The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘Taken Under Fascism, Spain’s “Stolen Babies” Are Learning the Truth’
Episode Date: November 6, 2022The phenomenon of babies stolen from hospitals in Spain, once shrouded in secrecy, is now being spoken about.The thefts happened during the end of the regime of Francisco Franco, the right-wing dictat...or who ruled the country until 1975, and even today the disappearances remain a subject of mystery and debate among scholars.According to the birth mothers, nuns who worked in maternity wards took the infants shortly after they were delivered and told the women, who were often unwed or poor, that their children were stillborn. But the babies were not dead: They had been sold, discreetly, to well-off Catholic parents, many of whom could not have families of their own. Under piles of forged papers, the adoptive families buried the secret of the crime they committed. The children who were taken were known in Spain simply as the “stolen babies.” No one knows exactly how many were kidnapped, but estimates suggest tens of thousands.Nicholas Casey relates Ana Belén Pintado’s discovery, after the deaths of her parents, that she was a “stolen baby,” and considers the web of culpability and the tricky question of blame, as Spain reckons with its past.This story was written by Nicholas Casey and recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
People go to Spain and they might see Barcelona, this modern, beautiful city on the beach.
Or they might go visit the Alhambra in Granada, or see a DJ in Ibiza.
But the Spain of the 1970s was a much darker place than what it is now.
And that's because of the dictatorship of Francisco Franco.
I wrote a story for the New York Times magazine
about one of the most harrowing
and also one of the most long-lasting abuses
that took place in Spain during that time.
Long-lasting because the victims were so young.
In those years,
women say that they were losing their babies the day that they were born.
The hospitals told them their babies were stillborn, but they weren't stillborn. They were
actually sold by nuns and doctors to families, usually Catholic families. And in their new homes,
the children usually grew up having nice, normal lives, except for the fact that a secret was being hidden from them.
No one knows how many babies were taken from their parents,
but people think that it could have been in the tens of thousands.
Most of the stolen children never knew that this had happened,
but as they became adults, a few found out.
This story focuses on a woman named Ana Belén Pintado, who, after the death of her supposed
parents, learned that they actually weren't who they said they were. I wanted to tell the story
of Ana Belén's search for her real mother. My name is Nick Casey. I'm a writer at the New York
Times Magazine. My job is to find compelling stories anywhere in the world.
But the one which I wanted to tell took place right here where I live, in Spain.
As I worked on this story, I thought a lot about the last article I wrote for the magazine.
It was about my own journey in finding my dad, who disappeared when I was seven,
and who I found again when he was an old man and I was in my 30s.
I thought about how Ana Belen, the main character here, and I were once in similar situations.
And I think one big question the story brings up is, who are your real parents?
Are they the people who raised you and the people that gave you Christmas presents and took you to school?
Or are your parents the people who gave birth to you?
And what do you do when you find out that the people who raised you aren't the people who you thought they were?
This story is also about the risk of asking questions about secrets in the past.
Anna Belen's secret was kept from her for all of these years.
No one in her village, not even her husband,
who knew that she was adopted,
had ever brought this up with her.
The stolen babies were kept secret in Spain for many years.
And even today, it's really hard
to bring this discussion out into the open.
How do you cope?
How do you explain such horrific,
traumatic events on a national level?
Or do you just move on?
For Ana Belén, the answer was
to find her mother.
And to find justice.
And that's where the story begins.
So here's my article.
Taken Under Fascism, Spain's stolen babies are learning
the truth. Read by Anthony Ray Perez. This was recorded by Autumn. To listen to more stories
from the New York Times, the New Yorker, Vanity Fair, The Atlantic, and other publications on your smartphone, download Autumn on the App Store or the Play Store.
Visit autumn.com for more details.
On a balmy October day in 2017,
Ana Belén Pintado decided to clear out some space in her garage.
Her father, Manuel, died in 2010, followed by her mother, Petra, four years later.
Their belongings sat gathering dust at her home in Campo de Criptana,
a small town in the countryside south of Madrid.
As she carefully opened the boxes, she marveled at the objects inside.
Her childhood dresses, a doll, an old dictionary, each so familiar,
reminding her of a life the three of them once shared.
But then she came across some papers she had never seen.
Medical records from decades ago, including a note from her mother's doctor.
Petra Torres, the note said,
had been married for eight years. She was 31 years old and had been trying to have a family.
But a set of x-rays indicated that she had a uterine anomaly and obstructed fallopian tubes.
In other words, Pintalo's mother had been sterile. The diagnosis was dated April 1967, six years before Pintado was born.
Pintado had long believed that the couple who raised her were her biological parents,
but there were a few puzzling aspects about her family.
parents, but there were a few puzzling aspects about her family. She had no brothers or sisters,
which was rare in a small Catholic town like Campo de Cliptana. Pintado herself, who was then 44,
had three children of her own. There was also an odd incident that happened after her father died.
A lawyer handling the estate found some papers that showed she was born with a different last name.
But before anyone in the family could have a closer look,
her mother snatched the documents away and refused to speak about them again.
