Herald on Sunday

PAINTING A PICTURE OF ‘the man whose genes I carry’

A Washington law professor has packed up her family and moved back to New Zealand to connect with her biological father’s family after more than 20 years of looking for him. She’s now working with other donorconce­ived Kiwis to combat an industry long cloa

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The notificati­on came in January last year as Covid19 was first getting its claws into the world. Washington law professor Rebecca Hamilton’s DNA had matched with a second cousin in Taupo¯ , New Zealand, via the ancestry website 23andme.

It was the closest she’d come in 20 years to finding her biological father, who had donated his sperm anonymousl­y in the late 1970s.

That second cousin was, helpfully, a retiree who had spent hours researchin­g his ancestry and was happy to share the informatio­n. What followed for Hamilton was months of working through registrati­on rolls, death notices and social media, and triangulat­ing that informatio­n with DNA matches from distant relatives.

“It was labour intensive and emotionall­y draining, as searching for biological family always is when there have been no records kept, or when records have been destroyed. This is the story of all donorconce­ived New Zealanders of my era.”

In March, Hamilton’s biological father’s daughter confirmed the connection. Hamilton discovered he had died when she was 2 years old but it opened up a whole new family.

By August, Hamilton, 44, had packed up her husband and four young children and moved back to New Zealand — which she left when she was 15 — to connect with her new relatives and spend time with her mother, now 78.

“They are an enormous family, which is such a source of joy for me. My Dad died when I was 9 and after that there was only Mum and me for a long time . . . I am building lovely relationsh­ips with many of them, and they have been so generous in helping paint a picture for me of the man whose genes I carry. Beyond the expected physical likeness, the profession­al similariti­es between us are absolutely uncanny. And as a mum of four, I’m also grateful to be able to tell my kids about who their grandfathe­r was.”

And with much of the US still working remotely, Hamilton has been able to keep her job, conducting her lectures via Zoom from the comfort of her home near Korora¯ reka (Russell). The hours have been “brutal” with the workday starting about 1am but the sleep deprivatio­n has been worth it with the children immersing themselves in Ma¯ ori and Pasifika language and culture and connecting with their new Kiwi cousins.

Hamilton’s Australian husband, Ben Batros, 45, is an internatio­nal criminal lawyer and also able to work

remotely in his job supporting civil society groups around the world. He’s currently working with a Brazilian group trying to stop illegal deforestat­ion of the Amazon.

“So there’s a lot of time-zone Jenga in our household,” Hamilton says. “We’re an awesome team and we couldn’t do what we’re doing without each other. Plus it helps that our kids are total rockstars. So life is exhausting but fabulous, and we wouldn’t want it any other way.”

Another bonus about being in New Zealand is that Hamilton has been able to continue connecting with other donor offspring, who have formed Donor Conceived Aotearoa (DCA). The group’s main goal is to advocate for the next generation who, as a matter of law, will become the first to receive identifyin­g informatio­n about their donors when they turn 18.

In an industry that was long cloaked in secrecy, DCA are excited to see change but as the date approaches, they say there is a dearth of informatio­n about how it will be implemente­d and what support there will be for

Kiwis applying for the details.

“Unless the wellbeing of these young New Zealanders is given active thought now, one can readily imagine them searching for the name they have been given on Facebook and having to reach out to introduce themselves to their biological parent on social media,” says Hamilton.

“One can also foresee situations where, after a lifetime of anticipati­on about being able to find out who their biological parent is, the donorconce­ived person receives their informatio­n and discovers that their biological parent has already died.

“The New Zealand Government has the responsibi­lity to think through what support structures need to be in place for this group of its citizens. No one chooses to be born through donor conception. The adults who facilitate­d this form of child creation need to take responsibi­lity for mitigating the negative consequenc­es that can flow from it.”

Hamilton was conceived at Auckland’s National Women’s Hospital (which in 2004 moved to Auckland City Hospital) in the early days of donor conception, when it was rare — and not a legal requiremen­t — for hospitals to keep records of donors or if they did, give them to the children conceived.

“[The doctor] told my parents to lie to me about it. This was the norm at the time. To this day there are likely to be many New Zealanders who simply do not know that they are donor-conceived.”

Luckily, her parents didn’t oblige. Hamilton’s father died of cancer and she didn’t get a chance to discuss any future search but she knows he would have supported her.

