Ms Kashin was sent to a home in NSW where she gave birth prematurely to a baby boy Black & Orange Friendship Bracelet May 1963. She was told that if she tried to escape the home, the police would arrest her. "I was handcuffed to the bed because they knew I would do a runner," she said. "That was the most traumatic part ... I thought I was going to die." Ms Kashin eventually moved on with her life and finally met her son in 1996, 33 years after he was adopted Black And Gold Friendship Bracelet. But, she said, she remained upset over the "indignity" of being incarcerated and she continued to wear a bracelet on her right wrist to remember the injustice. Ms Kashin said it meant "a great deal" to receive an apology from the state government. "It's like being given back your selfhood because adoption, forced adoption, any adoption, robs you of your self hood, and it robs your child Pewter And White Friendship Bracelet well," she said. WA Health Minister Kim Hames said, on the steps of parliament, it was an important day to recognise mothers who were forced to adopt out their children. "There was an enormous stigma about having a child out of wedlock and those mothers were strongly encouraged, if not coerced, into giving up their babies Red Friendship Bracelet adoption," he said. Dr Hames said the mothers were not allowed to bond with their children, were often heavily drugged with medication and had barriers placed between them and their babies. "They weren't told the sex, they certainly weren't allowed to see or touch the baby," he said. "Many of these women have not gone on to have children. They have been so traumatised." Dr Hames said the apology was not about compensation for the mothers or a criticism of parents who adopted the children.
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