As Pintado sat in her garage, sifting through the papers,
she found another document that was just as confounding
as the doctor's note. It was a
birth certificate, which indicated that her mother had given birth to a girl in the Santa Cristana
Maternity Clinic in Madrid. Good appearance and vitality, good coloration, a hospital staff member wrote. The paper was dated on Pintado's birthday, July 10th, 1973.
There was even a room number, 22. Pintado took a closer look at the birth certificate.
She could see that someone had torn off the top third of the paper, leaving a jagged edge behind.
Her birth certificate had been tampered with.
There had been something here
that someone wanted to hide.
I knew this couldn't be my mother,
she told me.
And that's when I thought
I might be a stolen baby.
Pintado had long known
about the phenomenon
of babies stolen
from hospitals in Spain.
The thefts happened during the end of the regime of Francisco Franco,
the right-wing dictator who ruled the country until 1975.
And even today, the disappearances remain a subject of mystery and debate among scholars.
According to the birth mothers,
nuns who worked in maternity wards took the infants shortly after they were delivered and told the women, who were often unwed or poor, that their children were stillborn.
But the babies were not dead.
They had been sold, discreetly, to well-off Catholic parents, many of whom could not have families of their own.
whom could not have families of their own.
Under a pile of forged papers,
the adoptive families buried the secrets of the crime they committed.
The children who were taken were known in Spain simply as the stolen babies.
No one knows exactly how many were kidnapped, but estimates suggest tens of thousands.
The stolen baby phenomenon was just one part of a national nightmare that began in Spain with Franco's rise to power. A right-wing
army commander, Franco was among a group of military officers who plotted to overthrow
Spain's governments in a 1936 army rebellion, triggering the Spanish Civil War. Overnight, Spain went from an elected
democracy to a country in which death squads rounded up and executed leftists and intellectuals.
When Franco's nationalists could not subdue the Basque country, they called on warplanes from
Nazi Germany that flattened the town of Guernica, inspiring the famed painting by Pablo Picasso that bears its name.
The ruthlessness was typical of a new brand of authoritarianism
that began toppling democracies one by one in Europe in the 1930s.
But unlike Adolf Hitler, Franco survived World War II.
Spain's regime lived on as an enduring fascist state in the heart of modern Europe.
As Spain's supreme leader, Franco took the title Galillo, or Strongman,
and soon began stripping away social freedoms within the country.
Up to the early 1930s, Spain had been among Europe's most progressive countries,
allowing for married couples to divorce and women to seek abortions. Under Franco, those rights were swiftly rescinded.
Contraception was outlawed, adultery was criminalized, and women lost the right to vote.
Newspapers were censored and many books were banned altogether, including those of Federico García Lorca, Spain's most renowned poet and playwright.
Lorca had already been murdered by nationalists during the Civil War.
Franco's political movement, the Falange, once even published a schedule for housewives
outlining times to take children to school, bleach clothes, and prepare dinners.
But one of the most lasting abuses of the era was borne by children. In the late 1930s and 1940s,
Antonio Vallejo Najera, a leading psychiatrist in the regime who was trained in Nazi Germany,
promoted the idea of a Marxist red jean carried by the children of Franco's left-wing opponents.
The gene, he said, might be suppressed by removing children from their mothers
and placing them with conservative families.
Franco's men soon began the abductions on a large scale.
They targeted children orphaned by Franco's firing squads
and took newborns belonging to women who had given birth in jail as political prisoners.
All were sent to be raised by regime loyalists.
The era of the stolen babies had begun.
Franco's rule also marked a dramatic turn for the Catholic Church, which allowed its nuns and priests to become partners of the right-wing regime. They commanded the education system, where children were to be
instructed in Catholic values, learning to read using the Bible. Franco also ceded oversight of
parts of the state-run hospital system to the clergy. Nuns often sat alongside top management at hospitals, helping to select staff and overseeing
the budget. But their influence was perhaps strongest in the hospital's charity floors that
took in the poor. There, the nuns were often deployed to encourage single mothers to give
their babies up for adoption to married couples. The mothers were no longer prisoners, leftists or the wives of leftists,
wrote the journalists Jesus Dua and Natalia Junquera in Stolen Lives, a 2011 book about
the kidnappings. It was no longer about political repression, even though in many ways the victims continued to be from the same defeated social
classes, poor couples. For a time, the arrangement ran smoothly. But by the 1960s, Franco had opened
Spain to tourism and multinational industries, which brought foreigners with more liberal
ideologies. The economy also boomed, giving women more independence.
Being an unwed mother was no longer as impossible as it once seemed.
The supply of babies began to fall, Soledad Arroyo, a journalist who investigated early accusations, told me.
But it had already generated a huge black market in the illegal trafficking of babies.
What do you do?
Some nuns, aided by doctors, nurses, and midwives, began to abduct babies to meet demand.
In certain cases, the nuns still managed to persuade mothers to give up their children willingly, though many say they were coerced into surrendering their newborns.
Others say they were sedated in the delivery room and then told when they woke up that their babies had died.
