Adoption <i>Agrafa</i>, Parts “Unwritten” About Cold War Adoptions from Greece: Unambiguous Losses

This essay examines relationships between adoptees and the (extended) adoptive family, focusing on the inheritance rights of adopted persons as entry points into levels and cycles of their belonging and un-belonging. The essay contextualizes a case report (or summary reports) on the kind of estrange...

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Main Author: Gonda A. H. Van Steen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-03-01
Series:Genealogy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/9/1/25
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author Gonda A. H. Van Steen
author_facet Gonda A. H. Van Steen
author_sort Gonda A. H. Van Steen
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description This essay examines relationships between adoptees and the (extended) adoptive family, focusing on the inheritance rights of adopted persons as entry points into levels and cycles of their belonging and un-belonging. The essay contextualizes a case report (or summary reports) on the kind of estrangement in the adoptee world that is fueled by inheritance disputes. It delves into postadoption perceptions and thus into the “unwritten” truths about adoption and its possible fallout. It draws from archival sources, semi-structured interviews (life-story interviewing), and life writing by adoptees, and also from a sequence of real-life exchanges dating back to 2018. All these sources focus on the contested inheritance of children, now older adults, who were adopted from Greece in the 1950s–60s and who became (or should have become) subsequent heirs to the estates of their adoptive parents and/or relatives. The Greek out-of-country adoptions of the postwar and early Cold War era involved more than 4000 children, most of whom were sent to the United States. The various testimonies and sections reflect critically on the continuing trend to infantilize the adopted persons, forever the adopted children, to push their origins back into the past and into geographical distance, to untie the family connections they have forged over the course of half a century. The examples take the reader from the adoptive family’s pre-adoption attempts at disowning the child through the postadoption stage of the end of an adopted lifetime, including cases of the extended adoptive family’s attempts at “de-adopting” the adopted person. This essay includes various sources of life-cycle documentation, among them an extensive case study and online obituaries. It adheres to truth and authenticity by incorporating fairly long original quotations, which, in the case study of the second half especially, assist the reader in comprehending much historical information in a question-and-answer format. This bolder structure offers the advantage of taking the reader step by step through the transactions of a prominent Greek adoption scheme (Rebecca and Maurice Issachar) and also through the various layers of the postadoption mindset and minefield. The material presented here is intended to raise awareness that change can and must still benefit the Greek adoptees today, whose lives may have been permeated by conditionality and nonlinearity. I conclude that, in the cases discussed here, the child’s orphanhood may well be a perpetual state, with the adoptee being orphaned of individuality and of a protective family on more than just one occasion.
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spelling doaj-art-17f674dc06414a7e95df30a7befab7082025-08-20T03:43:03ZengMDPI AGGenealogy2313-57782025-03-01912510.3390/genealogy9010025Adoption <i>Agrafa</i>, Parts “Unwritten” About Cold War Adoptions from Greece: Unambiguous LossesGonda A. H. Van Steen0Centre for Hellenic Studies, Department of Classics, King’s College London, Strand, London WC2R 2LS, UKThis essay examines relationships between adoptees and the (extended) adoptive family, focusing on the inheritance rights of adopted persons as entry points into levels and cycles of their belonging and un-belonging. The essay contextualizes a case report (or summary reports) on the kind of estrangement in the adoptee world that is fueled by inheritance disputes. It delves into postadoption perceptions and thus into the “unwritten” truths about adoption and its possible fallout. It draws from archival sources, semi-structured interviews (life-story interviewing), and life writing by adoptees, and also from a sequence of real-life exchanges dating back to 2018. All these sources focus on the contested inheritance of children, now older adults, who were adopted from Greece in the 1950s–60s and who became (or should have become) subsequent heirs to the estates of their adoptive parents and/or relatives. The Greek out-of-country adoptions of the postwar and early Cold War era involved more than 4000 children, most of whom were sent to the United States. The various testimonies and sections reflect critically on the continuing trend to infantilize the adopted persons, forever the adopted children, to push their origins back into the past and into geographical distance, to untie the family connections they have forged over the course of half a century. The examples take the reader from the adoptive family’s pre-adoption attempts at disowning the child through the postadoption stage of the end of an adopted lifetime, including cases of the extended adoptive family’s attempts at “de-adopting” the adopted person. This essay includes various sources of life-cycle documentation, among them an extensive case study and online obituaries. It adheres to truth and authenticity by incorporating fairly long original quotations, which, in the case study of the second half especially, assist the reader in comprehending much historical information in a question-and-answer format. This bolder structure offers the advantage of taking the reader step by step through the transactions of a prominent Greek adoption scheme (Rebecca and Maurice Issachar) and also through the various layers of the postadoption mindset and minefield. The material presented here is intended to raise awareness that change can and must still benefit the Greek adoptees today, whose lives may have been permeated by conditionality and nonlinearity. I conclude that, in the cases discussed here, the child’s orphanhood may well be a perpetual state, with the adoptee being orphaned of individuality and of a protective family on more than just one occasion.https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/9/1/25intercountry adoptionpostwar Greeceinheritance disputesadoptee obituariesestrangement
spellingShingle Gonda A. H. Van Steen
Adoption <i>Agrafa</i>, Parts “Unwritten” About Cold War Adoptions from Greece: Unambiguous Losses
Genealogy
intercountry adoption
postwar Greece
inheritance disputes
adoptee obituaries
estrangement
title Adoption <i>Agrafa</i>, Parts “Unwritten” About Cold War Adoptions from Greece: Unambiguous Losses
title_full Adoption <i>Agrafa</i>, Parts “Unwritten” About Cold War Adoptions from Greece: Unambiguous Losses
title_fullStr Adoption <i>Agrafa</i>, Parts “Unwritten” About Cold War Adoptions from Greece: Unambiguous Losses
title_full_unstemmed Adoption <i>Agrafa</i>, Parts “Unwritten” About Cold War Adoptions from Greece: Unambiguous Losses
title_short Adoption <i>Agrafa</i>, Parts “Unwritten” About Cold War Adoptions from Greece: Unambiguous Losses
title_sort adoption i agrafa i parts unwritten about cold war adoptions from greece unambiguous losses
topic intercountry adoption
postwar Greece
inheritance disputes
adoptee obituaries
estrangement
url https://www.mdpi.com/2313-5778/9/1/25
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