“He was the best dad you could imagine and I am so grateful to have known he wasn’t my biological father from the beginning, because if I had only found that out after he died it would have been devastatin­g.

“Unfortunat­ely, that is exactly what has happened for plenty of donor-conceived people around the world. Too often they have learned the truth in the midst of a traumatic event, like a family death or a divorce.”

A former Kristin School student, Hamilton moved from Auckland to Melbourne aged 15 to join the National Theatre as a ballet dancer. Later, a female friend encouraged her to re-enter the education system.

In her 20s, her search for her biological father ramped up and she pursued “every possible avenue”, including making a documentar­y that screened on TVNZ in 2001 and placing advertisem­ents in the Herald.

She wouldn’t join online DNA testing websites until about 2014 so her only option was to publicly appeal for men who donated around the time of her conception to test their DNA against hers. She didn’t match with any of the five donors who came forward, but it showed that just because people donated anonymousl­y in the 1970s or 80s, didn’t mean they wanted to stay anonymous.

According to the New Zealand Law Commission, up until around 1990, sperm was donated on the basis the donor could be anonymous. It was considered desirable because it ensured they wouldn’t find themselves burdened with legal parental responsibi­lities. The Status of Children Amendment Act in 1987 released donors from legal liability.

The harm that secrecy does to families, in particular to the children, was raised following closed adoption debates that led to the Adult Adoption Informatio­n Act 1985. Fertility clinics began altering practices so comprehens­ive records of donors were kept.

Then in 2004, the Human Assisted Reproducti­ve Technology Act (Hart) was passed. Those conceived via the donation of eggs or sperm on or after August 22, 2005, can apply to get identifyin­g informatio­n (name, address at time of donation and place of birth) about their donor once they turn 18. Or they can apply to the family court at age 16. “So while I didn’t find what I was looking for from doing the documentar­y, I was at least comforted by the fact that going forward, children in this country would have their right to identity preserved for them by law,” Hamilton says.

Meanwhile, her profession­al life soared. She completed a BA in psychology at the University of Sydney but, after working at the Villawood Detention Centre that housed refugees seeking asylum in Australia, she changed tack and moved to the US to do her masters in public policy at Harvard University. Her CV includes stints as a journalist for the Washington Post, Reuters in New York and serving as a lawyer for the Internatio­nal Criminal Court in The Hague — where she met Ben — working on cases in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Central African Republic, Uganda and Sudan. She’s now an associate professor of law at American University Washington College of Law.

Her new family is spread across New Zealand, Australia, and the UK. Some are based in the Far North and she sees them most days. Other members have travelled to visit and a niece organised a gathering last year, where Hamilton met 30 new relatives. “It was surreal to be in a room full of people who looked like me for the first time in my life.”

Hamilton has no idea how many times her biological father donated.

“So far at least, I haven’t identified any donor-conceived half-siblings, but it’s always in the back of my mind that one day I’ll be notified of a new relative through ancestry.com or 23andme.com.”

In her new book, ABC journalist Sarah Dingle, who was donorconce­ived in Australia and spent years investigat­ing the industry, cites a 2009 study that found only about a third of New Zealand donor offspring aged 17 to 21 had been told the truth by their heterosexu­al parents, which increases the risk of half-siblings getting into sexual relationsh­ips. It has happened in Australia. In 2010, politician Joanna Gash said she knew of a case in her electorate of Gilmore, on the New South Wales south coast, in which a half-brother and half-sister married without knowing they were related.

“I have never come across a single donor-conceived person made by a donor to a fertility clinic who says, with confidence, that they know who all of their brothers and sisters are,” Dingle says in her book. “Some have hundreds.

“Think about the terror and the enormity of that . . . Have you kissed, or slept with, more than one of them? Have you had a child with them?”

Dingle tells of a man from the Netherland­s, Joey Hoofdman, 32, who discovered the doctor who treated his parents for fertility problems was actually his biological father.

He found 75 siblings around the world.

Through her investigat­ion, Dingle met Rebecca Ronan, also donorconce­ived, and the pair became friends. Years later they discovered they had the same biological father. They managed to track him down together and discovered he had donated to the Royal North Shore Hospital hundreds of times over two years in the early 1980s.

The first cohort of donorconce­ived people affected by the Hart Act can technicall­y start applying for their donor’s informatio­n in about a year’s time. Births, Deaths and Marriages say there were 28 born between JuneDecemb­er of 2006 who will be 16 in the second half of next year.

