Category Archives: Rudy Owens

How the history of adoption in Michigan remains hidden

Crittenton General Hospital of Detroit, taken shortly after its opening in 1929 (source: Fifty Years’ Work with Girls, 1883-1933: A Story of the Florence Crittenton Homes).

I have published an updated article examining the hidden history of my birthplace, Detroit’s Crittenton General hospital. In my article, I write that one of the unexpected outcomes of the American adoption experience is how the stigma of illegitimacy created a cloak of invisibility around the birth of adoptees and their presence in the general population. The failure to count adoptees officially in state and federal vital statistics such as the U.S. Census up until the year 2000 also has promoted their hidden status. The intersection of these outcomes can be seen in the story of Crittenton General Hospital of Detroit, demolished in 1975 and now largely forgotten.

I was among what I estimate to be at least 20,000 infants born and placed for adoption at this major facility promoting that system during the height of the boom adoption years after World War II. My memoir on my life’s story, You Don’t Know How Lucky You Are, provides additional information on the history of the facility—one of the nation’s largest maternity hospitals dedicated to promoting the separation of infants from their birth mothers and kin through adoption. My book also examines how birth records of adoptions at the hospital are either kept hidden or intentionally sealed to prevent the public from knowing true scope of the adoption system in Detroit and Michigan in the decades after World War II.

More praise from my readers

My memoir on the U.S. adoption experience is available on Amazon and your favorite online bookseller.

Happy New Year, everyone. I hope all of you had a great holiday and have special memories of times spent with family and friends. For my followers, I want to thank those of you who last year purchased my book, You Don’t Know How Lucky You Are. Your support means a great deal to me.

This also marks the first holiday season where I promoted my book and when I heard back from more of you. In December, some of my readers wrote reviews on Amazon for the paperback version of You Don’t Know How Lucky You Are. Here are a few of those comments:

Shawna
Of all the adoption related books I have read, You Don’t Know How Lucky You Are resonates with me the most, on so many levels. It’s a difficult task to make folks understand what discrimination looks like for adoptees in this country.

Lazarus
You Don’t Know How Lucky You Are is an outstanding, heartfelt, and eye-opening memoir of its author, Rudy Owens, as an incredible 30-year journey to his birthright. It is essential, exhaustive, and compelling reading to those of us who have been passed through this exceptionally misguided, agonizing, and flawed system and for all those otherwise.

Click on my photo to see my video.

Thomas
The subject has always been intriguing to me, but before reading this book I had no idea the depth of issues that could be involved. It successfully tells a very compelling story but also reveals details of the legal roadblocks to adoptees getting the information they are entitled to. Highly recommended.

Please Share Your Reviews:
If you have purchased either an ebook or paperback version of  my memoir, my New Year’s video is for you, encouraging you to join Shawna, Lazarus, and Thomas by sharing your thoughts.

A reader’s most trusted source is his and her fellow reader. I hope to see your names in the comments section soon.

For the months ahead, I am still seeking opportunities to speak and do readings and share the information I wove within my own tale with people who know little about the system that still impacts millions of people in the United States. It can be challenging finding partners willing to host an author who wants to talk candidly and honestly about the history of U.S. adoption and adoption secrecy laws. I’ll share news of future events here.

Even beloved public libraries say ‘no’ to adoptees

My proposed presentation on the U.S. adoption system would have explained how facilities like Detroit’s former Crittenton General Hospital, shown here in 1965, promoted adoption and the separation of millions of mothers and their children in the decades after World War II

Between July and December 2018, I made five written attempts to offer a free, adult education program to the public at the Multnomah County Library. The library is a major cultural institution in this region that prides itself on promoting all voices and advancing knowledge and reading, particularly the issues highlighted in books shared with the public.

My presentation and reading would have mirrored the one I gave at the Tigard Public Library on Sept. 25, 2018. You can see my proposal here

In the end, the library refused my idea, which would have showcased the little-known research I shared in my newly published memoir on the American adoption experience and on the history of that system in the post-World War II years, along with ways adoptees are denied basic equal rights.

Not only did library event planning staff say, “No,” but they also shared that adult adoptees in the United States weren’t the “marginalized” community that they wanted to focus on with adult programs. Those activities include public events and conversations about books that highlight historic and political issues in American life. 

Don’t Count on “Progressives Allies” to Care About Adoption History or Adoptee Rights

The Multnomah County Library shared this statement with me by email after I asked event planning staff to reconsider my proposal for a free public lecture on the history of the U.S. adoption system. Staff did not change their minds.

As an adoptee, I am not surprised by this outcome.

When it comes to the story of adoptees, articles about adoptee rights, columns on the history of adoption, adoptees seldom find anyone who cares to give them a platform or who really gives a damn what adults adoptees have to say. 

Sadly, the library’s tinny tone reminded me of ways public health officials denied giving me my original birth certificate decades after I had found my birth families. It is hard to ignore that “paternal tone” if you have heard it for decades.

