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Beating
the Odds
APRIL 12, 2005
by
GREGORY J. RUMMO
Somewhere in the city of Zhanjiang, a port city located on
the South China Sea in China’s Guangdong Province, a young
woman learned she was pregnant in early 2003. It’s not clear
whether she was hoping for a boy and the birth of a little
girl nine months later was a disappointment or if her
husband or her family forced her to give up the baby for
other reasons. Maybe she didn’t even have a husband. Left to
fend for herself, she realized she could not care for both
herself and her little daughter.
Two weeks after the baby’s
birth, it was found, abandoned in a cardboard box, dressed
in a cotton baby suit and wrapped in a blue blanket. Perhaps
the color of the blanket indicated the parents had hoped for
a boy after all. A feeding bottle had been placed next to
her. There was no identification; only a red ribbon tied
around her leg with her date of birth: November 16, 2003.
Her chest, legs and stomach
we scarred as though she had been scalded. She was crying
when the officials from the Zhanjiang Social Welfare
Institute found her. They named her Zhan Ai Ping…
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The complete story of the adoption of his first
daughter, Wu Min Jian appears in Rummo's
second book, “The View from the Grass
Roots—Another Look.” It's 536 pages
of sometimes humorous, sometimes poignant and
almost always provocative commentary on American
Culture. $14.95 shipping and handling included.
Click here for more information.
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It was a little over two years ago when I traveled with my
family to China’s Guangxi Province to adopt one of the many
Chinese orphan girls that are abandoned each year. We spent
a week in the city of Nanning with the newest addition to
our family, Wu Min Jian whose American name is now Rebecca
Lee.
One day, our guide, Lin Don
Quing, brought us to a farm on the outskirts of Nanning. As
we picked our way along the hay-strewn paths crisscrossing
the fields of onions and lettuce, he spoke of the plight of
Chinese orphan girls.
“I have taken you to a farm
in rural Nanning so you can see for yourselves a place very
similar to the one where your daughter was most likely born.
A woman will have her baby on a farm like this one, and then
abandon it in a big city, hoping it will be found and taken
care of,” he said softly.
Lin had explained the sad
story of abandonment in China to us during the bumpy bus
ride out to the countryside. Raised by nannies, orphans
attend school only until the eighth grade and then find some
menial labor. They carry a stigma, which some overcome by
moving to another province.
Every year, millions of babies are abandoned in China.
Official estimates are up to 2 million, but unofficial
estimates put the number higher. The healthy ones are almost
all girls. Healthy boys are rarely abandoned because they
carry the family name to the next generation. That is deemed
important in a society where almost all families are limited
to one child.
Sadly, most orphans are
never adopted. According to U.S. government statistics, the
total number of immigrant visas issued to orphans from 21
different countries during 2004 was 21,900. China was at the
top of this list with 7,044.
The ratio of Chinese
orphans adopted every year to the number of babies that are
abandoned is miniscule. Yet, for those who are adopted into
loving homes, there is hope…
Zhan
Ai Ping is doing much better now. She has spent the last 16
months at the orphanage in Zhanjiang. The nannies report she
is healthy, eats well and is a playful little toddler. One
wrote, “She likes talking to herself and playing with her
toys joyfully. If you trick her by giving her an unfriendly
look she will cry at once until you hold her in your arms,
then she will be happy again.”
This story has a happy
ending. Ai Ping is one of the fortunate ones. She has beaten
the odds. She will become our second adopted daughter,
Rachel Marie, next month.
n
This appeared in the Herald News and
the New Jersey Herald on Sunday, April 17, 2005.
Gregory J. Rummo is an author and
columnist. His second book, “The View from the
Grass Roots—Another Look,” was published last year in August and is
available from Amazon.com or the author's website,
GregRummo.com.
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