"She didn't know about me because they took me at birth and told
her I was dead," Jimmy Lippert Thyden said in a TikTok video
while on the plane to meet his mother for the first time. "When
she asked for my body, they told her they had disposed of it."
"So we've never held each other, we've never hugged."
Walking down a street in mother's hometown of Valdivia some
740km (460 miles) south of the Chilean capital, with a bouquet
of flowers in hand, Lippert Thyden tearfully hugged Maria
Angelica Gonzalez, his biological mother, and told her he loved
her.
He traveled to Chile with his wife and two daughters, who met
their grandmother for the first time.
Lippert Thyden reconnected with his family thanks to a DNA
tracing via MyHeritage.com and Nos Buscamos, a Chilean
non-governmental organization which helps reconnect people
separated during the 17-year dictatorship. Thousands of people
were disappeared and tens of thousands tortured during
Pinochet's rule, which ended in 1990.
Nos Buscamos founder Constanza del Rio created the organization
after failing to find information about her own biological
family. The NGO says it has managed to help some 400 people
reconnect to their family.
"This case is one of hundreds or thousands of cases of child
trafficking during the dictatorship and democracy," del Rio
said. "These children were declared as dead and sold to
foreigners for $10,000 or $15,000."
(Reporting by Reuters TV; Writing by Fabian Cambrero and Sarah
Morland; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)
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