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Essay
Rape, Relinquishment and Closed Records
by Sheila Ganz
(Published in national newsletters The Communicator of Concerned United Birthparents,
Origins an organization for women who have lost children to adoption, and Bastard
Quarterly of Bastard Nation 2000,
2002.)
"Take your clothes off, or Ill cut them off!" My back is against the wall.
My feet are trying to find solid ground on top of his bed. Its a narrow little room.
He waves an empty wine bottle at me and echoes his demand. Hes blocking my way to
the stairs. Im 20 and grew up sheltered in a middle-class family. I have no verbal
or physical skills to defend myself. Hes in his 20s. Its the end of the
summer of 1968.
"Now!" Petrified, I take my T-shirt off. "Everything!" Like a deer
caught in the headlights, I go through the motions and do as he says. I turn my head away
in disgust. He rapes me.
Afterwards, he lets me get dressed and follows me up the stairs to the front hall. I get
out the door as quickly as I can. On the 45 minute drive home, I am shaking and think I am
pregnant. I dont know what to do.
I cant tell my parents I drove into Boston to see this guy. When they told me
earlier in the day, that they had to pay for my younger sister and brothers college
tuition and couldnt afford to send me back to the Museum School, I panicked.
I went to art school for two years and left for a year. Then I decided to go back
and get my degree. My parents suggested I take out a loan to finish college, but I
didnt see how I would be able to pay it back. I was very upset. I needed someone to
talk to...
Since Ive been away, Im out of touch with friends. I am close to my
sister and brother, but they are both at summer camp working as counselors. My parents and
I havent been getting along since I hit puberty.
When I dont get my period, I tell my mother. She takes me to a doctor. After
a quick examination, the doctor declares, "Youre pregnant." I tell my
parents I went to see this guy and he forced me. They say, "You shouldnt have
been there in the first place."
They take me to look at a home for unwed mothers in Boston. I dont want to go
there. So I get a job, save my money for four months, buy a car and head out cross
country to Los Angeles.
On January 19, 1969, the day before Nixon is inaugurated, I skid on some ice at the
top of the hill. Im just east of Pittsburgh, PA. The car flips over and I am pinned
underneath. The impact fractures my pelvis. Im five months pregnant. I spend two
months in the hospital recuperating. My car is totaled and I end up having to sign it over
to the garage to pay the towing and storage fees. Im stranded.
My parents call me every Sunday to see how I am doing. They dont want to
travel in bad winter weather to visit me and I dont want them to see me pregnant.
Because I have no place else to go, the social worker in the hospital makes arrangements
for me to go into the Booth Memorial Home for Unwed Mothers in Pittsburgh for the
remaining two months. The home sits alone on a hill by itself. I am on crutches.
The one time I walk down the hill, I make it to the middle of the block and realize
that I look pregnant and everyone in the neighborhood knows where I come from and what I
am. I turn around and walk back up the hill. I am so ashamed, I dont think of trying
it again.
I am assigned a social worker in the home. To her, adoption is a matter of paper
work. She doesnt give me any options, or ask me what I want to do. She tells me I
can name my baby and I do. "But," she says, "the adoptive parents
dont have to keep the given name." From then on, I only think of her as
"my baby."
Two days after I give birth to my daughter, I get to hold her for about ten
minutes. I am struck by what a miracle life is and how much she looks like me. I want to
keep her. I go down the hall to the pay phone and call my parents to ask if I can bring
her home. They say, "No."
No one told me about welfare, or that I could place my baby in foster care until I
get a job and a place to live. Im in a strange city. I have no idea of where to go.
When people say to me that I "chose" to relinquish my daughter for adoption, I
say, "No one asked me, if I wanted to do A, B, C, D, or none of the above. That is
choice."
The nurse tells me to go on with my life. My baby is going to a good home with a
two-parent family. Its best for her. When I leave a piece of my heart rips out of
me.
Legitimacy is a major cornerstone of patriarchy and makes women and children
dependent on a man and his name. I dont think relinquishment as we know it would
exist in a matriarchy. The unnatural mother/child separation, especially right after
birth, is not the language of women. Non-cooperation with the dominant white male
patriarchal system places "other" people on the fringe of mainstream society.
They are looked down upon as of lesser value, second-class citizens.
Shame enjoys a prominent position of power over the population, especially women.
Laura, a birthmother, calls this societys "web of shame." It managed to
snare a lot of us. We had to hide our shame until we were able to show ourselves
unencumbered by our "mistake." Today, women are given more power than
twenty-five, thirty, or fifty years ago. The web is weaker, but it is still with us. And
when a person steps outside of the traditional father-mother-child family they are still
looked down upon as "not good enough." Shame over my unwed pregnancy stopped my
parents from helping me keep my daughter, their granddaughter. The only way back over the
line is to "pretend it didnt happen."
But my empty arms know. My broken heart knows. I lost the most precious thing in
the world to me my flesh and blood, my baby. The shame of being raped, the
devastation of having to give my daughter up for adoption and my endless secret grieving
conspire to make me feel as though I am not entitled to any good thing in life. I failed
my daughter and I failed myself.
