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Sunday 8 January 2017

CHILD ADOPTION AND ITS CHALLENGES



There is a popular belief in Africa especially in the eastern Nigeria that an adopted child can never be your blood. This is genetically true but to people who truly cherish the concept of family, family is not always blood.
     Adoption is the process whereby a person assumes the parenting of another, usually a child, from that person’s biological or legal parents, and in so doing, permanently transfers all rights and responsibilities along with affiliation from the biological parents.
      The history of adoption is as old as time itself, starting from the Antiquity era where adoption especially in Rome was practised for the wellborn or elites in the society so as to strengthen political ties between wealthy families and create male heirs to manage estates. According to history, many of Rome’s emperors were adopted sons. During the medieval age, the idea of pure bloodlines was paramount and unwanted children were disregarded and labelled bastards and street urchins and if ever accepted into a family, they are used as slaves to work in the field or as household servants. The system of modern adoption became really popular during the “baby scoop era” between 1945 to 1974. This era saw rapid growth and acceptance of adoption as a means to build a family. Illegitimate birth rose three fold after World War II as sexual mores changed. Simultaneously, the scientific community began to stress the dominance of nurture over genetics, while condemning eugenic stigmas, in this period, adoption became the best solution for both unwed mothers and infertile couples.
   Child adoption can be categorized into; open and closed adoption. In an open adoption, the birth and adoptive parents exchange identifying information such as names and addresses, while in a closed adoption the adoptive and birth parents remain anonymous and do not exchange any identifying information. There is also domestic adoption where adoptive parents adopt a child within the city or country in which they reside. International adoption is where the birth mother and adoptive parents live in different countries. Private adoption is a type of adoption that is arranged through an individual who may be a physician, clergy or an attorney or even a referral service. There is also Agency child adoption where adoption is arranged through child adoption agency which can be private or public with or without religious affiliation. The distinctions among these types of adoption is important as each type must meet a different set of legal requirements and procedures. The legal requirements and procedures are very necessary because child adoption in many countries of the world is vulnerable to child trafficking, enslavement and other kinds of child abuse. It is due to these risks which are found in adoption system that in Nigeria, adoption process is regulated by the Nigerian Child Right Laws or the adoption Act of 1965.

ADOPTION AMONG THE IGBO OF SOUTH EASTERN NIGERIA.
It is a tradition in Igbo, Effik and Ibibio tribes of Eastern
Nigeria that a married woman without a child has no honour in her husband‘s family and her barrenness is believed to be her fault. This was the reason why Nnuego in ―The Joys of Motherhood tried to drown herself because it is a general belief that a woman who did not have a child for her husband is a failed woman.
    The reasons for child adoption vary with individuals and cultural settings. For some, the reasons include intense love for children, couple desiring gender balance in children, couple with only one child, and a male heir to inherit the family estate, avoidance of discomfort and pain of pregnancy and labour, and infertility. In Igbo land, those who engage in child adoption do so primarily for economic and psychological reasons. In a country such as Nigeria that has no social security provision for the elderly and the unemployed, child adoption serves as an insurance policy for old age for the adoptive parents. Also, in African societies, many families adopt children in need of help especially when such children are relatives. This is called kinship adoption. A child may lose his or her parents to death or they may be too poor or too sick to raise the child.
       In each of the Eastern states, there are also the bodies that are responsible for child adoption laws. For instance in Enugu State, the National Women Commission is the statutory body responsible for the documentation and follow-up of child adoption processes.

     One of the major fears associated with adoption is the grave concern about the genetic quality of illegitimate and indigent children, perhaps best exemplified by the influential writing of Henry H. Goddard who protested against adopting children of unknown origin saying:

               “Now it happens that some people are interested in the welfare
                And high development of the human race; but leaving aside
                Those exceptional people. All fathers and mothers are interested
                In the welfare of their own families, the dearest thing to the parental
                Heart is to have the children marry well and rear noble family. How
                Short-sighted it is then for such family to take into its midst a child
                Whose pedigree is absolutely unknown; or where if it were partially
                Known, the probabilities are strong that it would show poor and diseased
                Stock, and that if a marriage should take place between that individual and
                Any member of the family, the offspring would be degenerates.”

