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Sealed Records are Inexcusable
New York
State Commission on Child Welfare
Vincenette Scheppler, M.S.W.
1976
Social Worker Discusses Sealed Adoption Records
and the Search for Identity.
My testimony today is based on my experience as a psychiatric social
worker who has provided therapy for adolescents, many of whom were
adopted. I have also been involved for seven years as a director
of adoption programs. My work has been with unwed mothers and fathers,
adoptive parents, adoptive children and adult adoptees. While all
of this experience has convinced me of the need for open records
as a contribution to the mental well-being of adoptees, nothing
has persuaded me more than the testimony of my own adopted children.
Although the original sealing of adoption records was perhaps understandable
on the basis of an earlier lack of knowledge, what we have since
learned makes the concept today truly inexcusable.
For a long time it was a rather generally held view that only the
disturbed and/or unhappy person would want to seek out his biological
parents. It was honestly believed adoption created a totally new
life for a child and there was no need to seek out information about
his biological heritage. Now we know this is simply not so. Every
adopted child has to face what I have chosen to call the adoption
dilemma. The essence of this dilemma is in the fact that every adopted
child has two sets of parents. He must somehow come to know them
both and to settle for himself what his relationship is to be with
each. Although some of this may be beyond his control, he will try.
Knowledge of his biological parents may be actual, it may be by
way of information that is enough to satisfy him, or, if neither
of these is possible, it will be imaginary. But know them he must
if he is to resolve his dilemma and thus free himself to be all
he is capable of being.
All humans, in order to grow and become mature adults, must resolve
their relationship with their parents. By daily contact they learn
the reality of that relationship and grow in their ability to move
away and become independent individuals. This task is complicated
for the adopted child who has two sets of parents. Some may tend
to deny one set or the other, but this is often accomplished at
a very high emotional cost. Let those of us who have some authority
to act not be responsible for further complicating this difficult
task by keeping from adult adoptees information the rest of us accept
as a matter-of- course. Let us not force them to waste valuable
time, energy and emotional stamina better used for the building
of a creative, productive life. Spare them the necessity of obtaining
this vital information in an illegal, frustrating and perhaps unsuccessful
search.
The social work profession, undoubtedly composed of dedicated,
sincere workers who certainly want what is best for all parties
concerned, must now face the fact that the sealing of records has
been responsible for much unnecessary heartache for everyone involved
in adoption. Let us consider some of the reasons for this sealing.
Perhaps the most frequently given reason is the respect for confidentiality.
This is based on the myth that parents who surrender their children
do, indeed, want to be protected from them. The fact is that at
the time of the signing of a surrender, parents have had to be convinced
the only way they could provide a home for the child was to completely
relinquish their right to any future knowledge of it's existence.
Many have written frequently to ask about the child's well-being.
Others, believing they could not obtain any information, have agonized
in silence. Most have generally acknowledged they cannot play the
mother role, but they wanted to make their peace between themselves
and their offspring hardly a sinister motive. For those rare few
who may be truly unable or unwilling to acknowledge their children,
a statement to that effect might be made a part of their permanent
record.
Another argument against open records has been the felt need to
protect the adoptee from unpleasant information. There are, in truth,
no happy circumstances that lead to adoption. The very fact that
a child needs to be placed in an adoptive home tells us something
unpleasant has already happened to him. He may have been born of
unmarried parents who were not prepared to take on the responsibility
of caring for him. He may have been the product of rape or incest
or an extramarital affair. He may have been forcibly removed from
his parents by the courts because of neglect or abuse. He may have
been abandoned. To try to protect people from such information is
truly naive. The unknown frequently holds far more horror than any
truth. Both social workers and adoptive parents have been guilty
in the past of fostering a vague, meaningless explanation
to all adopted children that has, in effect, left all with the feeling
there is no way to learn why their placement was necessary: Your
mother gave you up because she loved you, we told them all,
as if that made any sense whatsoever. She wanted what was best for
you so she gave you to an agency to make sure they found the best
possible home for you. And now adults who were adopted as children
are telling us that such answers will not suffice. Their message
is clear. they must work out their dilemma . . . their own dilemma.
This is a very personal matter and can best be accomplished when
the adoptee is able to understand the reason for his placement.
All of this has led to society's continually treating the adult
adoptee as if he were perpetually a child. It is certainly possible
the adult adoptee who seeks out his past may encounter rejection
and unpleasantness. This possibility not probability is in no way
a justification for denying adults their right to know. The idea
that some adults can decide for other adults what part of their
own person they can be allowed to know is reprehensible. Every individual
has a right to come to grips with his own past.
Finally, there is the objection that open records invade the rights
of adoptive parents. Surely, while children are still minors, adoptive
parents and children need to be protected from custody suits. This
argument can no longer hold when those children become adults. The
parent-child relationship which has grown over the years need not
be threatened because the adoptee now seeks to explore that other
part of his being. The parents who understand the need for their
children to work out their dilemma will recognize it is in no way
a repudiation of them.
Some adoptees argue they feel no need to seek out information about
their biological background. That is their right. But hopefully
this will not be a basis for denying equal rights to those who do.
The question arises, how to make information available. Some have
suggested third party mediators. If adoptees have the right to grow
and handle their own problems as mature human beings, free of the
need for continual parenting and protection by all of society, we
must accept the fact mature people can make their own arrangements
without third party involvement. Indeed, one of the most tragic
aspects of adoption as we know it rises from societys unwillingness
to recognize we are not speaking of children.
In closing, I would like to share with you the words of my twelve-year-old
son. When he learned I was coming to this hearing, Tom said, Mom,
please make them understand. We dont want to run away. We
just want to know.
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The preceding was testimony offered in regard to sealed adoption
records and the search for identity, given in 1976 to the New York
State Commission on Child Welfare by Vincenette Scheppler. It is
still pertinent today.
This testimony may be freely quoted by persons who are working
to achieve open records. If you enjoyed reading this testimony then
please stay a while and look at some of our other publications.
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