In reality, the children had been sold to other families.
Franco's regime was not the only one to use the theft of children as a political weapon. In Argentina, as many as 30,000 people were disappeared by
military junta that ruled from 1976 to 1983 and gave their orphaned children to right-wing families,
prompting decades of protests and demands that the government investigate.
In Spain, people often refer to the Argentine cases as offering a precedent.
But unlike Argentina, Spain never established a truth and reconciliation commission.
In fact, the country did the opposite, passing a broad amnesty law in the years following Franco's death that absolved members of the regime of most of their past crimes.
of the regime of most of their past crimes.
While those responsible for the abductions were not explicitly granted amnesty,
the policy did reflect a consensus
that had emerged in post-Franco Spain
to avoid confronting the dark legacy of the dictatorship.
The agreement even had a name,
the Pact of Forgetting.
Spain's leaders on both the right and left espoused the need for peaceful democracy,
even if it meant sacrificing popular calls for justice.
Let's not disturb the graves and hurl bones at one another.
Let the historians do their job, said José María Aznar,
a former prime minister, in a speech years later.
It's a sentiment that has endured to this day. Many mass graves belonging to victims of the
nationalists killed during the civil war remain untouched, despite pleas from family members to
exhume and identify the bodies. The Valley of the Fallen, a Catholic basilica and paean to
the fascist dictatorship, still overlooks the capital. And for the stolen babies of the era,
now middle-aged adults like Pindal, there has been no official acknowledgement of what occurred
in the hospitals, no apology from the government or church for the kidnappings
and no clear starting points
for finding answers.
Pintado, like many others,
would have to become the detective
in the case of her own kidnapping,
tasked with hunting for the parents
she never knew. Campo de Cliptana offered what felt like an ideal childhood for Pindalo. The village lies
off a highway running south from Madrid, where the cityscape of the capital gradually gives way to vineyards and wheat fields.
On the hill above the town sit giant white windmills from the 16th century,
which residents say inspired those in Don Quixote.
Pintado cherished her memories of the winding streets,
of her parents, of the shop that her father had run,
the Manuel Pintado Bakery.
As a little girl,
she liked to play among the egg boxes he unloaded while her mother
sold croissants and madeleines
to the customers.
Now, as an adult,
she realized that she may have
never really known her parents at all.
They had kept a secret from her,
and she was determined to find out who else had known. She began by approaching a neighbor who had been a close friend of her parents.
Armed with the papers from her garage, she and her husband, Jesús Ignacio Monreal,
knocked on her door. I've come to find out some things, Bintalo said bluntly after walking inside.
Tell me what happened. Tell me how I was born.
The family friend admitted to having always known about the adoption, but said she knew little beyond that.
Bintalo asked the neighbor to think back, recall whatever she could, even details that didn't seem important.
She was with Pintalo's parents, the neighbor remembered, the night they brought her home
from the hospital. They stood on the street and the couple showed her the baby's face,
which looked like a little angel's. But there had been something strange about the encounter too.
Pintalo's father had insisted,
his body shaking with anger,
that no one should ever tell their new daughter that she was adopted.
It was to remain a secret.
And so the neighbor didn't bring it up again
until Pintado and Monreal asked her that night.
As Pintado's husband listened,
he wasn't entirely surprised by the story.
Many years ago, Monreal heard rumors that his wife had been adopted, but he never mentioned them.
Not when they were young and telling each other their life stories.
Not through years of marriage in which they had three children together.
My own husband, she told me.
He also knew, and he didn't tell me because he
thought I knew it already, like it was some kind of intimate secret of mine and I didn't want to
let it out. Monreal thinks he did bring it up at least once to his wife, after Petra snatched away
the inheritance papers. But he didn't push Pintado on it. Monreal tended to
avoid confrontations. He grew up in the town, too, and knew the subject of adoptions could be
a difficult one. Few places were more traditional than Campo de Criptana, where life centered on
religious charities, the confradías, each one with its own meeting hall dedicated to a different figure in the Bible.
Both Monreal and Pintado knew that for her Catholic mother,
not being able to have a family of her own would have been a source of shame.
Just one more secret in a town full of them.
But hearing the neighbor describe her father's anger,
they realized that the truth might be even darker.
Her parents weren't acting out of embarrassment.
They may have been trying to cover up a crime.
Pintalo decided to go to Campo de Criptana's town hall to ask for a copy of her civil registry document,
which would include a few more details about her birth.
A worker went into the archive
and produced a paper, marked with a Spanish coat of arms, that said that Pintado had been registered
under a different last name than her parents. Bardo López, the same last name she thought she
saw in the inheritance documents that her mother had taken from her. In scratchy handwriting that was hard to make out,
the document said that the parents' first names were
Miguel and María.
Pintado now had documents
that essentially said she was born,
twice,
to the woman who raised her
and to this couple she knew nothing about.
Pintado continued her search, knocking on doors throughout her village,
hoping that other people would finally be willing to share what they knew now that both of her parents were gone.
A few of her parents' friends had died in recent years, and others claimed ignorance.
