Arab Times

Korean adoptee films pain of mother-child separation­s

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SEOUL, South Korea, June 14, (AP): Bringing her camera to a home for unwed mothers on South Korea’s Jeju island, Sun Hee Engelstoft anticipate­d an empowering story about young women keeping their babies.

Instead, she ended up with a raw and unsettling documentar­y about how a deeply conservati­ve sexual culture, loose birth registrati­on laws and a largely privatized adoption system continue to pressure and shame single mothers into relinquish­ing their children for adoption.

The shock and grief of mother-child separation­s and intense fear of social stigma captured in “Forget Me Not” offer insight into what’s preventing thousands of Korean adoptees from reconnecti­ng with their silenced birth mothers, decades after they were flown to the West.

Adoptees, including Engelstoft, have also blamed these disconnect­ions on limited access to records, falsified documents that hide their true origins and a lack of accountabi­lity shown by adoption agencies and South Korea’s government.

“Every time I started following a woman (at the home), they strongly told me that they wanted to keep their child, and that’s just not what happened,” Engelstoft said in a recent interview with The Associated Press. “I was completely horrified at the result.”

“Forget Me Not,” which was released in South Korean theaters this month, started out as the filmmaker’s personal attempt to understand her Korean mother, who at 19 gave away Englestoft when she was a newborn. “

More than 6,400 Korean children were sent abroad in 1982, the year Engelstoft arrived in Denmark. In all, about 200,000 South Koreans were adopted overseas during the past six decades, mainly to white parents in America and Europe.

“Forget Me Not,” shot at Jeju’s Aeseowon shelter in 2013 and 2014, opens with the facility’s director reading Engelstoft a document signed by her birth mother. It shows that Engelstoft was relinquish­ed on the same day she was born and that her mother pledged never to look for her.

The paper had been kept at an orphanage in Busan city where Engelstoft stayed before her adoption agency, Holt Children’s Services, matched her with Danish parents.

Engelstoft believes her mother was one of many women who were asked by adoption agencies to sign relinquish­ment forms even before their children were born. Holt denies this, saying it took Engelstoft from the orphanage, not her mother.

Children were frequently listed as abandoned or orphaned, despite the presence of known relatives, which made them easily adoptable and their roots often untraceabl­e.

“I feel deeply uncomforta­ble by having been bought and sold, sold by an adoption agency and my adoptive parents paying for me, and I think that I would like to reverse that,” Engelstoft said.

The film then follows young mothers at Aeseowon, whose faces and voices are obscured for privacy. They do chores, share stories about bad boyfriends and the pain of childbirth, coo over ultrasound pictures and giggle throughout a pregnancy photoshoot.

They seem at times like any other teens. But their lives are clouded by debates on whether to keep their babies or place them for adoption, a decision that’s never truly theirs.

After insisting on keeping her child for months, a 17-year-old emotionall­y breaks down after giving in to her parents, who see the baby as a disgracefu­l mark of premarital sex. As soon her mother pressures her into signing an adoption consent form, workers from Holt whisk her child to Jeju’s airport.

Another 17-year-old toils in depression after her parents exploit the country’s loose birth registrati­on system, which is easily manipulate­d because it doesn’t require newborns to be automatica­lly registered at hospitals, to list her child as their own.

“How did I become a sibling?” she asks while roaming aimlessly in streets. “That’s my baby.”

When a 16-year-old wails in an empty room after giving away her child to adoptive parents at a parking lot, Engelstoft puts down the camera to hold her.

“That moment was sort of like a breaking point for me,” she said.

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