The irony for me is that I used the excellent resources in this library to research my book, including great works on adoptee rights and adoption history, and other works on the larger issue of sociological bias toward illegitimately born people, such as adoptees.

The library also secured many interlibrary loans for me, which was crucial for my work. This facility also has dozens of others books on adoption issues. But that information will stay on the shelves, mostly unknown to this community for now, in part because of the library’s decision.

In my two replies sent to the library asking them to reconsider its decision, sent on Dec. 12 and 13, 2018, I failed to convince the lower level librarian staff that the library decision was not consistent with the library’s stated mission. I wrote: “Among your stated goals are to be a ‘trusted guide for learning,’ a ‘leading advocate for reading,’ and a ‘champion for equity and inclusion.’ My proposal aligned with all three, particularly of a historically marginalized group in U.S. history and to this day.” 

For that email, I copied Vailey Oehlke, library director, and Terrilyn Chun, deputy director. I documented for both senior managers why the library failed, and in a way that showed adoptees that even so-called advocates of reading and knowledge will turn their backs on proposals as simple as a free public lecture.

Neither Oehlke nor Chun replied to my emails.

Why I Care About this Experience with the Library

As an adoptee, I decided long ago I never would apologize for promoting awareness of adoptee rights issues or for my advocacy that tried to educate the public by using facts and research.

That is why I am writing this post on this disappointing experience with the library concerning a human rights issue about millions who are denied basic rights. This interplay with staff showed me even librarians, who may self-identify as progressive, do not see adoptees rights as an issue that deserves a modest platform to discuss ongoing legal inequality in 2018.

I am moving on to find others who care about this issue and the story that still remains hidden in the shadows of shame. 

If you are a Portland area adoptee and care about this issue, you are welcome to contact Oehlke and Chun and encourage them to change the minds of the subordinates who made this decision; find their email addresses here. About the only thing a public official responds to is public shaming through fact-based news reporting and self-concern about their jobs. There is never a wrong time to engage public officials who are responsible for the actions of the public bodies they manage. 

My memoir makes top 20 list of Adoptee Reading

The website Adoptee Reading has chosen my memoir on the American adoption experience to be on its top 20 list for 2018. The site provides recommendations for books “written by adoptees themselves.” The website celebrates the totality of the adoptee voice and experience, noting “we believe adoptees have a unique perspective on life in general.”

I am delighted my work, You Don’t Know How Lucky You Are, is recommended. The authors and works picked showcase a wide spectrum of adoptee experiences in the United States.

The list features a diverse collection of works and authors, including Korean-American adoptee authors Nicole Chung, J.S. Lee, and Julyanne Lee, as well as books on the language of adoption, by Karen Pickell, and on famous adopted persons, by Alice Stephens. My narrative nonfiction work mixes my life story and journey to justice and a critical look at the adoption system as a public health, political, and sociological and historic issue tied to the harmful treatment of illegitimately born persons.

Rudy Owens’ memoir on the American adoption experience

Adoptees number more than 5 million Americans, and they provide a rich diversity of voices that is frequently drowned out and ignored in the larger national discussions of the U.S. adoption system. The continued publication of poems, novels, historical accounts, and nonfiction works like mine, which combines memoir and a critical and detailed study of that system, are slowly helping to change how the country, the media, and the public think about this incredibly diverse group and their collective experience.

The one unifying theme that binds U.S. adoptees is having been raised by people who were not their biological parents. U.S. adoptees may be born overseas, be raised in transracial familial settings, be foster-raised persons, or be persons raised by kin such as a grandparent. Or they may be like me, a person who is the product of one of the least-understood social-engineering experiments in U.S. history, which separated millions of families in the three decades after World War II.

I encourage you to order my book for the holiday season to learn more about the importance of kin relationships in the raising of children, the political landscape that denies most adoptees their legal rights, and the history of a system that encouraged single mothers to relinquish their illegitimately born kids to address societal fears of stigma and illegitimacy

Share a special story this holiday season with family and friends

I have always said stories are the one thing that connect people the world over.

Despite all of our differences, we share a common humanity that is rooted in our shared experience as humans.

One of humanity’s greatest stories, that of the orphan/adoptee/hero, is a tale as old as the Old Testament’s most famous adoptee hero, Moses. It is also the story of millions of adoptees in the United States, like me.

This holiday season, please consider sharing my memoir about finding my family, my past, and ultimately justice. Through my story, I also tell the larger tale of the U.S. adoption experience in the decades after World War II.

My book, You Don’t Know How Lucky You Are, makes for a perfect holiday gift. Maybe you are adopted and want to learn more about the system that separated family members. Maybe you know of someone who is adopted or know families with adopted kin.

My memoir about my adoptee journey, from my birth in one of the largest maternity hospitals that promoted adoption to finding justice more than five decades later, is accessible to everyone, even readers who know little about this uniquely America system.

You can buy the book online on Amazon, in paperback and as an e-book for your Kindle reader.

Share my book website with a friend, and tell them about this story for justice, truth, and living a meaningful life.

Please also let me know your thoughts. I love hearing from my readers.

Happy holidays, everyone.


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