But one neighbor offered a story Pintalo had never heard.
When her mother was alive, she and her group of friends would get together on Saturdays.
After a few hours, Petra would, let a few things escape, the neighbor said,
including a story about the night Pintalo was brought home from Madrid.
Petra told the group, almost boastfully,
that she had been asked by those involved in the adoption to wear a pillow under her dress to appear pregnant when she went to the hospital.
She also said that she had paid a large sum of money for the adoption.
Pintalo could barely process what she was hearing.
assess what she was hearing. If her mother had pretended to be pregnant, if her birth certificate was forged, if her parents had offered a large payment for her, then they must have known exactly
what they were involved in. They had actively played a role in her kidnapping. Her love for
them had been built on a shared story that she now knew wasn't true.
She could feel her sense of betrayal curdling into anger.
You want to ask them, why have you done this? Why?
Pintalo told me.
I'm not the kind of person who could rob a daughter of another mother.
Daughter of another mother.
Back in her garage, among her deceased mother's papers,
Pintalo found one more clue.
Her mother had saved a set of greeting cards from a Catholic nun in Madrid.
One showed Joseph and Mary in a nativity scene.
A second portrayed a woman in a gown, holding an infant.
May your child, who I remember,
be an encouragement for you to continue living full of dreams.
It read.
Pintalo recalled visiting a nun in Madrid as a child.
She remembered the train to the capital,
her mother leaving Pintalo outside while she delivered an envelope with money.
She couldn't remember the nun's name,
but there it was, signed at the bottom of the card. Sister Maria Gomez Valbuena.
Pintado did an internet search for the name and found scores of allegations of abductions,
many of which sounded much like her own. Case after case led to the hospital where she was born.
The first public accusations that babies were being sold in Spain came as early as the 1980s.
A cover of a popular women's magazine ran a headline in 1989 that read,
Baby Trafficking in Madrid. They took my daughter without letting me see her.
In the pages that followed,
a desperate mother told the story of how a doctor named Eduardo Vela
tried to get her to sign adoption papers
after she came out of anesthesia
during childbirth.
Her baby, she said,
was sold for 380,000 pesetas, the equivalent of several thousand dollars.
Yet Spain's pact of forgetting held.
As more accusations emerged that babies had been stolen, the accounts were mostly ignored.
The country's judges, many of them holdovers from the Franco era, refused to take the cases.
many of them holdovers from the Franco era, refused to take the cases.
And while Franco's regime fell in the 1970s,
the hospital system continued to be run by the same nuns for years.
It would take a new prime minister for something to finally change.
In 2004, the conservative government was defeated by José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero,
a socialist who came into office with plans to address the taboos of the past.
Zapatero ordered the last remaining statue of Franco in Madrid to be hauled away.
Then, as Zapatero's urging, Spain passed its historical memory law in 2007,
which condemned the crimes of the Franco era and recognized its victims for the first time.
A new generation of victims began to emerge, this time led not by the mothers who had lost their babies, but by their children, now grown, who were seeking their biological parents.
They formed grassroots organizations like the National Association
for Irregular Adoption Victims, which estimated that as many as 15% of the adoptions in Spain
from 1965 to 1990 were performed without consent of the birth parents.
In 2011, the group filed its first lawsuit on behalf of 261 people claiming to be victims of the kidnappings.
The filing caused a sensation in the country,
leading more to come forward.
Within a month, the number of cases had grown to 747.
As the pressure mounted, Zapatero's Attorney General,
Candido Condepumido Turrón, began his own investigation.
He soon discovered a pattern.
Though victims had filed many complaints over the decades, judges had simply archived case after case, citing statutes of limitations.
Conde Pumido didn't agree with these dismissals and told me recently the state needed to get to the bottom of what happened, then sort out the questions of who was to blame.
Officials began actively investigating the kidnappings and the number of cases ballooned to more than 2,000.
The first suspect to emerge was Vela, the gynecologist who was named in the 1989 article.
emerge was Vela, the gynecologist who was named in the 1989 article. Officials had interviewed a woman who accused Vela of forging her birth certificate and believed the doctor illegally
sold her without her birth mother's consent. Officials were also developing a case around
Sister Maria Gomez Valbuena, the nun Pintado remembered visiting as a child and who had also
worked closely with Vela.
Among the potential witnesses who came forward in the case against Sister Maria
was a janitor who had worked in the hospital. When I talked to the janitor, I.M., this spring,
she asked that only her initials be published because she feared retaliation for having worked
in the clinic. She said Sister Maria's office in Santa Cristina was located on the second floor,
downstairs from the nursery for the newborns,
where red and blue cradles sat along the wall.
On the fifth floor were charity beds where unwed and poor mothers
who required state assistance were covered after giving birth.
I cleaned her office, she said. I saw everything.
I.M. started working at the clinic when she was a teenager and remembers Sister Maria being severe
and unrelenting. But it was the nun's behavior toward the unwed women on the charity floor that
surprised her the most. Sister Maria would refer to them as heathens and subversives, sometimes to their faces.
