why do some celebrities or just people in general is big on adopting kids in america?

December 31, 2009 by Adoption Information and Laws  
Filed under More Adoption Answers

Can you answer Rorschach’s question about Adoption?:

a big example might be the brangelina couple….
i like angelina jolie adopt like kids of all races like black, chinese, hispanic, etc…. but has yet to give kids of their own? why?
i always wondered that question…..
like why do people even prefer adopting rather then making kids of their own willingly?

Adoption Tips

Adoption Content Added Today On AdoptionQA.com

December 31, 2009 by Adoption Information and Laws  
Filed under Adoption Updates

This has been a great week at AdoptionQA.com. As usual, I’ve added some helpful Adoption content for you below.

Now, on with today’s content…

Here are the Adoption resources that were added this week:

I would really appreciate your feedback on any of the above content. I would especially like to know what Adoption-related questions you would like answered. So, if you have any Adoption questions, please ask your question in the comments, and I’ll get right on it.

Thanks for looking!

Andrea Quagmire, Editor AdoptionQA.com

How would I start to get info on adopting from Russia? How much does it cost?

December 30, 2009 by Adoption Information and Laws  
Filed under More Adoption Answers

Can you answer JellyCat’s question about Adoption?:

I’m really wanting to do this, but I need to know a good place to start also what does it entail? Lastly how much is it?

Cost Of International Adoption

What does Jewish law say about adoption

December 29, 2009 by Adoption Information and Laws  
Filed under About Adoption

In Judaism, adoption is an important as well as an intricate issue. Although the Jewish Law recognizes adoption as a legitimate way to build a family, it also evokes conflicting messages, known as halakhah, in regards to adoption. Emphasizing greatly on bloodlines and ancestry, Judaism prioritizes tradition with respect to adoption.

A child that is legally adopted under the Jewish Law and is being brought up in a traditional Jewish household is not considered an adoptee. In regards to the Jewish religion, the adopted child is considered part of the family. However, for a Jewish family that wishes to adopt a non-Jewish child, there is always an additional filter that respects the Jewish tradition through generations of Jewish families.

Under the Jewish Law, an adopted child is duty-bound in the laws of death and mourning in the event of a loss of a close relative, namely mother, father, sister, brother, spouse, son or daughter. Considered as an immediate family, the adopted child recites the traditional mourner’s prayer (Kaddish) for 12 months and is obligated in the laws of mourning.

Jewish adoptive parents should carefully consider how they communicate respect for the Jewish religion to the adopted child without diminishing the importance of the birth parents’ religion. Particularly, when it comes to open adoptions and the birth family is not Jewish, the child is likely to raise questions about the Jewish religion, the birth parents’ religion, the differences between the two, why they exist, which is better etc. In these cases, both adoptive and placing parents should communicate in a respectful way and should follow a common way on explaining all these questions to the child without prejudices and conflict.

In many cases, there are conflicts between the different factions of Judaism, namely Orthodox, Reform, Reconstructionist and Conservative. Under the Jewish Law, an adopted child whose birth mother is not Jewish should be officially converted to Judaism. However, if the birth father is Jewish, Reform and Reconstructionist Jews do not proceed to conversion, while Orthodox Jews recognize conversions performed solely by Orthodox Rabbis.

All these complexities create additional challenges in regards to adoption under the Jewish Law. For children who are not born Jewish and have different race and culture in their genes, it is a difficult challenge to connect with a Jewish family, particularly when outsiders question this connection. There are cases that Chinese children are adopted by Jewish families and because their characteristics are so unique, they have been told that they are not Jewish. The same has happened with blond children with blue eyes, who do not look like typical Jews and again their identity has been questioned by third parties at school or even at the synagogue.

For all adopted children is difficult to create a solid identity. Jewish adoptive families should help children who are not born Jewish to develop a strong Jewish identity. On the other hand, they should respect the challenges that evoke from the birth family’s religion. There are cases that Jewish children have celebrated Christmas with their birth parents because the Jewish adoptive parents have accepted that their child should make his or her own choices. In any event, communication is the key.



Thanks to Christina Pomoni for contributing this article to our Adoption blog:

I work as a financial and investment advisor but my passion is writing, music and photography. Writing mostly about finance, business and music, being an amateur photographer and a professional dj, I am inspired from life.

Being a strong advocate of simplicity in life, I love my family, my partner and all the people that have stood by me with or without knowing. And I hope that someday, human nature will cease to be greedy and demanding realizing that the more we have the more we want and the more we satisfy our needs the more needs we create. And this is so needless after all.



Have you claimed your Genesis site?

Some Adoption Ideas on AdoptionQA.com…

December 29, 2009 by Adoption Information and Laws  
Filed under Adoption Updates

Due to recent activity from readers with questions about Adoption, I recently posted new helpful tips and resources below. Hope it gives you some ideas.

Use the convenient URL’s below to take a peek at what I’ve added for you today…

Recently Added Adoption Resources:

I hope you found this content useful. I’ve got some great things planned in the coming days, including answering subscribers’ Adoption-related questions. And, if you have a specific question you would like to ask about Adoption, please post it in the comments. I’ll do my best to either answer it myself, or find an answer for you.

Andrea Quagmire, Editor

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