Winnipeg adoptee one step closer to meeting her birth mother
New Manitoba legislation helping adoptees reunite with blood-relatives
A woman born in Winnipeg and put up for adoption as a child is one step closer to meeting her biological mom.
Last month, the Manitoba government pushed through new legislation that makes it easier for children put up for adoption to find out the identities of their birth parents.
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Making adoption records publicly available has helped lead Marla Gordon from Saskatoon, where she grew up, back to Manitoba, where she was born, to search for answers about her blood-relatives.
It didn't take long before Gordon discovered the name of her birth mother and that she once lived in a home on Coventry Road in Charleswood.
And last week, with a simple call to 411, Gordon came away with a phone number that turned out to belong to her biological aunt. She told Gordon her birth mother would give her a call.
"I was pretty shocked. It hasn't sunk in yet," said Gordon. "I just couldn't believe it after this much time."
Gordon said her mom was 17 when she became pregnant and wasn't in a position to raise her.
"I understand why she gave me up, I have no grudge against her or anything," said Gordon. "I think it's a good thing; if you can't take care of a child, it's probably the most unselfish thing to give a baby a better life."
Over the years in Saskatoon, where Gordon still resides, she felt out of place and often wondered who her biological family was.
"I'm so different from my siblings; there was nobody like me," she said.
It was that sense of curiosity, paired with the new legislation, that motivated Gordon's search for answers.
Royden Kading with LINKS Post Legal Adoption said he sympathizes with people like Gordon. He, too, was put up for adoption as a child.
"An adoptee sort of lives a lie all their life," said Kading. "To find out what your background is means a lot to people."