Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Woman Tracks Down Biological Dad Who Is An Elvis Impersonator In Thailand

The Canadian Press, 04 Jun, 2015 12:18 PM
    A Canadian woman says tracking down her biological father was always on her mind until a three-day social media campaign helped identify him as an Elvis impersonator working in Thailand.
     
    Forty-six-year-old Melonie Dodaro said she'd longed to know more about her father and had made many fruitless attempts to find him in the past.
     
    But the social media consultant from Kelowna, B.C., recently decided that it was now or never to put her professional skills to use in the hunt.
     
    Dodaro created a video identifying her dad and started a Twitter campaign using the hashtag #FindCeesDeJong, which was the only name she had for him.
     
    Three days later, Dodaro says she learned that he'd changed his name to Colin Young, spent decades travelling the world as a musician, had made many unsuccessful efforts to connect with her, and had finally settled in Thailand with a wife and two young kids.
     
    Dodaro says plans are in the works for her to travel to meet him and her two step-siblings, aptly named Elvis and Priscilla.
     
    Dodaro was no stranger to the power of social media, but said the experience of solving a decades-long mystery was like nothing she'd ever come across on the job.
     
    "I posted it on Saturday morning just after 10 a.m., and, basically, by Tuesday morning at 10 a.m., I was talking to my dad on the phone," she said in a telephone interview.
     
    Dodaro's curiosity about her paternal ancestry dated all the way back to childhood. She said her mother never hid the fact that the man who helped raise her was not a biological relative and willingly shared the few bits of information she had on the man who was.
     
    Dodaro said her mother and father dated for a few months in 1968 while living in Brampton, Ont., but went their separate ways before realizing there was a baby on the way.
     
    By the time Dodaro was born, her mother was engaged to someone else and the man she'd known as Cees DeJong had relocated to Australia.
     
    DeJong received a letter informing him that he had a daughter and soon tried to connect with her, but Dodaro's mother had now married and changed the family name.
     
    He tried again in 1985, even spending a few days in Toronto to dig through records, but drew a blank.
     
    During that time, Dodaro herself had undertaken her own search armed with only a few scanty details.
     
    She knew both his name and nationality, but said that information proved more of a hindrance than a help.
     
     
    "His name was the most common Dutch name," she said. "It was literally the equivalent of John Smith in North America."
     
    Dodaro eventually resigned herself to life without a connection to her father, but decided to tackle the search one more time at the urging of a friend.
     
    After consulting with her husband and 27-year-old son, she made her sparse knowledge public in a video, a blog post and a tweet that soon went viral.
     
    Before long, a Dutch newspaper had picked up the story and generated a flood of tips. Eventually, Dodaro said a man who was friendly with both the reporter and DeJong himself helped connect the dots and put father and daughter in touch for the first time.
     
    Dodaro described the wait for the phone call as "the longest 10 minutes of my life," but said the two immediately set about making up for lost time.
     
    Dodaro said she was initially taken aback by her dad's current career, but said she enjoys knowing that her son's musical talents were inherited from his grandfather.
     
    She said she and her family are hoping to head to Thailand in August to cap off what she describes as a "truly surreal" experience.
     
    "Part of me is still in shock," she said. "I wake up and I'm like, 'was that a dream? Is this real?' I jump out of bed and I'm checking my phone, checking my emails, checking my Facebook and saying, 'oh, yes, it is real!'"

    MORE National ARTICLES

    BC Ferries Drops Plan To Cut Service On Its Main Money-Making Routes

    BC Ferries Drops Plan To Cut Service On Its Main Money-Making Routes
    VICTORIA — BC Ferries says it will scuttle plans to trim services on its money-making routes between Vancouver Island and British Columbia's mainland and instead will find other ways to cut $4.9 million.

    BC Ferries Drops Plan To Cut Service On Its Main Money-Making Routes

    Shopify's Success Shines Bright Light On 'Renaissance' Of Ottawa's Tech Sector

    OTTAWA — Shopify Inc.'s successful stock-market debut is expected to reverberate well beyond the firm's Ottawa headquarters — and shine a spotlight on what some see as the second coming of the Canadian capital's tech sector.

    Shopify's Success Shines Bright Light On 'Renaissance' Of Ottawa's Tech Sector

    BC Regional District Won't Pay For Cleanup Of Demolished Site Where Allan Schoenborn Killed His Kids

    BC Regional District Won't Pay For Cleanup Of Demolished Site Where Allan Schoenborn Killed His Kids
    The Merritt, B.C., home where Allan Schoenborn stabbed his daughter and smothered his two sons has served as a loathsome reminder to the city since the killings in 2008.

    BC Regional District Won't Pay For Cleanup Of Demolished Site Where Allan Schoenborn Killed His Kids

    Police Discover Ontario Man Used Identity Of BC Boy Who Died In 1970s

    Police Discover Ontario Man Used Identity Of BC Boy Who Died In 1970s
    Police say a Caledonia, Ont., man who disappeared in 1992 took the name of a dead boy and lived under the assumed name until his death 10 years later.

    Police Discover Ontario Man Used Identity Of BC Boy Who Died In 1970s

    Supreme Court Orders New Trial For Alberta Men Who Made Sex Tapes Of 14-Year-Old Runaway Girls

    Supreme Court Orders New Trial For Alberta Men Who Made Sex Tapes Of 14-Year-Old Runaway Girls
    The Supreme Court of Canada has ordered a new trial in the case of two Edmonton men who made child pornography after videotaping two 14-year-old girls performing sex acts.

    Supreme Court Orders New Trial For Alberta Men Who Made Sex Tapes Of 14-Year-Old Runaway Girls

    Decades-Long Citizenship Battle Ends For Yukon Man Donovan McGlaughlin Who's Now Officially Canadian

    Decades-Long Citizenship Battle Ends For Yukon Man Donovan McGlaughlin Who's Now Officially Canadian
    The video showing Donovan McGlaughlin's Canadian citizenship ceremony in Dawson City, Yukon, is just two minutes and 11 seconds long but the elaborate script was decades in the making.

    Decades-Long Citizenship Battle Ends For Yukon Man Donovan McGlaughlin Who's Now Officially Canadian