SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Dozens of South Korean adoptees, many in tears, have responded to an investigation led by The Associated Press and documented by Frontline (PBS) last week on Korean adoptions. The investigation reported dubious child-gathering practices and fraudulent paperwork involving South Korea’s foreign adoption program, which peaked in the 1970s and `80s amid huge Western demands for babies. Here are some of the problems adoptees who responded say they faced, along with tips for finding histories and birth families.
Kyla Postrel's paperwork tells two different stories, neither of which she’s sure is true. After a DNA test last year, Postrel found a half-brother who was also adopted to the West. Comparing their paperwork made her even more skeptical of the stories they’d been told.
But part of her is reluctant to keep looking "for something that may or may not exist and could be absolutely devastating.” She has been flooded with messages from other adoptees looking for help, and tells them not to be disappointed if they can't track down their stories. “I just don’t want any adoptees feeling like their life is a lie," she says.
"Their life is everything that they’ve built since then.” If her birth mother is still out there, Postrel would want her to know her daughter has had a good life. Cody Duet, adopted to rural Louisiana in 1986, requested his full file a decade ago.
He got back less than one page, saying his mother was a young factory work.