The separate experiences of rape and unwed pregnancy can get twisted in a knot of
emotions and societal judgments. Being raped is a private trauma a disempowering,
humiliating violation of ones personhood. When the sexual assault results in
pregnancy, it transforms the personal experience into a public display. Being pregnant
"shows."
Up until the 1970s, societys solution to out-of-wedlock pregnancy was
to erase the event through relinquishment and adoption. The unwed expectant mother was
hidden until she gave birth. Then she was told to relinquish her child to a married
couple, who would give her child legitimate status through adoption. The
"wayward" girl/woman was "re-virginized" and the infertile couple had
a child.
Voila! Societys major concern that everything looks right according to
traditional standards has been accomplished. And as a "kindness" to the rape
survivor/birthmother, there is no acknowledgment of the trauma of rape, or relinquishment.
Everyone around her denies the truth of her experience and she is silently reintegrated
back into society.
Having no choice but to surrender my daughter for adoption cemented my victimhood.
It cut deep within my being affecting my self-esteem and my ability to make positive
decisions for myself. I reacted passively to outside forces. I started to believe
everything was out of my control.
The shroud of victimhood is unshakeable. It follows me everywhere
to
unsatisfying jobs, an abusive marriage, into the farthest reaches of my soul. The emotion
of passivity freezes me in a kind of ceaseless numbing pain. I live for the day when I
will find my baby.
Adoption records were closed in most states during the 1930s and 40s.
It was the Great Depression and thousands of children whose parents were indigent,
homeless, unmarried, or deceased needed homes. Closed adoption records were considered an
incentive to prospective adoptive parents. That way they didnt have to worry about
the birthparents finding their children. Closed record laws protected the child from the
stigma of illegitimacy, the unmarried mother from the shame of out-of-wedlock pregnancy
and maintained the "integrity" of the adoptive family though in reality,
birthparents are an integral part of the adoptive family.
Closed adoption record laws is the third assault on birthmothers who were raped.
These laws legitimize the first two traumas by keeping them secret. This "no
tell" law protects the victim as well as the abuser. Sealed adoption records keep
adoptees on the fringes of society. When adoptees are unable to obtain their original
birth certificate, a right enjoyed by all other citizens, they are relegated to second
class citizenship, like their unwed mothers and fathers.
The world has changed a lot since 1969. Society is more accepting of single mothers, now.
But some prejudice persists. The stigma that makes birthmothers the "bad guy" is
the easy way out for society. This way they dont have to deal with us as thinking
feeling people with hearts and souls just like everybody else.
The current argument to keep adoption records closed is to preserve the secrecy
surrounding the identity of unwed mothers. Advocates for closed records say that unwed
mothers were shamed and they want to help them hide their shame. Advocates for closed
records wrote the Uniform Adoption Act to keep adoption records sealed for 99 years. Under
this Act, which so far no state has passed, the relinquishing mother will never see her
child again. Her child will never call her mother. She will be buried with her shame.
I personally do not believe these lobbyists, paid by adoption agencies, give a hoot
about birthmothers. Closed adoption record laws serve adoption agencies, who do not have
to divulge how they conduct their business... to anyone. Society should beware of
cover-ups. Where there is no accountability, abuse cannot be far behind.
Several birthmothers have told me that their child was not placed in the kind of
family they requested, with the same religious or ethnic background. Adoptive parents were
often not given important medical information about the childs birthparents, since
agency workers didnt want to tell them anything negative.
With closed adoption records there is no follow-up when health issues do arise. And
it is not known how many adoptive parents do not tell the child that she/he is adopted.
We also need to address the adoptive family politic that says there is "no
difference" between biological and adoptive families. This notion glosses over the
fact that the child has a birth family and that that family matters. The attitude that the
birth family is unimportant or unnecessary does a huge disservice to the adoptee by
denying they come from anyone or anywhere.
When my daughter turned thirteen, my desire to find her slowly made its way to the
surface of my life. With a friends help I took the first step to contact the
adoption agency and update my file with medical information. After the agency confirms the
information was passed on to her adoptive family, my world looks different. For the first
time, I know
my baby is alive.
Two years later, in graduate school at San Francisco State University, my secret
bursts out of its seams. I am inspired to write a play about my experience as a
birthmother. I am determined to tell the world the truth about how losing my daughter to
adoption has affected my life. It is tortuous to write.
When it comes time to present my project in class I shiver in fear. As I tell my
story, I wait for them to throw rocks at me. When I finish a woman comes up to me and
tells me that she, too, is a birthmother. She asks me not to tell anyone.
Then an interesting thing starts to happen. In talking to people it invariably
comes up that I am writing a play and they ask, "Whats it about?" I shrink
for a moment and then I tell them. I tell lots and lots of people my story. A few look at
me, stare and say, "I could never relinquish my child." Most are sympathetic.
Gradually, my fear of telling dissipates. Telling my story is healing. At last I
feel validated for all that I have been through.
One afternoon, Pat Ferrero, my professor and the head of, CEIA, Center for
Experimental and Interdisciplinary Arts, visits me in my studio. We work at the old Navy
base in Tiburon, just over the Golden Gate Bridge. I am writing my play on the second
floor porch of one of the empty barracks buildings. Looking out over the bay, we discuss
the play. The perfect blue sky begins to crack when
Pat asks, "Why didnt you call the police?"