But the numbers are increasing substantia­lly each year (81 in 2007 and 312 in 2018) so there will likely be a steady stream of applicatio­ns to

follow. So far, Births, Deaths and Marriages have a total of 2678 births registered since the act came into effect but it is still counting records from 2020 and 2021.

“For too long, donor conception has been a conversati­on between adults who want a baby and the fertility clinics and/or donors who can help them get that baby,” Hamilton says. “The Hart law steps in to help ensure that the rights of that baby — a future New Zealand adult — are protected because it is really hard, when you’re desperate to start a family, to be focused on what the needs of someone who hasn’t even been conceived yet will be in 15, 20, 30 years time.”

DCA want a government-run public service announceme­nt so donor offspring, donors and their families know about the Hart Act and understand the rights it provides.

They want ongoing support and education for parents in telling their donor-conceived children the truth from an early age.

And they want resources to help guide them through contacting their biological parent.

They also want counsellin­g

offered. As it stands, fertility clinics provide it for donors and recipients and Hamilton said it had been suggested they might extend those services to donor-conceived adults. But, she says, their area of expertise did not prioritise the best interests of the people they helped create.

DCA wrote to Ministry of Health Deputy Director-General Clare Perry to ask about counsellin­g and was told there was not a specific programme of work on it although staff were regularly in touch with Births, Deaths and Marriages, the Ministry of Justice and some fertility clinics about how it might be addressed.

The representa­tive noted that both the ministries “are aware of the importance of such a service being available and of the potential need for counsellin­g.

However, neither ministry is responsibl­e for the day-to-day running of the register and cannot advise you how donor-conceived people would make such inquiries.”

The ministry reiterated those points when the Herald on Sunday inquired. When asked what preparatio­n was under way for 2022, a spokesman added, “We are aware of informatio­n beginning to be circulated to key organisati­ons and interested parties. This informatio­n campaign will continue with increasing intensity over the coming months.”

They supported a public service campaign to advertise the register and when it comes to parents telling their children how they were conceived, they supported transparen­cy around children’s origins.

Six members of DCA met with Births, Deaths and Marriages recently and the group were invited to give input on the forms that will be used to request their records, as well as the way in which they will be presented, and on what informatio­n can be provided so young people know what support is out there.

Registrar-General Jeff Montgomery says they are looking to see how they can make the forms and informatio­n more user-friendly. They also plan to use social media to raise awareness of the register.

For people such as Hamilton, conceived prior to 2005, a voluntary register was also set up under the Hart act. As at June 30, 28 donor offspring had signed up with the earliest birth recorded in 1977 — likely Hamilton’s — along with 24 donors (22 sperm and two egg donors). The number of people who had connected through it were not recorded but Montgomery says they expect it is very low (less than 10).

Birth, Death and Marriages is also in the process of improving the register which was designed in the 1990s, “quite cumbersome, and very difficult to generate statistics”, Montgomery says. It is also planning to publicise the register via social media.

The ministry spokesman said they support transparen­cy and use of the register, noting it is voluntary. “The ministry is regularly in touch with DIA [Department of Internal Affairs] to update progress around this.”

Hamilton is conscious of how lucky she is as she knows not every donor-conceived person gets a happy ending when they connect with their biological family.

“There are also some members of the family who do not want anything to do with me, and that is perfectly fine also. I came into this with no expectatio­ns whatsoever. I just wanted to know my identity — the fact that in finding that out I have also discovered that I am related to people who are warm, interestin­g, and willing to welcome a stranger into their lives is an incredible bonus that I will never take for granted.”

The adults who facilitate­d this form of child creation need to take responsibi­lity for mitigating the negative consequenc­es that can flow from it. Rebecca Hamilton

●To sign up for the voluntary register or find out about the mandatory register, visit the NZ Government website.

 ??  ?? Rebecca Hamilton and her husband, Ben Batros, with their children, twins Hamilton and Sami, 4, Baz, 8, and Matilde, 6, at their home in the Bay of Islands.
Rebecca Hamilton and her husband, Ben Batros, with their children, twins Hamilton and Sami, 4, Baz, 8, and Matilde, 6, at their home in the Bay of Islands.
 ??  ?? Hamilton with her father, Eric, when she was about 7.
Hamilton with her father, Eric, when she was about 7.
 ??  ?? Rebecca Hamilton
Rebecca Hamilton

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