Support Ethica – Fundraising Campaign

Many people don’t realize that Ethica is primarily a volunteer effort. Most of the people working for Ethica do not get paid and in fact pay for much of Ethica’s expenses out of their own pockets. Ethica is in a unique position of standing in the middle – representing birth families, children and adoptive families. Due to that position, they are very careful about where their funding comes from. It is for that reason that VVAI is more than willing to promote Ethica’s fundraising campaign. Will you consider making a donation today?

On this Mother’s Day, the adoption community will celebrate and honor first and adoptive mothers for the love and care they’ve provided to their children. These mothers might be blocks or oceans apart, but connected through a desire to ensure their children’s well-being and futures. We at Ethica, ask that you help contribute to their legacies by supporting ethical adoptions, practices, and policies.

Our work reminds us that motherhood through adoption has its challenges and sometimes, heartbreak. Unfortunately, adoptions can be tainted by questionable practices and the victimization of vulnerable members of the adoption triad. When problems arise, families and their advocates approach Ethica for guidance and assistance. Their stories speak for themselves:

– An American mother calls, seeking help to recover her child, whose “adoption” she never consented to.

– An anthropologist calls seeking help for Vietnamese women who are searching for their children. They had been given as little as $31 USD as “poverty alleviation support” by Vietnamese officials who promised that their children will be returned to them in several years, and that until then the orphanage will provide for them. The children have been internationally adopted without their consent.

– A family is stranded in Guatemala, abandoned by their adoption agency in the midst of new policy changes that essentially close adoptions while the country centralizes its process.

– A young woman adopted from Eastern Europe, and then left in the U.S. foster care system, wonders if she is a citizen since she has no immigration paperwork and needs to apply for federal assistance.

– Adopted children in an African orphanage tell their prospective adoptive parents about being sexually abused. As a result they are denied food, and the orphanage threatens to stop their adoptions.

– An adoption agency uses a bait-and-switch tactic, offering children to prospective adoptive parents despite not having the appropriate paperwork or histories, then switching the “referral” in-country.

– A Christian missionary group questions if their donations are being used to care for orphans as the poor conditions persist.

– Families report giving “donations” of $5-7,000 to Vietnamese orphanage directors in order to complete their adoptions. And yet two months ago, Ethica was asked to provide blankets and formula for babies dying from unusually cold weather in Vietnamese orphanages participating in international adoptions.

Ethica receives 50-80 inquiries a week from adoption triad members in crisis. Over the past 6 years, we have assisted over 8,000 children and families, often advocating for them with the U.S. Department of State, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, and state attorney generals. currently we are actively assisting over 200 children and families in the U.S., Guatemala, Vietnam, Liberia, Haiti, and Nepal.

In the United States, in addition to answering many questions and supporting individuals through difficult situations, we have conducted a review of state adoption laws. We have testified in person and in writing on adopted people’s rights to their birth records. We have worked on cases involving the informed consent of first parents.

Our work involves human rights issues such as the trafficking of children into adoption. We have carried out several successful humanitarian aid projects to Liberia and Vietnam.

It is essential that Ethica continue to assist families in crisis and expand our advocacy initiatives. Ethica is the only truly independent adoption advocacy organization doing this vital work. Ethica represents all members of the adoption triad, and has no competing financial interest. To maintain our independence, we do not accept monetary support from anyone who places children for adoption.

Ethica’s goal is to raise $20,000 in 15 days so that they can meet the increasing demand for their services. Consider:

A $100 donation allows Ethica to administer humanitarian efforts for 1 month.
A $250 donation allows Ethica to train a state adoption regulator on adoption fraud and the need for adoption consumer protection laws.
A $500 donation can keep the Ethica phone lines open for 1 year.
A $1,000 donation can cover Ethica’s office rent for 4 months.

If we all give a little, it will amount to a lot. Please, take a moment now and make a donation, for Ethica, and for all those who will benefit from their important work.

Ethics-Tools & Resources

Tags:

3 Responses

  1. You are right about that… sorry, I should have phrased that better. I meant to say that they try to look at these issues from all sides, including the agencies’ viewpoint… but not that they represent them. I’ll edit my post to try to make that more clear.

    Thanks for pointing out my error! 🙂

  2. We do work cooperatively with some agencies and have provided assistance in securing emergency medical visas, advocate for clarifications on new immigration procedures, and clarified Hague regulations. (Our founder and Board President assisted in writing the implementation manual for countries ratifying the Adoption Convention.) Ethica is also a member of JCICS. This allows us to press for agency accountability and responsiveness. Though requests for assistance are primarily from prospective adoptive parents and first families in crisis, we do receive requests from agencies seeking to improve the process and make ethics a priority.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *