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  2. Holt International Children's Services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holt_International_Children...

    Learning that it would be possible only if both houses of Congress passed a law allowing it, Bertha Holt decided to push for such a law. [7] Two months later, the "Holt Bill" was passed, and in October 1955, Harry Holt and eight children arrived at Portland International Airport. The resulting publicity stirred interest among many families in ...

  3. International adoption of South Korean children - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_adoption_of...

    Their work resulted in the founding of Holt International Children's Services. The first Korean babies sent to Europe went to Sweden via the Social Welfare Society in the mid-1960s. By the end of that decade, the Holt International Children's Services began sending Korean orphans to Norway, Denmark, Belgium, the Netherlands, France, Switzerland ...

  4. Brothers Home - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brothers_Home

    The AP further revealed that six U.S. adoption agencies—Holt International, Children's Home Society of Minnesota, Dillon International, Children's Home Society of California, Catholic Social Services, and Spence-Chapin—had received adoptees from Brothers. [23] The European countries included Belgium, Germany, Netherlands, Norway, and Denmark.

  5. Birth mothers in South Korea (international adoption) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birth_mothers_in_South...

    The decades-long phenomenon of international adoption in South Korea began after the Korean War. In the years since the war, South Korea has become the largest and longest provider of children placed for international adoption, with 165,944 recorded Korean adoptees living in 14 countries, primarily in North America and Western Europe, as of ...

  6. Bertha Holt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertha_Holt

    In 1956, the Holts founded the Holt International Children's Services. [3] There was no system in place at the time for international adoptions. Grandma Holt, as she was known, continued to be active in the agency until the day she died. [2] While in South Korea in 1964, Harry Holt had a heart attack and died.

  7. Seoul National University Korean Language Education Center

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seoul_National_University...

    The Seoul National University Korean Language Education ... Seoul, the program is one of the three Korean language programs approved by the Blakemore Foundation ...

  8. Talk : International adoption of South Korean children

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:International...

    Also, large scale international adoption started in S-Korea, meaning the situation there is important in order to understand international adoption in general (and act as a warning of how a well-meaning program can turn into a horror story of a wealthy country using foreign adoption to solve its own domestic problems, see e.g. research done by ...

  9. Deportation of Korean adoptees from the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deportation_of_Korean...

    Phillip Clay (Kim Sang-pil) was found abandoned in Seoul in 1981 and legally adopted into an American family in Philadelphia.. After a struggle with drug addiction and a run in with the law, Clay was deported back to Korea in 2012, despite no knowledge of the Korean language or customs, nor without a single contact in the country.