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Blast From My Past Podcast, Ep. 2: The Missing Piece

The second episode of our new Blast From My Past podcast has dropped! In case you haven’t heard yet, we launched our first-ever podcast two weeks ago: a podcast that tells the stories of people from all over the world whose lives were changed by what they discovered through MyHeritage. In our debut episode, “The Secret of Ereikoussa,” we took our listeners to a tiny Greek island with an unbelievable secret. This time, we’re taking you across the globe to a train station in the city of Daegu, South Korea, where a pair of sisters who had been abandoned there almost 50 years ago are about to meet each other for the first time.

You can listen to “The Missing Piece” on your favorite podcast app or right here:

Christine Pennell and Kim Haelen were born in Daegu, South Korea during a period in Korean history when multiracial children, children born out of wedlock, or those whose parents encountered financial hardship were often sent abroad for international adoption. Estimates suggest that more than 200,000 Korean children have been placed for adoption worldwide from the 1950’s until today.

Kim and Christine grew up worlds apart — Kim in Belgium and Christine in the United States — completely unaware of the other’s existence. It was only when they each took a MyHeritage DNA test that they discovered one another. MyHeritage DNA’s fast-growing global database helps make reunions like this possible.

The episode follows the stories of Christine and Kim and the emotional roller coaster they experience surrounding their reunion at the same train station in Daegu, South Korea where they were both abandoned nearly 50 years ago.

The sisters had been left in the train station in a very similar way three weeks apart, but no one made the connection between the cases at the time. A woman walked into the station and asked someone to watch her baby daughter — Christine — while she went to the bathroom, and never returned. Three weeks later, the same thing happened with Kim. Each was sent to an orphanage and eventually placed for adoption. It never occurred to the police that the cases were related.

Christine as a toddler

Christine as a toddler

Christine, now a mother of 4 from Berlin, Connecticut, explains what it would mean to her to find biological family.

Christine with her children

Christine with her children

“There’s a family photo. And the only person you can see in the family photo is you. You would feel like you’re missing out on something. Like, where is the rest of that picture? Maybe there’s bodies, but the faces are blurry. You would really want to know who those other people were in that picture.”

Her sister Kim, now a mother of 3 from Oud-Turnhout, Belgium, shares her experience.

“When we would go outside in the city, I felt a little bit ashamed of who I was because all the people looked at us. I hated it when we would go outside, because I was different and I didn’t like the feeling that I was different.”

Kim as a child in Belgium with her adoptive family

Kim as a child in Belgium with her adoptive family

Kim on her wedding day

Kim on her wedding day

Their journeys led them to take a MyHeritage DNA test to uncover more about their origins. After a decades-long search for her family through records and a trip to Korea that proved fruitless, Christine knew that a DNA test was her only hope. Kim, by contrast, turned to MyHeritage DNA after recently battling medical issues and realizing the importance of filling in the blanks about her biological family’s medical history.

Kim will never forget the moment she received the life-changing email from MyHeritage just one month after taking the test.

“I opened it and I read ‘Sister.’” says Kim. “I said, ‘No, that can’t be.’” Her husband was sitting next to her and Kim said to herself, “Maybe it’s nothing. Go to sleep, tomorrow you will see…” But Kim couldn’t wait: she decided to contact Christine.

“I was shaking and crying,” recalls Christine. “I just couldn’t believe it.”

The two chatted all night and quickly decided that they had to meet. At long last, their lifetime search for belonging was leading toward a happy ending.

When the two finally reunite on the subway platform in Daegu, the moment is unforgettable. Their bond is instantaneous and the two have been inseparable since.

Christine and Kim meet for the first time on the subway platform in Daegu where they were abandoned.

Christine and Kim meet for the first time on the subway platform in Daegu where they were abandoned.

We know you will love this beautiful new episode of Blast From My Past. Don’t forget to follow the podcast on Apple, Spotify, your browser, or your podcast app of choice!

The post Blast From My Past Podcast, Ep. 2: The Missing Piece appeared first on MyHeritage Blog.

Source: My Heritage

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