Many of the babies had been reported dead, Ayam said, including some she had seen alive
in their incubators hours before. There were rumors that the body of at least one newborn
was preserved in a refrigerator, though I.M. never knew why.
Some I interviewed said that mothers who demanded to see the remains of their children were shown corpses of other babies.
She also remembered a blue notebook that sat on Sister Maria's desk in the clinic.
Inside were lists of names,
many of which I.M. recognized as prospective parents she had seen visiting the nun.
They came to the clinic in the morning, always with a check. Sister Maria would interview them
for several hours, and if things went well, the families left with the baby that afternoon.
In another column of the notebook, I.M. had also seen numbers marked in pesetas.
book, I.M. had also seen numbers marked in pesetas. The amounts didn't seem like donations to her. Some of the figures amounted to weeks of wages. I.M. never told anyone what she saw
during those years. She hadn't, she said, because it would have been her word against that of the hospital. Back then, women were nothing, she told me. You had to
submit to your father, then to your husband, and then to the state. The janitor's account was among
several similar stories that were appearing in the media as the investigations under Zapatero
were underway. David Rodriguez, then a student in Madrid who took his story to local
journalists, said that his mother had told him she paid 60,000 pesetas to Sister María when she
adopted him. Rodríguez had even met with Sister María, who denied the claims and said she couldn't
offer him more information about his adoption because of her faulty memory. In 2011, the nun made similar statements during an interview with Arroyo,
the investigative journalist, and said,
Adoptees shouldn't be looking for their biological parents
because they're not going to find them.
As the search for her mother continued,
Pintalo realized she needed to look beyond her neighbors in Campo de
Criptana if she wanted more answers. In the fall of 2017, she came across an organization called
SOS, Stolen Babies, a grassroots group of victims searching for family members,
with chapters throughout Spain. Pintalo met with the founder of the group,
Maricruz Rodrigo, who gave birth to her second child in 1980.
Five days later, a doctor told her the baby had died of a heart attack in an incubator
and refused to let Rodrigo see the body. As the years passed, Rodrigo started to doubt the story.
She warned Pintado that the road ahead would
be difficult. Only a dozen of the nearly 400 SOS members had ever found their families.
Rodrigo still had no idea if her own child was alive or what his reaction would be when learning
the truth. If I find him, he won't be my son. He will simply be a man who I gave birth to,
Rodrigo told me. But Rodrigo encouraged Pintado to continue her search, pointing her to a Madrid
government office that had helped SOS members get information on birth mothers through records
requests. Pintado was willing to try anything, so while she reached out to
that office, she also opted for something that was more of a long shot. Writing letters to any
families she could find, with the surnames Pardo and López. López is a common name in Spain.
Nearly one in every 50 people has that last name, which meant that Pintalo would need to write
hundreds of
thousands of letters if she was to have any chance of finding her mother. But she had sold the family
bakery where she had worked much of her life. Her children were older now, and there were suddenly
many more hours in the day to fill. No task seemed too futile or inconsequential. What if her mother opened one of the letters?
She picked up her pen and wrote to a random family in her rounded cursive script.
I am Anna Belen.
I am writing because I am looking for my biological family.
Just by chance I have found your name and address.
I am a stolen baby. I'm desperate to find
my family and I'm asking you if by any chance in your family there were ever suspicions about this.
Please write to me even if it's not the case so I can eliminate people as it's been hard work
and I spent a lot of time searching. I'm sorry to bother you and for this coming out
of the blue, but at this time, I've got no other leads. Sincerely, Ana Melen.
She was like Don Quixote and I was like Sancho Panza, Monreal said of his wife.
He wanted to do what he could and started reading drafts and helping her write letters.
She wrote to dozens of families from the suburbs of Madrid to Murcia, a small region on the Mediterranean coast.
They even received a few replies.
They said things like, look, this isn't us, but we support you.
And if you find them, write to us, Pintalo said.
But no one wrote back, claiming to be her mother.
Sometime after sending the first batch of letters, she received a call from someone at the Madrid government office.
Rodrigo had suggested she contact for possible leads.
The official said she had been able to find the first name for her mother
in the hospital records.
But the name wasn't Maria,
which had been listed
on her civil registry document.
That name, it would seem,
had been forged.
Her mother's real name
was Pilar.
The official told Pintado
that the search also surfaced
a place of birth for the mother,
a province called Ávila, a short drive west of Madrid.
The mother was 23 when Pintado was born.
It wasn't much, but Pintado grew hopeful again.
Now, she would search for Pilar.
One of the most highly publicized cases working its way through the court system against Sister
Maria involved Purificación Betegón, whose story about the disappearance of her children in 1981
shocked many throughout the country. When I met Betegón, she told me that in those years she was
living with her boyfriend and pregnant with her second child.
Before heading to the clinic,
Medegong expected that her two-year-old son
would soon have a younger brother
or a sister to keep him company.
But when she went into labor,
there was a surprise.
The doctor informed her
that she would be giving birth
to twins.
Both babies were healthy,
she was told.
