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15 - Time Run Out

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 October 2023

Mary Cardaras
Affiliation:
California State University, East Bay
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Summary

It was another woman who gave me life. Though physically absent, her constant presence came by way of persistent reminders that I was of someone else, from someplace else, an import, brought to the United States to a new, another Greek family.

I was labeled an orphan. An orphan. That was me all my life. But I wasn’t an orphan at all. I had a mother, who knew me, touched me, held me. And I had a father, too, who might be out there somewhere. But I wasn’t an orphan. I was left. Abandoned. And then signed away to other people. Wasn’t I lucky? She loved me so much that she chose for me a better life.

She didn’t want to leave me. She had to leave me. Is that even true?

She.

Whoever she was, she was with me, if only for a few precious, painful days, weeks, months. She was with me. She still is.

With me.

My story achieved folk legend status in Gary, Indiana, where I grew up. Not because it was so important, or that I was so important, but because it had been told and repeated over and over again by someone, anyone, who knew the story or was in our lives when I arrived from Greece. I was “special” because I was adopted and I was the adopted child throughout my life. “A souvenir baby,” one local newspaper article said about me.

I was left in an orphanage in Athens. Dozens and dozens of babies. Overcrowded. Dirty. Two, sometimes three to a crib, they said. I was the only one awake when a Greek couple had come looking for a baby for their American-born daughter and son-in-law, who could not afford the trip themselves.

They were looking for a baby girl. Up and down the cramped aisles of cribs with steel bars, they gingerly stepped, staring at tiny sleeping faces. But every time they passed where I could catch of glimpse of them, I raised myself up on my two, small, stiffened arms and followed them as if to say “what about me?”

Type
Chapter
Information
Voices of the Lost Children of Greece
Oral Histories of Post-War International Adoption
, pp. 163 - 178
Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2023

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