Such adoptions can enrich family life, parents say In a country where people shell out millions of dollars on tabloids, some now write off transracial adoption as the new cause célèbre. Yet once the glitter of Angelina Jolie-Brad Pitt and Madonna-Guy Ritchie is stripped away, thousands of children in need of adoptive families remain. Poverty, war and disease throughout the world have caused the need for adoptive parents to skyrocket. In Africa, for example, the spread of HIV and AIDS makes it nearly impossible to meet the demand for such families. Families that adopt internationally often deal with special medical needs as well. According to the International Adoption Clinic of the Children’s Hospital and Research Center, Oakland, Calif., 60 percent of children adopted from outside the U.S. have health problems.
As the adoptive mother of two children from Korea, Diane H. Pederson, a pastor of Bethlehem Lutheran Church, St. Cloud, Minn., understands such issues and seeks ways to bridge the gap. Although her children are now grown, she continues to advocate for transracial families. The rest of this article is only available to subscribers. |






