to be the only known story of its kind. Keall plans to write a book, has some interest in a film on her story, and still believes there could be one more baby abandoned by her mom that hasn’t been found.

“It just seems so amazing. Even though there have been some positives in the truths I have uncovered, there has also been some sadness,” Keall said. “But now I have this wonderful gentleman who is my father and I am so happy.”

Even though there have been some positives in the truths I have uncovered, there has also been some sadness.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada