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Survivors of dark episode in Canada's history trace their past
Statehouse Bureau [Published in the Asbury Park Press and The Home News & Tribune]
Susan K. Livio
November
8, 1997
When Riva Barnett Saia was old enough to read, her parents gave
her a copy of the "The Chosen Baby," a book that explained why her
olive-skinned family didn't share her blue eyes and blond hair.
Saia was adopted. The book was her parents' way of telling her she
should feel special because she was chosen. But Saia, now a 52-year-old
social worker from Union Township, said she has always felt incomplete
without knowing who she was and where she came from.
Now, Saia and as many as 40 other adoptees living in Monmouth, Ocean,
Middlesex, Camden and Union counties are discovering their identities
within the pages of a paperback book, linking them to a dark chapter
in Canada's history.
The adoptees came from the Ideal Maternity Home, an illegally run
home for unwed mothers in the rural east Canadian province of Nova
Scotia, where many babies were sold on the black market to desperate
couples from New York and New Jersey in the 1930s and '40s.
For sums as steep as $10,000, couples chose their infant from the
rows of bassinets, arranged like produce bins at a supermarket.
Twins were separated, or arbitrarily "matched," depending on what
the unwitting customers wanted.
Those were the lucky ones.
Hundreds of others were left to die, either because the medical
care at the home was lacking, or because the children appeared "unmarketable,"
according to witnesses.
Infants who were sick, deformed or disabled, or of mixed race were
fed molasses and water until they starved to death. A caretaker
years later admitted to Canadian journalist Bette Cahill that he
was paid to bury the babies in open graves, or in butter boxes from
the local LaHave Dairy.
Cahill's 1992 book called them the "Butterbox Babies," a name with
which adoptee Ilene Seifer Steinhauer, 52, of Shrewsbury readily
identifies.
"I am a Butterbox Baby," said Steinhauer, who learned of her past
through immigration records that contained details about her adoption.
"I feel very drawn to it. Before this, I felt like I didn't have
any history."
A bygone era's dark legacy
The history of the Ideal Maternity Home is the story of a religious
but ambitious couple, Lila Coolen Young and her husband William
Young.
In 1928, Lila Young, 29, a recent graduate of the National School
of Obstetrics and Midwifery, and her husband, 30, an unordained
Seventh Day Adventist minister and missionary, opened the "Life
and Health Sanitarium." They barely had the money to supply enough
cots for their patients in the small cottage in East Chester, Nova
Scotia.
Within a year, Lila had parlayed her training as a midwife into
a maternity practice, and the Youngs were well on their way to becoming
known as "the Baby Barons of East Chester." Within 15 years, they
had expanded a four-bedroom operation to 54 bedrooms, with 70 babies
in the nursery.
The Youngs knew far more about babies than just how to deliver them.
Karen Balcom, a doctoral candidate at the History Department of
Rutgers University studying the baby selling trade between the United
States and Canada, said the Youngs operated for years unimpeded
by laws governing adoptions because there weren't any at the time.
"This institution is able to establish itself in a vacuum," Balcom
said.
The Youngs also benefited from being at the right place at the right
time. The Nova Scotia coast drew vacationers from New York and New
Jersey, many of whom were childless Jewish couples frustrated by
the long waits for Jewish infant adoptions back home.
The Youngs were willing to disregard the "unbreakable" rule of that
era followed by American and Canadian adoption agencies: that children
must be placed with a family of the same religious background, Balcom
said.
"The evidence I have seen is that Jewish parents were told there
were Jewish babies (at the home), and that was extremely unlikely
to have been the case. Other families knew they were getting non-Jewish
babies but were either comfortable enough or desperate enough to
take them," Balcom said. "Quite consciously, the Youngs realized
they had a specific market to serve."
The Youngs also met a demand for Canadian women, for whom both abortion
and birth control were illegal.
"For those women who decided to bear and keep their babies, there
was little community sympathy," Cahill wrote in her book, describing
how families would disown their pregnant daughters. "It would be
another 20 years before the Nova Scotia government recognized the
need for social programs for unmarried mothers."
Understanding the moral tenor of the times, the Youngs sold what
all unwed mothers wanted: secrecy.
According to a Canadian television documentary, a newspaper advertisement
Young composed to lure women to the home read: "Dame gossip has
sent many young lives to perdition after ruining them socially,
that might have been BRIGHT STARS in society and a POWER in the
world of usefulness HAD THEY BEEN SHIELDED from gossip when they
made a mistake."
That shame kept pregnant women quiet when they witnessed the infant
neglect, or the unsanitary conditions of the delivery rooms.
By 1933, the Youngs' lucrative business had attracted the attention
of the Nova Scotia child welfare director and health minister, who
forced them to to hire a registered nurse -- the home's first.
Health officials intervened in 1945-46 and won convictions against
the Youngs for violating new adoption licensing laws. But the Youngs'
downfall came in 1947, after they filed a libel suit against the
Montreal Standard Publishing Company for its coverage of the home,
according to the Cahill book.
By insisting that their good names had been besmirched, the Youngs
succeeded in reliving the newspaper's coverage of the home.
Pediatricians who had inspected the Home testified to its "striking
overcrowding" its 'fly-filled nurseries," and the "malnourished
children." The mothers called as defense witnesses also revealed
wrongdoing: one told how her baby died after receiving no medical
attention, and was buried in a butter box. The same mother also
said the Youngs told her to pose as a nurse during a health department
inspection. Another witness admitted to lying in adoption records
when she said her child was Jewish.
A jury dismissed the Youngs' libel suit. The Youngs tried to continue
their business, but the trial "really shredded any remaining reputation
they had," Balcom said. They both died in the 1960s.
Child welfare authorities in Canada and America were so concerned
with what the Youngs had done, they developed new laws to protect
adopted children.
"This case says something about what can happen when you back women
in trouble into a corner, the danger of punitive attitudes toward
women, and the danger of controlling their reproductive options,"
Balcom said.
Miracles out of the horror
Ideal Maternity Home survivors, once confused and saddened by the
choices their mothers made, have a newfound sympathy for their sacrifice.
"Our mothers still can't deal with the shame," said Steinhauer,
a recently laid-off manager for Weight Watchers in North Jersey.
She went hunting for her birth family in Nova Scotia and found receptive
relatives, but her mother told a cousin that she wanted to remain
in hiding.
"I wish my biological mother would have come running with open arms,
'Oh darling, I've been looking my whole life,' instead of a 'Dear
John' letter," she said.
"But it's a miracle we are all alive."
Steinhauer, Saia, and a growing number of New Jersey butter box
baby survivors -- some of whom have just learned of their ties to
the maternity home -- will arrive in Nova Scotia Labor Day weekend.
They will attend a memorial service and a monument dedication ceremony
in honor of the infants who died at the home.
If the money can be raised, survivors from Nova Scotia intend to
come to Rutgers University to present a play, "Aftermath," depicting
the events at the Home, said Robert Hartlen, spokesman Survivors
and Friends of the Ideal Maternity Home.
Although horrified by the truth, the adoptees say knowing their
origins helps them appreciate their adoption in a way they never
imagined.
Steinhauer said she feels inextricably tied to other "survivors"
of the maternity home, many of whom were adopted in the summer of
1945. "We feel related. It's somebody who has lived your whole story,"
Steinhauer said.
They also realize their adoptive parents may have saved their lives,
bringing new meaning to the words they were told as children: "you
were chosen."
Freehold Township resident Sandy Tuckerton said her mother chose
her because she was the only baby in the ward that day with dark
hair, like her own. A pediatrician diagnosed Sandy with pneumonia
-- a fact that must have escaped the Maternity Home's proprietors.
"If I had stayed there, I probably wouldn't have made it," Tuckerton
said. "The sick babies weren't marketable. I feel very lucky that
I was adopted."
Saia was also fortunate that her mother was drawn to a wet and sickly
looking child in a corner of the room. A pediatrician in town who
examined Saia urged her mother to "get the child out of there as
quickly as possible," Saia said.
"I realize I could have been bound for a butter box," Saia said,
"and I'm here to tell the story."
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For more on this topic:
Life
After The Ideal Maternity Home by Bob Hartlen
[ARTICLES]
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