Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Girl Hopes DNA Drive Will Help Her Find Birth Parents In China

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Feb, 2018 12:21 PM
    VANCOUVER — For 10-year-old Isabelle Smit, finding new blood relatives through a long-shot DNA drive has been like a game of Connect the Dots.
     
     
    Smit, who was adopted as an infant from Chongqing, China, and now lives in Esquimalt, B.C., describes a distant cousin she found in Holland.
     
     
    "Her name is Yaya and she's the closest relative I've found. She's really tall, she's older than me. I think she likes Minecraft," Smit said.
     
     
    "I don't know a lot about her, but she looks really, really cool."
     
     
    Smit is one of 20 international adoptees from Chongqing who posted a video together to China's equivalent of Youtube, asking potential biological relatives to submit DNA samples.
     
     
    The video gained thousands of hits after it was posted in December.
     
     
    In the video, the adoptees introduce themselves, name the orphanage where they were adopted and where they live now. There are 19 girls and one boy ranging in age one to 16, who live in Canada, the U.S., the Netherlands and Belgium.
     
     
    The video was picked up by Chinese media and the group's contact in China received a flurry of responses, Smit's mother Kristen Lundgren said.
     
     
    From the initial 15 samples received from Chongqing, two American adoptees who weren't in the video found close matches. The results are entered into a larger DNA bank, so they aren't only tested against samples from the kids in the video.
     
     
    In addition to Yaya, who was also featured in the video, Smit has matched with three other distant relatives, including one from Chongqing. But she's still holding out hope for her birth mother.
     
     
    "We're hoping that maybe because these matches happened, it will get people talking," Lundgren said.
     
     
    "Maybe more people will come forward who want to be tested."
     
     
    An additional five samples that came in response to the video are still being processed. The group is working on more videos to keep it in China's public eye.
     
     
    Lundgren said she was given very little information about Smit's birth family when she adopted her at 10 months old in 2007. But her guide told her most of the children were placed for adoption by families who couldn't afford the high fees of keeping a second child under China's one-child policy.
     
     
    The one-child policy was phased out in 2015.
     
     
    That year, almost 3,000 children out of 22,348 placed for adoption went to foreign families.
     
     
    Lundgren's adoption agency emphasized the importance of birth family and culture for an adoptee, so Lundgren always wanted to help Smit connect with those parts of her identity, if her daughter expressed interest.
     
     
    "I really strongly believe that the better you understand your own story, the better off you are. I have my own curiosity and I know I would want the best information possible," Lundgren said.
     
     
    She said her daughter has written letters to her birth mother in China for as long as she's known how to write, but she's never had a place to send them.
     
     
    "If she was really hesitant, I wouldn't do it. But she's always wanted that."
     
     
    Lundgren said it's been a bit of a rollercoaster for her family, especially with no promise that the search will end with Smit's birth mom. But each time another family finds a match, it gives them hope.
     
     
    "It's kind of incredible that 15 samples came back from China and [two] were matched with their birth families," Lundgren said.
     
     
    "For a child, it's about understanding that it's a long-term process and our DNA is logged. And at some point, any point in the future, we could find someone who is a match."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Two Women In Custody In Victoria After Separate Alleged Assaults On Police

    Victoria Police Department Says Two Of Its Officers Were Assaulted In Separate Incidents.

    Two Women In Custody In Victoria After Separate Alleged Assaults On Police

    Charter Plane With 10 People On Board Slides Off Runway In Abbotsford, B.C.

    Charter Plane With 10 People On Board Slides Off Runway In Abbotsford, B.C.
    Airport general manager Parm Sidhu said officials were trying to confirm what happened but no one was seriously hurt.

    Charter Plane With 10 People On Board Slides Off Runway In Abbotsford, B.C.

    SEE PICS: NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Marries Toronto-Based Designer Gurkiran Kaur Sidhu

    SEE PICS: NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Marries Toronto-Based Designer Gurkiran Kaur Sidhu
    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh is now a married man. Singh posted the picture of the wedding ceremony with his new-wife, Gurkiran Kaur, on social media.

    SEE PICS: NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Marries Toronto-Based Designer Gurkiran Kaur Sidhu

    Minister Says Greyhound's Decision To Cut, Reduce Routes In B.C. ‘Unfortunate'

    Minister Says Greyhound's Decision To Cut, Reduce Routes In B.C. ‘Unfortunate'
    Greyhound Canada will eliminate or reduce routes in northern British Columbia, the Interior and Vancouver Island amid financial losses and a steep drop in passengers. 

    Minister Says Greyhound's Decision To Cut, Reduce Routes In B.C. ‘Unfortunate'

    Boy Fascinated With Garbage Trucks Gets One Of His Own From Sanitation Crew

    Boy Fascinated With Garbage Trucks Gets One Of His Own From Sanitation Crew
    EASTERN PASSAGE, N.S. — A Nova Scotia boy who every week waits wide-eyed for the local garbage truck now has a truck of his own — just on a slightly smaller scale.

    Boy Fascinated With Garbage Trucks Gets One Of His Own From Sanitation Crew

    State Of Emergency Remains In Place After Brantford, Ont., Flooding

    A southwestern Ontario community remains under a state of emergency after flooding from a swollen river forced thousands of residents from their homes.

    State Of Emergency Remains In Place After Brantford, Ont., Flooding