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Adoption News - 16 - Hello, I'm Your
Sister, Our Father Is Donor 150
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Hello, I'm Your Sister. Our Father Is Donor 150.
By Amy Harmon
Published: November 20, 2005
Photo by Jim Wilson
The New York Times
Hello, I'm Your Sister. Our Father Is Donor 150. Jim
Wilson/The New York TimesMatthys Schouten, 2, and the twins
Julia and Eliza Weix, 23 months, have the same sperm donor
father
By AMY HARMON Published: November 20, 2005 Like most
anonymous sperm donors, Donor 150 of the California Cryobank
will probably never meet any of the offspring he fathered
through sperm bank donations. There are at least four, according
to the bank's records, and perhaps many more, since the dozens
of women who have bought Donor 150's sperm are not required to
report when they have a baby.
Photo
by: Tina Gibson
Justin Senk, 15, right, was the most recent half-sibling to
surface in a group that now numbers five.
But two of his genetic daughters, born to different mothers
and living in different states, have been e-mailing and talking
on the phone regularly since learning of each other's existence
last summer. They plan to meet over Thanksgiving.
The girls, Danielle Pagano, 16, and JoEllen Marsh, 15,
connected through the Donor Sibling Registry, a Web site that is
helping to open a new chapter in the oldest form of assisted
reproductive technology. The three-year-old site allows parents
and offspring to enter their contact information and search for
others by sperm bank and donor number.
"The first time we were on the phone, it was awkward,"
Danielle said. "I was like, 'We'll get over it,' and she said,
'Yeah, we're sisters.' It was so weird to hear her say that. It
was cool."
For children who often feel severed from half of their
biological identity, finding a sibling - or in some cases, a
dozen - can feel like coming home. It can also make them even
more curious about the anonymous father whose genes they carry.
The registry especially welcomes donors who want to shed their
anonymity, but the vast majority of the site's 1,001 matches are
between half-siblings.
The popularity of the Donor Sibling Registry, many of its
registrants say, speaks to the sustained power of biological
ties at a time when it is becoming almost routine for women to
bear children who do not share a partner's DNA, or even their
own.
"I hate when people that use D.I. say that biology doesn't
matter (cough, my mom, cough)," Danielle wrote in an e-mail
message, using the shorthand for donor insemination. "Because if
it really didn't matter to them, then why would they use D.I. at
all? They could just adopt or something and help out kids in
need."
The half-sibling hunt is driven in part by the growing number
of donor-conceived children who know the truth about their
origins. As more single women and lesbian couples use sperm
donors to conceive, children's questions about their fathers'
whereabouts often prompt an explanation at an early age, even if
all the information about the father that is known is his code
number used by the bank for identification purposes and the
fragments of personal information provided in his donor profile.
Donor-conceived siblings, who sometimes describe themselves
as "lopsided" or "half-adopted," can provide clues to make each
other feel more whole, even if only in the form of physical
details.
Liz Herzog, 12, and Callie Frasier-Walker, 10, for instance,
carry the same dimple near their right eye.
"She looks up to me," said Liz, of Chicago, who was an only
child before learning of Callie and six other half-siblings but
seemed to have had no trouble stepping into her older-sister
role. Finding her brothers and sisters, Liz said, "was the best
thing in the world," even if Callie does copy her sometimes,
like when Liz got her hair dyed red and Callie did the same. "I
wanted blue," Callie said. "But they didn't have blue."
The two girls, who send instant messages to each other
frequently, will be spending Thanksgiving with their mothers at
Callie's house in Chester Springs, Pa. They had a mini-family
reunion with some of their other siblings last April, although
as Liz's mother, Diana Herzog, notes, "It wasn't really a
reunion because no one had ever met before."
Many mothers seek out each other on the registry, eager to
create a patchwork family for themselves and their children. One
group of seven say they too feel bonded by the half-blood
relations of their children, and perhaps by the vaguely
biological urge that led them all to choose Fairfax Cryobank's
Donor 401.
