FOR SARA MELGAREJO, the wait at Santiago airport was agonising. The 65-year-old had travelled about 30km north from San Bernardo, a working-class suburb of the Chilean capital, for the reunion. She walked the length of the building trying to calm her nerves, holding her breath for the arrival of the two children she had spent the last 40 years believing were dead. "My heart was racing and my body was trembling," she says, "but I felt pure joy."
Siblings Sean Ours, 40, and Emily Reid, 39, walked into arrivals together, having arrived on a flight from the US. Even though they had never met Sara in person, there was no question that she was their biological mother - they share the same eyes, the same infectious smile.
"When I saw her there waiting for us, all pretty in pink, I started crying. I just gave her the biggest hug because it was the first time that we were able to feel her, to tell her that we loved her," Emily says.
"To be able to just hold her, and for all of us to hold each other, was so surreal. It was a long time coming," Sean says.
Their story is just one of tens of thousands relating to Chilean families torn apart by illegal adoption. Parents were typically told that their babies were lost or dead. In reality, they had been stolen and sold, facilitated by a network of social workers, faith officials and health and legal professionals across the country. Thousands of dollars were paid by American and European families for newborns they believed had been given up willingly. Mothers in Chile have recounted how hospital staff claimed their babies had died at birth and refused requests to see their bodies. Others were denied access to their babies, who were being looked after in children's homes or public institutions, while some were coerced into giving them up for adoption.
This story is from the May 03, 2024 edition of The Guardian Weekly.
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This story is from the May 03, 2024 edition of The Guardian Weekly.
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