Living Life for Myself | Amanda Assalone | Legacy Project Atlanta

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 6 жов 2024
  • Amanda Assalone was born in Seoul, South Korea, and adopted into a white family in Tulsa, OK. She always believed she was given up for adoption because her birth mother was young and could not financially raise a child. Amanda never intended to search for her family and always wished them well. So when she received an email saying they'd been found, she quickly learned the truth. Her story had been fabricated and she was given up for adoption because she was not a boy.
    Amanda currently resides in Atlanta, GA and looks back at each moment in her life happening for a reason. She is not filled with any regrets and is thankful to be surrounded by the Korean American and Korean American adoptee community in Atlanta. As she continues to learn to live life for herself and not others, she hopes to embrace her identity more and more.
    Thank you to Rayanne Williams of Atlanta, GA for coordinating this Legacy Project recording!
    Support us!
    koreanamerican...
    See more of KoreanAmericanStory.org:
    www.koreanameri...
    / koreanamericanstory.org
    / koreanamericanstory
    / ka_story
    www.vimeo.com/k...
    CREDITS
    Interviewer: Rayanne Williams
    Videographer: Janice Chung www.janicechun...
    Editor: John Zhao veladacinema.com/
    Production Coordinator: Young Sun www.kimberlyyo...
    Production Assistant: Deborah Baik
    Music Composer: Jang Hyeong Yoon
    Executive Producer: HJ Lee
    KoreanAmericanStory.org is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization whose mission is to create and preserve the stories of the Korean American experience.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2

  • @NicholasRamsey
    @NicholasRamsey Рік тому +1

    What a wonderful video! 😍

  • @teesong6801
    @teesong6801 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for sharing your story. Although I was not adopted, we immigrated at a young age and I didn’t be come “comfortable” or proud being Korean until I was in high school and more so when I joined the Navy and went to college. It’s good to hear that you have embraced your ethnicity because some who are full Korean have not which is fine also. It comes down to what makes them happy.