Whether you have already adopted a child or you are just considering adoption, there is a lot to consider when it comes to transracial adoption. Families who have adopted transracially experience unique blessings, as well as unique challenges. Those who are living this journey have the best insight to what has been helpful to them, so here are some tips that we compiled from multiracial adoptive families who adopted through New Life Adoptions.
- Live in a diverse area.
- “We moved from Apple Valley to Richfield because it’s more diverse.”
- “This is a big one… we moved for this reason. Kids need to see people who look like themselves every day.”
- Attend a multiracial adoption group. This connects your family with others who also experience the journey of both adoption and a multiracial family.
- Attend a church where there are other families that look like your family.
- “Our church has many families that are multiracial, including the pastor’s.”
- Have friends, not just acquaintances, who are the same ethnicity as your child.
- Make sure your children see people of their ethnicity in leadership roles.
- “Choose doctors who reflect your child(ren)’s heritage. We went to a black allergist and I have a black gynecologist.”
- Go places where you are the minority as a white parent.
- “We occasionally attend our daughter’s birth grandmother’s church. My husband and I are the only white people in the church. This helps remind us how our kids can feel if we are in an all-white environment.”
- Watch movies and TV shows that have positive images of people of color.
- “Now that our kids are older (12 & 10) we have started watching TV shows that have positive images of black people on family night. We are currently watching Family Matters and recently watched the Gabby Douglass documentary.”
- “We’ve watched some pretty gruesome movies, but our children have a very good understanding of slavery, how slaves became slaves, and what happened to them when they were slaves.”
- Get to know the police officers in your community.
- “The other day I got pulled over for turning right on red – oops! When I rolled down my window for the officer, my daughter exclaimed ‘Oh I know you! You brought the police dog to national night out!’ And yes, I think it helped me not get a ticket.”
- Create ways for your neighbors to get to know your children so they don’t just see their skin color.
- “We take cookies to our neighbors at Christmas, attend national night out, and my son regularly visits with the neighbors as he is riding his bike. I’ve heard several compliments about how friendly my kids are.”
- Read about racial issues and concerns and dialogue with people of color so that you can begin to understand what your child will have to navigate as they get older.
- Read transracial adoptees’ points of view on transracial adoption.
- “I wish we had read more, and knew more before we adopted. I think we thought it wouldn’t be a big deal, we would love any child the same. Which is true, we adore our daughter, but we will never know what it’s like to be Black and there isn’t a way to understand how she feels.”
- Read books by authors who are of a different race than you. This will give you a different perspective of how people view the world through the characters.
- Don’t be “colorblind.”
- “Don’t act like there is no difference between you and your child’s skin color/physical features.”
- “This does a disservice to kids of color. Our daughter noticed she looked different from us before she was 3, and she talked about it. Be prepared for some emotions around this.”
- Ask for and accept advice, especially when it comes to hair and skin.
- “Skin and hair care of other ethnicities can be quite different from yours. Do some reading and research, and don’t be afraid to ask questions.”
- “I will always be blessed by the neighbor who dropped off a book on how to do black hair styles for my daughter and the neighbor who told me how to cut my son’s hair.”
- If you adopt one child who does not share your ethnicity, seriously consider adopting again to give them a sibling of a similar race.
There are many great resources available for both children and parents on transracial adoption, race, and other cultures. Here is a list of just some of the resources available.
Children’s Stories About Transracial Adoption
- We Wanted You by Liz Rosenberg and Peter Catalonotto
- We Adopted You Benjamin Koo by Linda Walvoord Girard
- A Blessing From Above by Patti Henderson
- A Mother for Choco by Keiko Kasza
- I’m Adopted! by Shelley Rotner and Sheila M. Kelly
- Is That Your Sister? A True Story of Adoption by Catherine and Sherry Bunin
Children’s Stories About Race and Culture
- The Colors of Us by Karen Katz
- Let’s Talk About Race by Julius Lester
- Hush! A Thai Lullaby by Minfong Ho and Holly Meade
- Baseball Saved Us by Ken Mochizuki
- Grandfather’s Story Cloth by Linda Gardner and Sarah Langford
- Cora Cooks Pancit by Dorina K. Lazo Gilmore
- Meet Kai-Lan adapted by Mickie Matheis
- The Legend of the Bluebonnet by Tomie dePaola
- Papa and Me by Arthur Dorros
- Black is Brown is Tan by Arnold Adoff
- Read and Rise by Sandra Pinkney
- Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freedom by Carole Boston Weatherford
- I’m Like You Your’e Like Me by Cindy Gainer
- Whoever You Are by Mem Fox
- Global Baby Girls by The Global Fund for Children
- Global Baby Boys by The Global Fund for Children
- It’s Okay to be Different by Todd Parr
- Find more children’s books on this list from Creating A Family
Books About Transracial Parenting
- Come Rain or Come Shine: A White Parent’s Guide to Adopting and Parenting Black Children by Rachel Garlinghouse
- Inside Transracial Adoption: Strength-based, Culture-Sensitizing Parenting Strategies for Inter-Country or Domestic Adoptive Families That Don’t “Match” Second Edition by Beth Hall and Gail Steinberg
- The Interracial Adoption Option: Creating a Family Across Race by Marlene Fine and Fern Johnson
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