I have no answer. I think back. Why was I so passive? Why didnt I call the
police? It is the most logical question in the world.
The rest of the day, I try to find the answer to Pats question. When I get
home, I go to my room and walk to my dresser. I look at myself in the mirror. Theres
something not right about my hair. I brush it. Maybe I should cut it. I start to get the
scissors and stop. I want my hair to grow.
Pats question wont go away. "I couldnt call the police
because
I was afraid my father would go after him and get hurt. The guy said he was
in a gang war with rifles the night before. Thats when I got up to leave and he
stopped me. I didnt want to have sex with him and he knew it!"
"You threatened me. I hate you! Why did you do this to me?!"
I land on my bed. I look at my pillow and hit it. "You ruined my life!"
I punch it again. "You! You took advantage of me!"
I want to scream and rip the heart out of my pillow. I shake it. "You attacked
me! You scared me. You used me. I wish you were in front of me right now so I could punch
you! Shake you! Kick you!"
I pound my pillow over and over again. "NO! NO!"
The familiar mass of sharp dark pain fills my heart and chest. Tears stream down my
face. "You forced me."
I feel razors of pain pointing into my breasts. "Get out of me!"
I punch my soggy mangled pillow. I collapse onto it. A thick silence hangs in the
air. I gurgle, "My baby
I wish I could tell you a better story for your
beginning."
I open my eyes and see shards of the dark pain floating out of my body. "Is
this real?"
I barely breathe. The pain is leaving me. I touch my heart. "Its not
there."
"Its gone. Fifty, seventy-five, ninety percent of the pain is gone!"
I feel light and sleep deeply that night. The next morning I realize that mass of
pain was my suppressed anger. Finally expressing my anger after all these years released
me from the pain. I couldnt get angry because I thought it was my fault, because I
was ashamed of what happened and didnt want people to know. I was afraid to even say
the word
rape.
Unwed mothers are treated as though we are a menace to society. We are not supposed
to be angry. We are supposed to be repentant. We were told, "If you love your baby
you will give her away, because someone else can better raise your child than you."
Theyre married and they have money. These words are still being said to single and
poor mothers today. But, having money doesnt automatically make you a better parent.
I believe that everybodys soul weighs exactly the same, from the bag lady on
Sixth Street to the Queen of England. We may be on different paths and different stages of
growth, but our Souls weigh exactly the same. Whos to say a single mother cant
raise a child to be an astronaut, a scientist, an artist, a gold medal athlete, or
president?
So I say to birthmothers, "Lift yourself out of your particular situation for
a moment and take the high view. By affirming rather than denying the existence of your
child, you allow her/him access to their original birth certificate. Giving adoptees the
same rights as other citizens acknowledges they do have a whole birth family out
there and validates the existence of birthmothers and birthfathers, as the original
parents of their relinquished children."
And to birthmothers who were raped I say, "It would be good to get some help
in dealing with this trauma. And this would give you the perspective to separate your
experience of being raped from the child you bore and gave birth to. Supporting the rights
of your child, now a grown adult, to obtain her or his original birth certificate and
adoption information will de-stigmatize her origins, and integrate her as a full citizen
with the same rights and privileges as everybody else. Punishing a person their whole life
for the accident of their birth is inhuman."
I know many birthmothers who support open adoption records. But, if you dont
feel safe meeting your grown child, you can put your story and important medical
information in a letter in case they find you. Its your responsibility as the mother
to give your child information that no one else can provide. Everybody has the right to
know the story of her or his origins. It is part of our birthright as human beings.
I never doubted I would find my baby. I never doubted that I should find her. As
her mother, I felt it was my way of making things right. The logical equation for me was,
"I relinquished my daughter, therefore I should find her."
My search was stalled when the director of the Catholic Charities adoption agency
told me that my daughters family had moved out of state. With the help of the
Adoptees Liberty Movement Association I found her when she was 19 years old. She was
living in the same zip code as the agency. We met once, but she was very reserved. Her
adoptive parents didnt want to know me. A couple of months later, she broke off
contact. And I lost her again.
Every year, I send her a birthday card. Even if she doesnt want a
relationship, I feel that letting her know I love her and think about her, especially on
her birthday, is important. I do have hope for the future.
I remember when I was in high school and struggling to learn how to draw trees I
told my art teacher, Miss Sparks, that I felt like a failure. She said, "Youre
only a failure if you quit."
I am a rape survivor. I am a relinquishment survivor. I am a reunion-on-hold
survivor. Being a survivor is not quitting on yourself. Its time for birthmothers to
throw off the oppression of pretense and secrets. To step out of the shadows and tell
their stories. To stand up for the rights of their children and be counted. There are
millions of us. Together we can show the world Birthmothers never forget. We
nurtured our children in our bodies and gave birth to them. And we will hold them in our
hearts, forever.
If you would like to contribute an essay to this website, please email your essay
to Sheila Ganz at unlockingheart@hotmail.com
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