An Honourable Mention at the Columbus International Film + Video Festival

Receiving an honour at a festival is always a nice way to start off the New Year.  So we’re delighted to announce that “The Invisible Red Thread” has received an honourable mention at the Columbus International Film + Video Festival (CIF+VF).

The CIF+VF, now in its 61st year, is the longest running film festival in the United States. Their website states “the festival is 6 day event honors and screens the work of makers whose creations of vision, beauty and power help us understand the complexities of our world by using their committed artistry to touch our minds and hearts.” We’re definitely feeling honoured to be part of that.

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Happy Holidays!

The filmmaking team behind “The Invisible Red Thread” wishes you a happy holidays. We hope you watch lots of great documentaries, sip hot chocolate and enjoy time with your loved ones.

Happy New Year!

 

222579click the photo to see snow falling!

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Adoption-themed holiday gift ideas! (PART 2)

‘Tis the season and we got to compiling a list of great gifts to give to parents and families who are in the process of adopting or have adopted. We’ve taken the theme wide so there should be something for everyone.

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Adoption Jewelry

We stumbled across this site and found some inspiring and beautiful gifts.

http://www.manyheartsonebeat.com

Super cute adoption t-shirts that had us all wanting them! 

adoption tee shirt

A wide range of fun, stylish products that express the excitement, joy and frustration that are all part of the adoption journey.

http://www.adoptionbug.com

 

T-shirts, cups, mugs, sticky pads

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“Got love? Adopt” is this family’s motto. With kids adopted from Korea, this innovative and creative family offers a range of fun products for all different types of budgets.

http://www.gotloveadopt.com/


DECORATION

adoption posterPosters

Find the perfect adoption poster to decorate your house or put in your kid’s bedroom. Many great ones worth a look!

http://www.rainbowkids.com/HTMLFiles.aspx?page=AdoptionAdvocacy

http://www.zazzle.com/adoption+posters

CARDSCapture

Adoption cards

Whether you’re waiting, have just set your mind or finally met your beloved child, share your happiness with those lovely cards:

http://www.adoptioncardshop.com/

EDIBLES

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Country shaped cookie cutters

 With a wide range of countries represented, these make a unique gift to help celebrate your family’s adoption day:

http://www.adoptshoppe.com/Country-Shaped-Cookie-Cutters/

And lastly, we really could not forget to mention our dear documentary:

The Invisible Red Thread

55 minutes

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Our own popular and touching adoption documentary follows 15 year old internationally adopted Vivian back to China to connect with a teenager from her birth region who was adopted within China.  This is a great discussion starter for families with kids ages 10 and  up who’ve been internationally adopted from any country, not just China. You can read more about what viewers are saying about the film

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Adoption-themed holiday gift ideas! (PART 1)

‘Tis the season and we got to compiling a list of great gifts to give to parents and families who are in the process of adopting or have adopted. We’ve taken the theme wide so there should be something for everyone.

FOR READERSxmas gift adoptive families magazine

Adoptive Families magazine

Adoptive Families, the award-winning US adoption magazine, makes a great gift for families before, during, and after adoption.

For gift subscriptions: http://www.adoptivefamilies.com

Xmas gift message-from-unknown-chinese-mother

Message from An Unknown Chinese Mother, by Xinran

Following up on her internationally bestselling book The Good Women of China, Xinran has compiled a powerful account of the lives of Chinese women. It’s a collection of heartrending stories of Chinese mothers who’ve had to give up daughters, whether due to the One Child Policy, age old traditions or sheer economic necessity.  For both the parents of children adopted from China and the older children themselves, these deeply moving stories will stick long after you’ve finished the book.

