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Title Foreign Correspondent: Vietnam - Are You My Mother?
Published Australia : ABC, 2015
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Description 1 online resource (streaming video file) (28 min. 52 sec.) ; 174846744 bytes
Summary Sophie English could be walking past her mother in the streets of Saigon at any moment and not even know it. She was born into war, but has very little information about her family and why they gave her up. She was only ten months old, when the connections with her mother and motherland were broken. "If you think about it too long it could make you cry because it's such, there aren't words that could convey it." - Sophie English, adoptee.The pain of not knowing and not belonging is deep - it's haunted Sophie for much of her life. She is grateful for the opportunity of growing up in Australia, but something is missing. She wonders about what life might have been."I might've been on the boats fishing, and I would be working really hard like them, but I would have that sense of family. I would probably have grandchildren by now, and I would have that deep need in me fulfilled." - Sophie English, adoptee.As the fortieth anniversary of the fall of Saigon approaches, Sally Sara travels with Sophie into the Vietnamese heartland to meet a mother who relinquished a child during the war. It's a conversation she has waited years to have."I hope you understand that it's not your fault ... We understand, it was the war and you did your best. We hope that we have done something good in our lives, so that our mothers would feel proud of us." Sophie English, adopteeMore than four decades after she was adopted, she's making peace with her past, but Sophie worries about future children who may be adopted into Australia from overseas.The Federal Government is taking steps to re-open adoptions from several countries, including Vietnam. It's an historic chance to address the trauma and mistakes of the past.International adoption advocates like Deborra-lee Furness, who speaks to Foreign Correspondent in New York, say it's time to get adoption right. "We have to change a whole culture and we have to make people step up and go okay let's do this and you know when we need to do it by? Yesterday. Because every minute that that child is institutionalised or without a forever family they are being damaged." Deborra-Lee Furness, Adopt Change
Notes Closed captioning in English
Event Broadcast 2015-04-21 at 20:00:00
Notes Classification: NC
Subject Adoption.
Child care.
Parent and child.
Parent and child -- Family relationships.
War.
Vietnam.
Form Streaming video
Author Sara, Sally, host
English, Sophie, contributor
Huong, Le My, contributor