The orderly said to me, Uri,
you've given birth to precious children. The twins were quickly rushed elsewhere,
and Bedegon was wheeled into a dark room. When a nurse came in, Bedegon asked her,
what am I doing here? I'm not in my room. The nurse didn't answer, instead telling her that Sister Maria had told her to prepare the twins for adoption. And I said, who the hell is Sister Maria? The next day,
a friend arrived to check in on her, and Betegong immediately demanded to see the babies in their
incubators, leaning on her friend's shoulder as they went to the third floor.
It was the first time she had seen her children. They were so tiny, she thought, and shared her fair skin. They were girls, identical from what Bethegon could tell. But again, Bethegon was told
that the babies were up for adoption. She grew angry and threw herself against the glass that separated her from the incubators.
Pedegón demanded to see Sister María and found her alone in her office. She asked Sister María
why she had been told her children were going to be adopted. And she told me,
well, it's that you're young and you already have a child. You haven't married yet. I told her,
this is my problem,
not yours, and my daughters are my daughters. And she said, but they can be with a family.
Bethegon continued to push back. Eventually, Sister Maria relented,
saying there had been a misunderstanding and the adoption would be called off.
That afternoon, a doctor arrived at Bethegon's room to tell her that one
of the twins had died. Bethegon was shocked. I started crying because at first I thought they
were telling me the truth, she said. Then a few minutes later, the same doctor came down and said
the other one had died. Bethegon, no longer believing him, forced her way into the nursery with the incubators
and once again saw her two daughters.
She asked the doctors why she had been told they were dead
when they were still clearly alive.
A doctor told her that they were brain dead.
I said, look, I don't understand medicine,
but as far as I know, a brain dead person can't move, Bethegon said.
She went to Sister Maria's office one last time.
The nun asked her what name she had chosen for her children.
Betegon said she wanted to name them Cheresade and Desiree.
She told me these aren't very Catholic names.
When Betegon returned to the incubators, the babies were gone. This time, when she asked
to see her children, she was taken to a morgue. A doctor pulled out two small bodies. Wrapped in
white, they seemed much larger than her daughters. Betegón took a close look at their faces.
Betegón took a close look at their faces.
They weren't my children, she said.
She never saw Sister María again.
For years, Betegón thought that even if people believed her story,
no one would be held accountable.
But decades later, in 2011,
she heard about a protest taking place in Madrid,
one of the first gatherings of stolen babies, and decided to attend.
A representative from one of the victims' groups took down her information, and a prosecutor from Madrid got in touch with Betegón and asked her to give a deposition.
The prosecutor said they were building a case against Sister Maria. I am looking forward to the trial so I can look into Sister Maria's face,
Betegon told reporters in 2012.
She filed her own complaint against Sister Maria shortly afterward.
Betegon would never see Sister Maria in court.
No one would.
In 2013, the nuns of her convent awoke to find Sister Maria dead at age 87.
She was never formally charged, and she never admitted to selling babies. The Catholic Church also never publicly acknowledged what role it played in the kidnappings. But it is widely
understood that for decades, certain nuns, empowered by a dictatorship that allowed them to operate with impunity, had taken it upon themselves to decide who had the right to raise a child and who did not.
The case of Eduardo Vela, the doctor who faced allegations from the 1980s, would fall apart years later, after the court dismissed the charges against him,
citing the statute of limitations. To further complicate matters, the victim later said she
had learned that her mother had, in fact, willingly given her up for adoption. Spain's
first recognized stolen baby was not one at all. Of 2,186 cases under investigation, none resulted in a conviction.
Prosecutors told me the problem wasn't that they doubted that the victims were telling the truth,
but that the cases lacked evidence. The crimes took place decades ago. They pitted one mother's
word against that of an elderly nun or doctor.
For someone who is 80 years old,
is it right to convict them for something they did when they were 40?
Conde Pompido, the former attorney general, asked me.
And so out of desperation, some victims turned to another outlet, one that gave them hope, however slim,
that they would be reunited with their biological families.
By the 2010s, daytime talk shows had begun dedicating much of their airtime to the stolen
babies scandal. Producers assembled street crews, interviewing witnesses anonymously with voice
alteration, or wore hidden cameras as they confronted doctors and nurses at their apartments.
cameras as they confronted doctors and nurses at their apartments.
In many ways, these shows were doing the previously unthinkable, publicly addressing the horrors of the Franco era.
But they were sensationalizing those horrors, too, for the millions of viewers at home.
In an early 2011 episode of El Diario, an afternoon talk show in which guests would air out family conflicts.
A presenter introduced Alejandro Alcalde, a middle-aged father who was trying to find
the mother of his adopted daughter. As Alcalde shared the details of his life,
the camera cut to an unidentified woman backstage, sitting on a white couch.
Her back turned to the camera. On the bottom of the screen flashed the words,
I'm looking for my daughter.
They stole her from me the moment she was born.
The father was then shown on a split screen
alongside dramatic footage of a car driving up to the studio.
A woman in a white lab coat emerged from the car
and pulled out a large envelope containing DNA evidence,
proving that the mysterious woman on the couch was in fact the mother of the child.
