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Adoptee Scholarship

Funded by
user profile avatar
Nathan Trail
$1,250
1 winner$1,250
Awarded
Application Deadline
Feb 1, 2023
Winners Announced
Mar 1, 2023
Education Level
Undergraduate
1
Contribution
Eligibility Requirements
Education Level:
Two or four-year undergraduate student
Background:
Adopted

Adopted youth come from all different backgrounds, such as foster care, direct adoptions at birth, and more. 

Regardless of the guardian or family a child is adopted by, they may face struggles throughout life such as trauma from previous living situations, limited financial resources, etc. In order to build a better future, it’s critical that adoptees have all of the resources and encouragement they need to attain their degrees.

This scholarship seeks to support adoptees as they prepare to pursue higher education so they have all of the resources necessary to achieve their goals.

Any adopted student who is an undergraduate in a two or four-year program may apply for this scholarship, but students of Eastern European descent are preferred. 

To apply, tell us about yourself, how being adopted has impacted your life, and what you’ve done to support the adoption community. 

Selection Criteria:
Ambition, Need, Boldest Bold.org Profile
Published July 26, 2022
Essay Topic

Please tell us a bit about yourself and how adoption has impacted your life and what you have done to support the adoption community. You can consider how finding out about your adoption impacted you at that moment, how you react when people ask you about your adoption and biological family, if you have attempted to contact your biological family, etc.

400–600 words

Winning Application

Jackie Fisher
Indiana Wesleyan University-National & GlobalWilson, WY
I was adopted at eight years old from a Ukrainian orphanage. I still remember the first day I met the people that were going to adopt me, it was scary because I didn’t know a single word in English and they didn’t know a single word in Ukrainian, but they had nice smiles and bought me a doll so I was excited about that. Shortly after this first meeting, I was told I would be adopted. I then got on a plane with total strangers that I could not talk to nor understand and traveled halfway across the world leaving everything familiar behind. This journey has not gone without challenges, there was a lot of playing charades with my new family trying to communicate while I learned the new language. I was also adopted with another girl who became my sister. She has a disability and required/s a lot of my new parent’s attention and time. I struggled to find where I belonged and someone who wanted me, craving this attention from years in the orphanage and lack of attention from my new parents I found a person who gave me attention. This person was my grandfather, he took me to get donuts and let me go pet the neighbor’s dog, and told me I was special, I craved this, I needed someone to see me, and he did. Unfortunately, this was not all my grandfather did, in the midst of the attention he gave, he also sexually molested me for years. Under his excuse of telling me I wasn’t real family, I am just adopted. He went to prison for molesting multiple children when I was 15. It has taken me years to overcome these traumas and though I have not nor will overcome them, I can endure and improve my own life and the life of others who have faced similar challenges. In my healing, I embarked on the journey of finding myself which let me to find my biological family in Ukraine. I found my mama and learned I had four siblings I didn’t know about. I learned that my mama was also a product of the Ukrainian orphanage system and therefore struggled to raise children and had alcohol problems, which is why I ended up at an orphanage. Yet she never forgot about her children and even stayed living in the same place for all these years so that her children could find her one day. It has been a beautiful reunion with daily communication, until, Russia invaded Ukraine this past February. This has limited our contact as she does not always have service and is often stuck in a bomb shelter. My heart aches for her safety and fear that my one connection to help me be me might get stolen away with this war. Since these challenges, I have started school to become a social worker; to work in the adoption field and help educate new adoptive families, and be a support for the adoptee. I currently work at a residential facility serving adolescent males who have struggled in their family life, many of whom are adopted. I plan to continue working in the adoption field and help other adoptees obtain what I struggled to find, caring adults that tell them they are worthy. Thank you for listening to my story.

FAQ

When is the scholarship application deadline?

The application deadline is Feb 1, 2023. Winners will be announced on Mar 1, 2023.