Jane Jeong Trenka | |
Birth Place: | Seoul, Korea |
Education: | Augsburg University |
Occupation: | Activist, writer |
Jane Jeong Trenka is a Korean American activist and an award-winning writer.[1] She is the president of the organization TRACK (Truth and Reconciliation for the Adoption Community of Korea).
Trenka was born in Seoul, Korea in 1972. When she was six months old, Trenka and her sister were adopted into a white family in rural northern Minnesota. Her Korean mother found her daughters in 1972, shortly after the girls were sent to the U.S. and before they were legally adopted. Trenka reunited with her birth mother in Korea in 1995 when she was 23. In 2004, she returned to live in Korea. While applying for a visa in 2006, Trenka discovered that the Korean adoption agency that had overseen her adoption had lied, both about her background and about the people who were going to adopt her. Trenka became an activist for standard and transparent adoption practices to protect the human rights of adult adoptees, children, and families. She officially repatriated to South Korea in 2008.[2]
Trenka received a degree in music performance from Augsburg University in Minneapolis, Minnesota[3] and became a piano teacher in Minnesota before her return to Korea.
While studying at Augsburg University, Trenka was consistently stalked, and she has spoken publicly about her experience in order to raise awareness to the issue, including discussing the incident in her book The Language of Blood.[4] Her experiences were adapted for an episode of the Investigation Discovery series .[5]
In 2013, Trenka attended Seoul National University to pursue a degree in public administration.[6]
She has written two memoirs on her experiences with international, transracial adoption: The Language of Blood and Fugitive Visions: An Adoptee's Return to Korea.