Brown Babies, Pink Parents, by Amy Ford cover_BBPP_proof2

Brown Babies, Pink Parentsis a super new resource for transracial adoptive families. Amy Ford, a white adoptive mother of three black daughters, crafted a mix of insightful anecdotes and practical information for white parents raising black kids. From the practicalities of caring for black hair care to the topic of white privilege, this is a great book to help parents prepare and deal with transracial adoption.

http://brownbabiespinkparents.com/

FOR FILM LOVERS

Family Portrait in Black and White ( 85 minutes)

Director: Julia Ivanova – Producer: Boris Ivanov

xmas family portrait in black and white

This award-winning documentary follows super mom Olga Neny during three turbulent years as her brood of 17 (yes, 17!) bi-racial foster children grow into independent-minded teenagers. Nenya’s life’s work is picking up black babies left in Ukrainian orphanages so they could grow up together, and become a kind of support and protection in a country where racism and neo-Nazis are a real danger. But the film is careful neither to make Nenya, a single, into a hero for  her overwhelming love and commitment nor to demonize her for the flaws in the overbearing way she is raising the brood. An interesting and challenging film!

http://familyportraitthefilm.com

The Invisible Red Thread (55 minutes)

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Our own popular and touching adoption documentary follows 15 year old internationally adopted Vivian back to China to connect with a teenager from her birth region who was adopted within China.  This is a great discussion starter for families with kids ages 10 and up who’ve been internationally adopted from any country, not just China.

You can read more about what viewers are saying about the film

Off and Running (76 minutes) 

Director/ Producer: Nicole Opper

offandrunningIn this festival favourite, teenager Avery grew up in a unique household with two othermixed race siblings and led by two Jewish lesbian parents. Her curiosity about her African-American roots propels her to contact her birth mother and sends her on a complicated quest into race and family.  The personal journey begins to distance her from her adoptive family and threatens her own dreams, but her personal journey of discovery is ultimately inspiring viewing.

http://offandrunningthefilm.com/

Coming soon : part 2 of “Adoption-themed holiday gift ideas” with ideas for cool t-shirts, jewelry and more!

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China’s One Child Policy To Change? A CBC Radio Documentary Investigates The Potential Impact

China’s One Child Policy is infamous around the world. It’s been a leading factor in the hundreds of thousands of girls adopted internationally from that country since 1991.

But now a Chinese Foundation is urging the Chinese Government to change the strictly enforced policy by 2015 to permit urban families have two children.  And there are signs that this change be this time be implemented. CBC Radio produced an interesting half hour documentary that looks at the impact the One Child Policy on China’s current demographics and the possibility that change is indeed on the way.

But is there a social crisis looming in China’s future if the Official One Child Policy doesn’t change? The Policy was put in place to deal with overcrowding and limited resources in a country that now holds an estimated 1.3 billion people. Yet some say that China’s current reverse population pyramid, where a young married couple must eventually care for two sets of aging parents and four sets of grandparents just isn’t sustainable.

The twenty minute long radio documentary, hosted by CBC’s Anna Maria Tremonti, includes discussions with demographers, academics and regular Chinese people who’ve grown up as only children under the One Child Policy. Their concerns about how they won’t be able to help care for their aging parents as they move away for work opportunities is one of the more touching parts of the documentary.  The doc then looks at how this policy change would affect not just China, but the whole world- and checks into how other countries are dealing with their own dropping birth rates and growing older demographics.

You can listen to this 20 minute radio documentary on CBC Radio’s The Current:

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TWO FUNDRAISING SCREENINGS! Oregon/ SW Washington and Shanghai screen our film

We’re excited that some groups in the US and even China are starting to organize fundraising screenings featuring our documentary! The most recent two are raising money for a Families with Children from China (FCC) and surgery for a child being held at a Children’s Home in Shanghai.

 

Families With Children From China is proud to present the Oregon Premiere of the documentary The Invisible Red Thread on December 9 as a fundraiser for its Oregon and SW Washington chapter.  The chapter contacted us back in June and since then have put together a great event at Portland’s Clinton Street Theatre. Aside from the film’s screening (with popcorn and snacks available!), there’ll be a raffle and a remote Q&A session with the film’s co-director Maureen Marovitch. General admission tickets are $10, with discounts for members of FCC-Oregon & SW Washington.  There’s even an early bird rate for those who buy their tickets before Friday! For more info, visit http://invisibleredthreadpdx.eventbrite.com

Last weekend also saw a fundraising screening of “The Invisible Red Thread” in Shanghai! Organized by North American ex-pat Sarah Uren, invitations were extended to the community of North American families who have adopted while living in Shanghai or who are still waiting to adopt. The screening was held at Bali Bistro, where Sarah reported that some tears were shed during the screening along with many laughs, especially at the recognizable parts filmed in their city. Proceeds of the screening will go towards financing a baby’s surgery at a Baby Home in Shanghai.

