Take My Children
A Love Story
by
Book Details
About the Book
Advance Praise for Take My Children Take My Children is a story of love that bridges two continents. It is a story of human compassion. It is a story of the courage of parents, who, out of love, ask others to adopt their children … and of the parents who say they’ll take them. It is also the story of a battle to eradicate age-old prejudices, fears and superstitions—a battle that one woman carried through the halls of Congress to move a nation to open its arms to eight children no other country wanted. These innocent, healthy children hadn’t lived long enough to become anyone’s political enemies. The enemy was ignorance, the children its victims. It all began with a visit from Father Alexander Lee, a priest who served as administrator of a leprosy colony at St. Lazarus Village in Korea. He carried a plea from five of his patients: “Take our children and help them to have a better life.” This is a story of love, compassion, determination, and courage. It is a book that is real; because that’s the way it happened. —Marvin Scott, Senior Correspondent, WPIX-TV News, New York
About the Author
Bernice Gottlieb was a pioneer of transracial adoption in the United States and an advocate for single and gay parent adoptive households. In 1998, she received the Ellis Island Medal of Honor for her work with children who are denied their basic civil liberties and suffer from the same pervasive, unwarranted stigma associated with this terribly misunderstood disease.