There are few questions that I had after reading the article. 1. The orphanages that find an easy way out by getting a child adopted, rather than work to get the child re-united with the parents. 2. The young man was missing his roots, so he worked hard to find where he came from. And once he found where he came from, met the people where he belonged, the quest was over. He returned back to his adopted place. 3. I think of both the parents, the adopted ones and the real ones. Both would be at loss. The young man needs to take a decision. The best would be to return to his biological parents. Return to his roots, that his what instinct wants him to. That is why he worked so hard in the first place to look for them. 4. But India is no Australia. Life in Australia is more comfortable. Returning to India is like a start of life once again.
On Apr 14, 2012 S Gardia wrote:
There are few questions that I had after reading the article.
1. The orphanages that find an easy way out by getting a child adopted, rather than work to get the child re-united with the parents.
2. The young man was missing his roots, so he worked hard to find where he came from. And once he found where he came from, met the people where he belonged, the quest was over. He returned back to his adopted place.
3. I think of both the parents, the adopted ones and the real ones. Both would be at loss. The young man needs to take a decision. The best would be to return to his biological parents. Return to his roots, that his what instinct wants him to. That is why he worked so hard in the first place to look for them.
4. But India is no Australia. Life in Australia is more comfortable. Returning to India is like a start of life once again.
More open wounds I would summarize.