Would you like to organize screening in your community? Please contact us with your request or check out our How To page for tips and info on organizing a local event!

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Through The Eyes Of Adoptees: Films To See

Last week Invisible Red Thread co-director/ co-producer Maureen Marovitch was invited to the 2012 Minnesota Transracial Film Festival to show the film. After engaging in spirited Q & A with the audience after the screening, she caught several interesting films about cross-cultural and cross-racial adoption that should move to the top of your must-see list. Here’s a short review of three of them:

Maureen Marovitch, co-director/co-producer of The Invisible Red Thread

Going Home and Finding Seoul: Going Home director Jason Hoffman, and Finding Seoul director John Sanvidge share many interesting similarities. Both 20-something Korean-American directors/ editors grew up in New York State, adopted by loving Caucasian parents. Both glided through their childhood and teens as typical American boys, remarkably disinterested in their Korean heritage. And then in their early twenties, both Hoffman and Sanvidge felt a pull towards their birth country and a need to find their birth mothers. For John, a gregarious spirit part of a family of three adoptees, it starts a search he’s ill prepared to finish, despite the support of his parents and siblings. When he finds roadblocks in Korea, he decides the search process itself may have answered all he needed to know. For Jason,  he will be able to meet his mother and birth sister, with his girlfriend and parents along to help on the journey. On some levels, Jason’s film is the more complex one. At 74 minutes in length, it manages to explore more ground, including the reality that some birth parents may not be able or willing to welcome a birth child back into their life. But both are excellent films for parents and adoptees to start discussions about the meaning of identity, and what it means to search for birth parents – both for the adopted child and for the biological parents.

John Savidge, director of  Finding Seoul

The Struggle for Identity: The Struggle for Identity and its follow-up, Struggle for Identity: A Conversation 10 Years Later, produced by Photosynthesis Productions, delve into tough issues around domestic transracial adoption. Both films are tautly edited discussions with adoptees of colour who were adopted into white American families as babies and toddlers. Many of the adoptees speak about their adoptive parents as well-intentioned and loving, but unprepared for the identity struggles and prejudice the children would face as they grew older. All now young adults, the participants in the film weave an intelligent and multi-faceted discussion that is informative and thought-provoking for any parents considering or in the midst of transracial adoption.

All of these films are available for home or educational/ institutional viewing. Whatever the country of origin for the adoptees featured in the films, their issues and stories transcend colour and national lines to beautifully explore the issues and questions of identity that all adoptees and their families face.

Jason Hoffman (Going Home), John Savidge ( Finding Seoul), Amber Anderson (Photosynthesis Production), Maureen Marovitch ( The Invisible Red Thread)

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Off to the 2012 Minnesota Transracial Film Festival! (Can’t go? See the films online!)

Co-director/co-producer Maureen Marovitch is getting her bags packed. On Friday she’ll be flying out to Minnesota for The 2012 Minnesota Transracial Film Festival. If a festival all about transracial adoption issues has your interest peaked, you’re in luck. Even if you aren’t close enough to see the films in the theatre, you can view several of the films from anywhere in the world!

On November 10th, the physical portion of the festival kicks off at the University of Minnesota’s St. Paul Campus, with features The Invisible Red Thread (that’s us!), Going Home and Finding Seoul,  Short films include Struggle for Identity and Seoul Searching. The following Monday to Friday, November 12th-16th, the festival will continue online via Watch Adoptee Films, which will stream worldwide some of the films from the festival and a handful of others.

This adoptee-centric film festival is hosted by AdopSource, AK Connection, and Watch Adoptee Films, a subsidiary of Land of Gazillion Adoptees.  With one of the largest transracial and transcultural adopted communities being in Minnesota, the festival was started to showcase both the adoption community and its rich diversity. The festival will also be a showcase for emerging voices telling their point of view through film, words, and music.