      From the above quote, it can be deduced that one of the major challenges of adoption is the lack of knowledge of the adopted child’s medical history. It is commonly believed that insanity, drug abuse, imbecility and other degenerative health and psychological problems could run in the bloodline of the biological family of the adopted child. This could discourage the would-be adopted parents from adopting. Other challenges associated with child adoption include:
Cultural Belief:
In Eastern Nigeria, child adoption has never been acceptable culturally before pre-colonial era. Even now, in Igbo communities, adoption is still a stigma. This assertion is true because in Eastern Nigeria people do not easily accept a child whose biological make up is foreign as a legitimate child in the family. Newspaper reports on child adoption in the Eastern Nigeria revealed that;
(i)                 although child adoption is done, it is alien in Igbo culture
(ii)               no matter how rich an adopted child might be, he cannot be a traditional ruler in the community
(iii)             adoption of babies is bringing a lot of problems that are against people‘s way of life and should discontinue
For these reasons, motherless babies who yearn for parents to love and train them may not be adopted.
Poverty:
Poverty is a social problem, and a serious challenge to adoption process. Nigeria is Africa‘s top oil producer, yet poverty is so endemic across the country that that 67 million Nigerians live below one American Dollar per day. Consequently, many people in Eastern Nigeria sell themselves to material temptations to make ends meet. It is due to poverty that some people establish illegal adoption agencies and orphanage homes known as baby factories where teenage girls are lured into giving birth and selling their babies for the same purpose. In 2012, 2,500 pregnant teenagers were rescued from baby factories in South Eastern Nigeria. News Flash reported that the police on 15th March 2013 found 6 pregnant teenage girls in Enugu City and arrested 3 suspects planning to sell the babies after being born.
Arinze Orakwe of the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons and other related matters (NAPTIP) said that couples who patronize such factories are those Nigerians who want to avoid illegal adoption process. In December 20, 2013, Nigeria Police freed 19 pregnant teenagers in Abia State aged 15-23 years old. According to sources, most of the teenage mothers were lured into the infamous trade with monetary offers by the baby factory operators, while some others were forced into the trade by poverty and illiteracy. These issues are a dangerous development and a criminalization of child adoption laws. The emergence of baby factories in Igbo land and the high patronage it enjoys challenges or impacts negatively on child adoption in two fundamental ways. First, genuine orphanages no longer have enough babies for adoption. This is mainly because most of the teenagers with unwanted pregnancies now prefer to make gain out of their mistake by selling their babies to operators of baby factories rather than placing them in orphanage homes or even dumping them where they would be located and taken to motherless babies’ homes.
Second, those women who fake pregnancies prefer to purchase babies from baby factories and claim such as their biological babies rather than formally adopting children from orphanages. The reasons for this fraudulent practice are to create the impression that the woman is capable of becoming pregnant, and that she is not barren after all. The second reason is to secure for the new baby cultural acceptability, and remove from the child the stigma associated with adopted children. These illegal agencies and orphanage homes do not have legal backings to run child adoption services. The perpetrators indulge in this crime due to poverty, materialism, greed and high moral decadence.  The business attracts both genuine prospective adoptive parents and fake ones who want babies for ritual purposes and or for child trafficking.

Denial of Inheritance:
In Eastern Nigeria, child adoption is not common. It occurs only among educated people whose adopted children suffer discrimination and denial of inheritance when they come of age. Many traditional communities in Eastern Nigeria, do not allow an adopted child to participate in sharing communal land. They are not also allowed to inherit the staff of office of the family (a position and honour given to the eldest man in a village or community). This type of attitude towards the adoptee discourages childless couples who may wish to adopt children that will inherit their property when they (adoptive parents) pass away.

Bastard label:
 Most adopted children are rejected in their immediate society because they are indirectly regarded as slaves. Because slaves and adopted children are paid for with money, they are seen as outcasts and therefore have no position in the family. Hence, an adopted child is not seen as a real son of the soil, because everybody wants a child that is recognized biologically. Therefore, both the adopted parents and the adopted children are stigmatised.
This type of attitude towards the adoptee discourages child adoption. This is because nobody wants to adopt a child that will be discriminated against, and finds it difficult to interact freely because of fear of being intimidated.

Late adoption:
This is another social problem that destabilizes the process of child adoption. Adoption Act of 1994 stipulates that the maximum age limit for those wishing to adopt a child is 45 years if one is adopting a first child, but if the adoptive parent already has other children and wants to adopt more, the maximum age is 50 years. However, for the adoption of new born babies, the age limit imposed is usually 35-40 years so that the adoptive mother will be able to take adequate care of the child.
Unfortunately, here in the Eastern Nigeria, because adoption of children is alien to our culture, many infertile couple delay a lot before they take decision to adopt. Because biological children are more preferred they usually exhaust all the avenues of giving birth before they opt for adoption. Sometimes you see couples retiring from their jobs and adopting children they may not have the physical and economic strength to take care of. Adoption at old age does not give the adoptive parents enough time to train their adopted child in school or nurture them enough to face the challenging world.

