DiscoverMPR News with Angela DavisMistaken: Minnesota’s Korean adoptees grapple with confessed systemic corruption
Mistaken: Minnesota’s Korean adoptees grapple with confessed systemic corruption

Mistaken: Minnesota’s Korean adoptees grapple with confessed systemic corruption

Update: 2025-11-26
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Earlier this year, South Korea’s government admitted that widespread corruption had tainted hundreds of thousands of adoptions from its country. Babies who were thought to be orphaned had living parents. Some children were trafficked. Paperwork was falsified. Records were destroyed.


Korean adoptees worldwide were left reeling, including here in Minnesota, home to the largest population of Korean adoptees in the U.S. Many had already wrestled with questions of identity and racial and cultural belonging. Now even the small bits of information they had about their past could no longer be trusted.


How are Korean adoptees who call Minnesota home responding to this foundational earthquake? Earlier this month, MPR News’ North Star Journey Live project hosted a gathering of adoptees who are deeply invested in the search for truth about their origin stories at Arbeiter Brewing in Minneapolis.


Moderated by Twin Cities PBS reporter Kaomi Lee, who is herself an adoptee, the panel shared their personal histories and how the work they do today is moving the narrative forward.


Guests:




Find a resource guide to learn more about this topic at MPRnews.org.

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Mistaken: Minnesota’s Korean adoptees grapple with confessed systemic corruption

Mistaken: Minnesota’s Korean adoptees grapple with confessed systemic corruption

Minnesota Public Radio