Wednesday, September 17, 2025 - María Verónica Soto has been reunited with her twin daughters, Maria Beatrice and Adelia Rose Mereu Chessa, in Chile, 45 years after they were stolen as babies and placed for adoption with a foreign family.
The emotional meeting took place in the city of Concepción,
Biobío province, after the twins, now 46, traveled from Italy, where they were
raised. It was the first time Soto, now 64, had seen her daughters since they
were just eight months old. The twins always knew they were adopted in Chile
but had no memory of their mother.
In 1979, under the dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet,
Soto gave birth to the girls in Hualpén. After a routine doctor’s visit, she
was told her daughters needed evaluation. Instead, the babies were taken from
her, with officials accusing her of not feeding them properly. When she sought
police help, she discovered her daughters had already been placed for adoption
abroad. Their birth certificates had been altered to suggest no parents had
come forward.
During Pinochet’s rule, thousands of Chilean babies were
stolen and sold into adoption, many to the US and Europe. They became known as
the “Children of Silence.” Some were taken from poor mothers and sold through
adoption agencies; others were given up under pressure from families, priests,
doctors, or nuns.
“They listen to women now. Back then, they didn’t listen to
mothers. We could not speak up in those years like we can now,” Soto said.
The road to reunion began in 2020, when Soto contacted “Nos
Buscamos,” an NGO that reconnects children illegally adopted abroad with their
biological families. She took a DNA test, which was entered into an
international database. For years, she waited. Earlier this year, her
grandson—the son of one of the twins—took a DNA test, leading to the discovery.
Within 20 minutes of contact on Facebook, Soto was speaking with her daughters.
On September 10, the twins landed in Concepción, where the
airport turned into a scene of celebration. As soon as they arrived, they ran
into their mother’s arms. Soto cried, “Momma always looked for you,” over and
over.
The language barrier—Soto does not speak Italian, and her
daughters don’t yet know Spanish—did not matter. The embrace spoke louder than
words.
“So many emotions and very, very happy because we finally
found our mother … we want to be with her, with the family, all the brothers,
all the uncles, all the cousins, everybody!” Maria Beatrice said.
“God heard me,” Soto added. “For me, this has been like
giving birth to my daughters again, but in an adult version.”
Both Soto and her daughters believe they were deceived, as
their Italian adoptive parents were unaware the twins had been taken without
consent.
Despite nearly half a century of separation, Soto considers
herself blessed. Many mothers, she said, are still searching or died without
ever reuniting.
“I fought until I found my girls. That’s why I tell those
mothers not to stop fighting. Knock on doors, because now there are more
possibilities with technology,” she said.
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