Carla Schouten sent a leftover vial of sperm to another
mother who wanted to have a second child and found there was no
401 sperm left to buy. (Banks typically pay men $50 to $100 per
sample, and customers pay about $150 to $600 per vial, plus
shipping.) In July, Ms. Schouten and her 2-year-old son, Matthys,
went camping in Northern California with Louisa Weix, and her
Donor 401 twins, Eliza and Julia, who turn 2 next week.
While many donor-conceived children prefer to call their
genetic father "donor," to differentiate the biological function
of fatherhood from the social one, they often feel no need to
distance themselves, linguistically or emotionally, from their
siblings.
Several who have met describe a sense of familiarity that
seems largely irrational, given the absence of a father,
unrelated mothers and often divergent interests.
"All I can say is, they feel like siblings," said Barry
Stevens, 53, a filmmaker who has discovered several
half-siblings through research and DNA testing since the release
of his 2001 documentary, "Offspring," depicting his search for
his donor.
If yearning for a sibling is in part a desire to feel less
alone, some donor-conceived children may ultimately find
themselves yearning for a bit more solitude.
Deb Bash, the mother of a 7-year-old, exchanges e-mail
messages often with eight other mothers who have a total of 12
children from the same donor, and she has created a baby book
for her son with all their pictures. The siblings, Ms. Bash
said, have given her son a way to feel connected to the
otherwise abstract concept of a genetic father.
"It's not a phantom person out there anymore," Ms. Bash said.
The children already have some uncanny resemblances, she
said. "That nurture vs. nature," Ms. Bash added. "Wow, there's
just something to that nature."
For Danielle, of Seaford, N.Y., contact with her half-sibling
JoEllen has helped salve her anger at what she describes as
"having been lied to all my life," until three years ago when
her parents told her the truth about her conception. It has also
eased her frustration of knowing only the scant information
about her biological father contained in the sperm bank profile
- he is 6 feet tall, 163 pounds with blond hair and blue eyes.
He was married, at least at the time of his donation, and has
two children with his wife. He likes yoga, animals and acting.
For JoEllen, whose two mothers told her early on about her
biological background, it helps just to know that Danielle, too,
checks male strangers against the list of Donor 150's physical
traits that she has committed to memory.
"It'll always run through my mind whether he meets the
criteria to be my dad or not," said JoEllen, of Russell, Pa.
"She said the same thing happens with her."
The girls are considering a trip to Wilmington, Del., which
Donor 150 listed as his birthplace.
Even as the Internet makes it easier for donor-conceived
children to find one another, some are calling for an end to the
system of anonymity under which they were born. Sperm banks,
they say, should be required to accept only donors who agree
that their children can contact them when they turn 18, as is
now mandated in some European countries.
That is partly for reasons of accountability. Sperm bank
officials estimate the number of children born to donors at
about 30,000 a year, but because the industry is largely
unregulated, no one really knows. And as half-siblings find one
another, it is becoming clear that the banks do not know how
many children are born to each donor, and where they are.
Popular donors may have several dozen children, or more, and
critics say there is a risk of unwitting incest between
half-siblings. Moreover, they argue, no one should be able to
decide for children before they are born that they can never
learn their father's identity. Typically, women can learn about
a donor's medical history, ethnic background, education, hobbies
and a wide range of physical characteristics.
More recently sperm banks have begun to charge more for the
sperm from donors who agree to be contacted by their offspring
when they turn 18. But they say far fewer men would choose to
donate if they were required to release their identity.
Like Wendy Kramer and her donor-conceived son, Ryan, 15, who
founded
www.donorsiblingregistry.com, many
of the site's 5,000 registrants hope that the donor himself will
get in touch. But others are happy to settle for contacting
their half-siblings, who actually want to be found. As they do,
they are building a new definition of family that both rests on
biology and transcends it.
"It's so weird to know that you're going to meet someone that
you're going to know for the rest of your life," Justin Senk,
15, told his half-sister Rebecca Baldwin, 17, when they spoke on
the phone last summer before meeting for the first time.
Justin, 15, of Denver, was the most recent half-sibling to
surface in a group that now numbers five. After his newfound
family attended his recent choir concert, Justin's mother, Susy
Senk, overheard him introducing them to his friends with a
self-styled sing-song, " 'This is my sister from another mother,
and this is my brother from another mother, this is my other
sister from another mother' and so on."
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