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Twins separated at birth reunite after 13 years

Twins separated at birth reunite after 13 years

One grew up in Vietnam and the other was adopted by a family in America.

Separated at birth and raised in different countries, Vietnamese twins are reunited after 13 years.

The story by Isabella Solimin and Ha Nguyen followed the publication of the book ‘Sisters Somewhere: A Story of Adoption, Identity and the Meaning of Family’. , journalist Erika Hayazaki.

In 1998, girls were born in Vietnam. Their mother could not take care of them and because she had no money to take care of them, she decided to adopt them.

Ha was sent to her aunt, who at the time lived with her partner in a simple rural community, and Isabella went to an orphanage, where she stayed for four years until she was adopted by a couple from Chicago, USA.

The girls were told about identical twins from an early age, and although the two admitted they were interested in each other, they never thought they would get the chance to meet in person.

However, Isabella’s adoptive mother, after reading a series of expert studies on the psychology of the twins, decides to embark on the task of reuniting the twins. In 2008, he traveled to Vietnam, where he interviewed orphanage staff in an attempt to track down Ha’s whereabouts.

With the help of a local resident, she found the family and showed them photos and videos of her adopted daughter. At that moment, Ha felt “overwhelmed” and expressed her desire to meet her sister.

Three years later, in 2011, Isabella traveled to the Asian country with her mother and met her twin at the local airport. However, Hayazaki described the moment as a long-awaited one, due to the language barrier between the two.

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But the two slowly begin to bond as they talk about their childhoods with the help of a translator and realize that despite being so different, they share similarities.

After the trip ended, Isabella’s mother helped pay for Ha’s education at a private school and provided the girls with the latest electronic devices to keep in touch.

In 2016, Ha decided she wanted to move to America to spend more time with her blood cousin.

Eventually, she settled down with Solimenes and finished her last two years of high school with her twin in Chicago before heading off to college.

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