Yes/No Situation.
It's something an individual will want to know, to complete them. Without knowing, there will be an empty hole - a missing piece to the puzzle of you.
On the other hand, your birth parents didnt want you, they left you. Does that not hurt? Why would you want to find them and interfere with your happy life?
This really is an opinionated matter; it all maters how the child feels, the parents feel, and how you feel.
Honestly, that decision is up to the adoptive parents until the child is 18. When that child turns 18, the choice is no longer up to the parents. The choice is the child's.
I would say legally, they could find out from you or government, but I don't think you are required to tell an adopted child who their true parents are...
Adopted children often would like to meet their birth parents, but sometimes a happy ending does not occur.
yes.
They feel like they need to find them in order to feel like they belong again.
I believe that you have to be 18 to do that
Money for what? You inherit your adoptive parents not your birth parents.
You most cetainly are Jewish, from the minute you were adopted.
if they terminated their rights, they're probably out of luck
well i certainly think so if i found out i was adopted and my legal guardians were not my birth parents i would wanna ask where my birth parents are and why they put me up for adoption or what happend so they had to p.s i dont even think my dad really is my birth father i really think my birth father is my uncle i have so many attributes as him my mother always says i look like him
Kristin Chenoweth was adopted, and her birth parents are unknown.
Kristin Chenoweth was adopted, and her birth parents are unknown.
No, since they are not your biological parents.
If you were adopted, your birth certificate was modified so that your adoptive parents are listed as your parents. If you are wondering how to learn the identity of your birth parents, start with contacting the agency through which you were adopted.