Poor Law Enforcement:
In spite of the existence of different law enforcement agencies and organizations in the country such as the police, the States Security Service (S.S.S), the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corp (NSCDC) and the Independent Corruption Practices Commission, (ICPC), many corrupt practices in child adoption often go on unchecked. On daily basis, different news media are filled with stories of babies that are sold, illegal adoption agencies that operate and other illegal adoption practices such as children being sold for ulterior motives in Eastern Nigeria and in South-East precisely. Unfortunately, the perpetrators of these evils are not punished squarely. The state Governments are sometimes aware of the foster homes and illegal maternity homes where babies are sold to both genuine prospective adoptive parents, and the fake ones, but turn a blind eye because some of the people who run such establishments allegedly grease the palms of those in authority so as to remain in business. Worse still, the establishments are allegedly owned by prominent members of the society who cannot afford to have their image tarnished. It is because the perpetrators are not punished seriously that the business of baby sales still flourish up to date, with more people joining them.

Having exhausted the problems associated with adoption, how can we make it easier? How can we elevate the heartaches of childless women? And how do we give genuine care to orphans around the world? Despite the fact that adoption has been severely looked down upon by the African society, adoption has healed a lot of homes which were on the verge of destruction. It has also been an avenue for so many love deprived babies to find love in the midst of a loving and stable family. Every child deserves love and there is a saying that you have never truly loved until you love someone who has never had a taste of love. Many orphaned children around the world are being abused and have never known what if means to be truly cared for. It is time to look beyond what the society thinks and what our culture says, after all traditions can be broken especially traditions that do not positively affect our lives. How can society look down on a family who takes in an orphan child for all the right reasons? And how can the same society turn around on that child and brand him a bastard, a slave, and still deny that child his rights just because his bloodline is unknown? It is time for us to have a rethink and do things the right way. And to all those adopted children out there who has been looked down on, abused, disregarded, whose rights have been trampled upon and denied, whose ego have been bruised and who have lost all sense of belonging and self-esteem, remember this, you are human just like every other person and you have an equal right to love and be loved and you can reach within yourself and discover who you are, you can be anything you want to be. Do not resort to violence to get back at the society because you will hurt yourself in the long run. Remember, when you love those who hate you, you will heap coals of fire on their head and the great architect of the universe will order your steps.

In conclusion, we bring some random facts about adoption from around the world
·          Perhaps the earliest known adoption is mentioned in the Bible when the Pharaoh’s daughter “adopted” the baby Moses.
·         Famous people who were adopted include Jamie Foxx, Jack Nicholson (by his grandparents), Ray Liotta, Steve Jobs, Nicole Richie, Dave Thomas (Wendy’s Founder)
·         From 1854-1929, homeless children (especially Catholics and Jews) were placed on trains and taken to rural sites in the Midwest and West in search of homes. At each stop, children were “put up” on platforms to see if anyone would want to take them, which led to the phrase “put up for adoption.” Criticism of the Orphan Train movement sparked new agencies and laws, such as Minnesota’s Adoption Law of 1917, which required an investigation of all adoptions
·         There are more orphans in Sub-Sahara Africa than children in Denmark, Norway, Canada, and Sweden combined
·          There are more orphans globally than the population of UK and France combined
·         Around 7 million Americans are adopted persons.
·         UNICEF estimates that there are 151 million children who have lost at least one parent worldwide and 18 million who have lost both parents
·         The United States adopts more children, not only internationally but also domestically, than the rest of the world combined.
·          In 2010, an American woman put her adopted 7-year-old son on a plane back to Russia with a letter citing “severe psychopathic issues.” That same year, an American woman left twins she had adopted from Russia on a freezing Russian street with a note saying she didn’t want them anymore. These cases sparked outrage and caused a diplomatic row between Russia and the U.S.
·          While modern adoption tends to favour creating stable family structures for often homeless or needy children, ancient adoption practices emphasized the political and economic interests of the adopter. It was more a legal tool and political tool that created ties between wealthy families and created male heirs to manage estates.
·          In contrast to the Roman tradition of adopting a male to create a peaceful transition of power, in the Germanic, Celtic, and Slavic cultures after the fall of the Roman Empire, a ruling dynasty simply was replaced if a natural born heir was not available. Adoption was widely denounced, and infant adoption was rare. In fact, abandoned children were turned more often into slaves.
·          Reasons besides infertility that lead people to adopt are many, including compassion, to avoid contributing to the overpopulation of the planet, to avoid passing on inheritable disease, and health concerns about pregnancy and childbirth.
·          Women who adopt are usually currently married, have impaired fertility, are childless, and are in their early 40s.
·          Because adoption in England was discouraged, “baby farmers” cropped up during the late Victorian era before foster care and adoptions were regulated by British law. Baby farmers would take the babies of unwed mothers for a lump sum with the promise of providing the child a loving home. Because it was more profitable if the baby died, some baby farmers murdered the children. Two infamous British baby farmers were Margaret Waters (1835-1870) and Amelia Dyer (1837-1896). Together, these two women were responsible for at least 400 murders.
Because the English law of inheritance heavily emphasized natural bloodlines, little or no provisions were made for a family name to “live on” through adoption. Abandoned children were at risk of being used by beggars who often mutilated the abandoned child so that he or she could be more effectively used as a beggar.

Chidimma Ezeobi

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