The family was reunited as the audience cheered.
The wave of media attention also had some unexpected consequences.
Any mother who had a stillborn child now had reason to believe the baby might be alive and well, and simply living with another family.
A 2013 segment from La Mañana, a Spanish morning show, opens with a scene in a cemetery as men with hard hats and hammers cracked open a tomb.
Inside was a small white coffin, clearly made for a baby.
The reporter who stood just outside the tomb turned to the mother, who was dressed in black.
She said that after giving birth, she was told by the hospital that her child was stillborn,
but she now suspected that her child was stolen, even though the baby was born in 1992,
nearly a decade after the last documented
kidnappings. The coffin was not empty as she had hoped. A DNA test of the remains later confirmed
that the baby was her child. Pintalo, like millions of other viewers, had seen the talk shows and had even been contacted by one of them.
After her father's death,
a producer on El Diario called her at home,
claiming that she might have had an identical twin.
Pintado hung up on the caller.
But years later,
while searching for her mother
and pulling on any thread she could,
she went to the studio in person.
Producers couldn't find any files on her case.
Perhaps they had just been fishing that day,
following a dead-end lead.
So Pintado decided to go on a talk show, herself.
I'm going to introduce you all to Ana Belén,
began the host Viva La Vida in January 2018. The camera zoomed in on Pintalo,
who was visibly nervous. The host continued,
This is what I believe television is for. This woman is looking for her biological family,
and you all are watching from home. Now, we need you to give us any leads or clues so she can realize her dream
of finding her family. Pintado began to tell her story. There was the forged paperwork from after
she was born, the visits to Madrid with envelopes of money. Pintado explained that she had learned
that the local church had likely helped connect her parents to Sister Maria.
Someone, she said, had even told her that her adopted mother had pretended to stumble into
the room where her biological mother had given birth to see what she looked like,
and found the mother grieving. If anyone is seeing this and recognizes me, well,
the truth is I would like to meet them
because I have always been alone,
Pintado says
as the screen fades.
Pintado was hopeful
that someone would call
with information.
As time passed,
no one did.
But she wouldn't allow herself
to feel discouraged.
After she had gone public about the harm that had been done to her,
it was as if a switch had been flipped.
She would never stop looking for her mother,
so she decided to call every journalist she could find.
Over the next months, the story of Pintado's search appeared in numerous print outlets,
from La Vanguardia, one of Spain's largest broadsheets, to La Tribuna de Ciudad Real, the province where her town sits.
It was a big fat lie, she said of her childhood to the reporter from the society section of El Economista, a financial publication popular among Spain's elites.
among Spain's elites.
Pintado also appeared on podcasts,
radio programs,
and television channels,
including one in which a news crew traveled to her home
and asked residents what they knew.
The media appearances
were starting to take a toll
on her relationships
within Campo de Criptana.
Her parents had many loyal friends,
especially her mother,
who belonged to several
Catholic associations
until she died.
One day,
Pindalo was in a grocery store
with her daughter
when a friend of her mother
sidled up to her.
The two exchanged pleasantries
at first,
but then the friend
took a more aggressive tone.
Why do you need to keep looking
for your family?
You have a family.
The question upset Pintalo.
Yes, her mother and father had given her a good upbringing.
But they have stolen a mother from me, and I can't go along with that,
she told the neighbor before walking off.
One evening, after returning from another television appearance,
Pintalo decided to write to a WhatsApp group of her mother's family to get a sense of how they were feeling about her search.
Everyone knows what a mess I'm in right now, and the media have been asking me what my family
thinks of this, she wrote. What should I tell them? A cousin was among the first to reply.
I tell them.
A cousin was among the first to reply.
Good evening.
I have always loved you.
Regardless of whether you're adopted, you belong to this family.
I think it's great you want to find your biological parents.
But I think your adopted parents deserve some respect.
Who knows if you were a stolen baby or not.
But I'm sure my family could have never known you were stolen.
I agree, wrote another family member in the group. You've gone and said this everywhere,
and the least you could have done was approach us, wrote the cousin.
Another family member replied, claiming that Pintado had known about the adoption all, and had even asked her biological parents about it when she was 12.
It was a baseless accusation, Pintado said, but the message was clear.
Some in her family preferred to believe Pintado was the one who lied, not her parents.
It was starting to feel as if nothing was going to break Pintado's way.
The press appearances didn't appear to surface any leads.
Her relatives had seemingly turned against her.
Then one night in July 2018, she got a phone call that changed everything.
The man on the line wished to remain anonymous, he told Pintado.
The man on the line wished to remain anonymous, he told Pintado.
He had read her story in a local newspaper and was an intimate friend of a woman named Pilar Villora Garcia,
someone who lost a child around the same time that Pintado was born.
Would she like to take down Pilar's number?
Pintado called it right away.
As soon as she picked up, I said,
I was a stolen baby
and I am looking
for my biological mother
and an anonymous person
has called me
and said that you might
be my mother.
There was a pause
on the other end of the line
and she could hear
a commotion in the background,
the sound of many people.