We’ll have about the festival and some if it’s films after the weekend, but if you’re in the region, come and see the films. The filmmakers and The Invisible Red Thread co-director Maureen would love to meet you!

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Our Favourite Adoption Blogs

About to adopt or still thinking about it? Maybe you’re in the middle of the experience or already raising one or more chosen children. It’s always encouraging to hear first hand experiences from parents who have already adopted. What better than exploring the Internet and all its adoption blogs ranging from international adoption to open adoption to foster care?

Here is a list of our favourites! Feel free to share with us your personal bests!

International Adoption

China Adoption Talk:
If you’re interested in adoption from China, this is the perfect blog for you, with advice about the country, adoption-related articles from around the world, and personal anecdotes on raising adopted Chinese girls
www.chinaadoptiontalk.blogspot.ca

Hormonal Imbalances
This blogger is a military wife who bares her soul during her ongoing struggles to become both a natural mother and adoptive parent to an internationally adopted child
www.hormonal-imbalances.com

Rage against the Minivan
One mom, one dad and four kids via birth and adoption from Haiti. A funny well written blog that humoursly explores the craziness of mothering
www.rageagainsttheminivan.com

Our Little Tongginator
“Tonggu Momma” tells stories of her life with her two daughters from China. Adorable and funny.
www.ourlittletongginator.blogspot.ca

Catherine’s Chatter
Catherine is a single mom with whom we share a special relation as she was one of our first fans! She shares her life with her cute little Hannah adopted from China.
www.catherineschatter.blogspot.ca

Salsa in China
The life of a lovely family with two twin girls adopted from China. A personal and sweet read
www.salsainchina.blogspot.ca

Kopfegeshbloggin
A blog with great design written by Becky, adoptive mom of a little six-year-old Chinese girl. Becky was the winner of our contest.
www.kopfegeshbloggin.wordpress.com

Unperfect Moms
Emily is an “unperfect” mom with two kids and about to adopt one more from China.
www.unperfectmoms.com

We Resonate
A family of four with two lovely kids adopted from Ethiopia about to embark on Christian homeschooling
http://weresonate.blogspot.ca/

Millions of Miles
Two biological kids, a little one from the  Democratic Republic of Congo and now in the process of becoming a foster mom, Megan shares her photos and thoughts about her family with a side dose of travel tips.
http://www.millionsofmiles.com/

Domestic adoption

Production Not Reproduction
Heather has three kids through open domestic adoption.
http://www.productionnotreproduction.com/

Wendy-Steve-and G3
Zoe, a little girl, was adopted through domestic adoption and her mom tells the story of their life.
http://wendy-steve-andg3.blogspot.ca/

The Chronicles of Munchkinland
Jenna, a birth mother involved in open adoption has become an expert in the topic in her personal but also professional life. A excellent blog to start learning more about open adoption!
http://thechroniclesofmunchkinland.com/

What are your favourite adoption-related blogs? What other blogs should our readers know about? Send us the info or post below and we’ll do another list in the near future!

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Put our documentary in your school!

This is our shameless self-promotion post.  We know that our documentary, “The Invisible Red Thread” is a fantastic resource for high school, college, university and public libraries. But many people don’t realize that they can request that their library order the film.

International adoptee Vivian Lum’s return to China to meet discover her birth place and connect with a locally adopted girl, along with the film’s very personal exploration of the larger social impact of adoption makes it right on target for classes in Asian Studies, Family Studies, Anthropology, Multicultural Studies and Adoption Issues. Our documentary is already being used in libraries and schools in the US, Canada and Australia. So how can institutions order it?

We have a special $199 educational institutional license to allow unlimited group viewings within an institution, including library loans. And to make it affordable for all situations and schools, we can discuss special classroom classroom screenings. If you want to make sure the film is right for your institution, there is a special online password protected site for librarians and educators who’d like to preview the film.

Contact us to request a preview, to order a copy or with any other questions.

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