I am not sure I would take the word of the adoptive parents at face value. It's in their best interests to paint the man as an uncaring parent.
My MIL sent birthday and Christmas cards and gifts to one of her granddaughters for 18 years and never received an acknowledgement. The divorce was acrimonious; the mother took the daughter and remarried and for all we know the girl never received anything my MIL sent.
And think of the impending separation this way: a child may become an orphan at any age and be forced to transition into a new family.
It would be interesting to know the entire background of the case, that's for certain.
Yeah, my parents spent years sending things to a grandchild that received nothing. Thankfully, in her mid-20's, she contacted "the family that threw her out," and found out the truth. Unfortunately, it was just in time to attend my parents' funeral... She has never forgiven her mother.
If the father truly has done nothing to contact this child, we're not talking about a child tragically orphaned...we're talking about a child taken from loving parents and placed with a total stranger ON PURPOSE, by a system that is supposed to consider the child's welfare above all. And it is being done by a man that is considering his wants and rights as more important than the child's.
My brother raised 2 of his 5 kids, not because he demanded his rights, but because one mother was a neglectful drug-addict, and the other was totally unable to provide any discipline for a very difficult child. The first mother lost custody of all her children. The second kept her oldest...and he is mess, despite being the type of kid that wouldn't have been any big problem to raise.
I have no doubt that fathers are capable of raising their kids, and are often the better choice as parents. However, if the facts presented are at all accurate, I have doubts that this particular father considers his son as being a separate human being instead of animated "property."
I currently have to beg, plead and threaten in order to see one of my grandchildren...and have done the same to demand that they allow my son to see his kid. Evidently, the last discussion lead to them consulting a lawyer and finding out that Nebraska law does not allow them to refuse visitation, because the last year or so have been much simpler. However, that said, my son is in no position to seek custody of his kid...though the child lived with him and the mother for 5 years, so knows his father and would love to live with him again. The child does not know us well enough to have any wish to live with us, so despite feeling strongly that we could give him a more comfortable home, the facts today are that the child is well cared for, well loved, doing well in school and sports, and happy...and we are willing to put up with the difficulties of visitation in order to see the child remain happy.
Children are our responsibilities, not our possessions. As their parents or grandparents, we are responsible for considering what is best for the child before our own wishes, needs, dreams, loves, interests. Anyone that is not willing to put the child first should not be a parent.