Let me call you back,
an older woman's voice said.
The line cut off.
For a moment, Pintado wasn't sure what to do.
Perhaps the woman felt ambushed.
Five minutes passed, then the phone rang.
Okay, said the woman, after Pintado picked up.
What are the dates?
The two women compared notes. The delivery and birth dates matched.
The city matched. And the maternity clinic, Santa Cristina, matched as well. Only one thing
seemed off. The government office told Pintado that her mother gave birth to her when she was 23,
that her mother gave birth to her when she was 23,
not 24, the age that Pilar remembered.
But she was first seen by a gynecologist the year before,
which might have been the source of the error.
So my mother, or the woman I believed was my mother,
she tells me that was the only thing that didn't match.
And when I had more information to call her,
Pintalo said. Pintado could feel
she was close to solving her case. Months before, when she contacted the Madrid government,
they told her they had found only a first name for her biological mother.
Now she called them again to see if they had any more information.
They said there was, including a full name.
The name matched that of the woman
she had spoken to.
Pintado called Pilar back
right away.
I know who my mother is,
she told her,
and it's you.
Pintado saw her mother The End roughly at the halfway point between their homes, an hour's drive away. Pintado arrived with her husband and children.
Pilar came with a friend.
I was on edge.
I knew this might be good.
It might be bad.
I didn't know what I was going to find, Pintado told me.
But as the two groups approached each other, Pilar started running toward Pintado.
Do you still not know who your mother is? Pilar started running toward Pintado. Do you still not know
who your mother is? Pilar asked Pintado, joking. The two women hugged each other and began to cry.
Pilar had a look at Pintado's children, her grandchildren, and embraced each of them.
Over dinner, Pilar told Pintado her life story. She was born in a small mountain village
called Lanzahita, and her parents took her to live in Madrid at age 12. She met her husband
and married young. Pilar had two children, José Luis, whom she named after her husband in 1968,
in 1968 and Francisco in 1972. The next year, she was pregnant for a third time,
and she wondered if it might be a girl. Perhaps they would name her after her mother, Angela.
Pilar first visited the clinic in April of that year to see an obstetrician.
She didn't remember seeing a nun there, but her hospital file indicates that Sister Maria most likely noticed Pilar. In handwriting that closely matches the letters
the nun sent to Pintado's family, the word charity is written in Spanish, referring to the area in
the hospital here the nun supposedly selected her targets. On July 9, 1973, Pilar felt contractions and returned to Santa Cristina.
It was an easy birth with no complications. She even remembers holding her baby for a brief moment.
But then the baby was taken away and someone came to put an anesthesia mask over Pilar's face.
She cried when this happened. It was as though
she knew something terrible was coming. When she woke up again, a doctor and nurse told her
the baby was stillborn. The hospital would handle the paperwork and the burial. It never occurred to
her that they had lied. Bilad had never gone searching for her daughter because she had thought there was no daughter to look for.
Now, she was sitting right there, a grown woman with a family and an entire life story that Pilar was only starting to know.
As Pilar talked, Pintado noticed how similar they seemed.
They both had green eyes.
Pilar was also animated like Pintado, jumping from one story to the next.
As she let her mother catch her breath, Pintado began to tell her own story
about Campo de Criptana and the couple who had raised her.
She talked about the search that began in her garage and led to her neighbors and television
studios, a journey which now seemed to have reached its conclusion that night at the dinner
table. The visits continued. Pilar came down to Campo de Criptana to celebrate the feast day of
the Virgin of Pilar, for whom she was named. Pintado traveled to Madrid to meet her biological father,
who she learned was battling cancer.
The two women eventually took a DNA test,
which confirmed what they already knew.
Pintado, who once told television viewers she had always felt alone,
now had two siblings.
One of them worked in southern Spain during the weekdays,
and when he and Pintado realized her town was a short detour from his weekend commute home,
he started stopping in Campo de Criptana.
Pintado would make him sandwiches, and they ate them together,
trading stories about their childhoods.
Pintado accomplished what almost no one in her position had managed to do.
She found her family. Her happiness was palpable. At a time when so many people she knew were losing
their parents to old age, when she herself had lost the people who raised her, she gained two
parents. And yet for all her relief, some small part of Pintalo couldn't shake the feeling that something was missing.
if the energy she had put into the search, the letters she wrote by hand, the calls she made to journalists, the hours she spent telling people her story, the doors she knocked on and the
uncomfortable conversations she had, needed to be redirected toward something else. An acknowledgement
that she had been robbed of her birth parents. She needed someone to tell her that what happened was wrong.
She needed an apology. She needed, she realized, for someone to be punished.
Pintalo continued to search. This time, she was looking for a man named Jose Maria Castillo Diaz,
the doctor who delivered her and signed the paperwork.
Pintado hired a lawyer and, in January 2019, filed a case against Castillo Díaz in a criminal court
in Madrid. A judge accepted the case and Castillo Díaz was ordered to appear at a hearing where he
confirmed that his name was on the paperwork. But then in March of last year,
Castillo Diaz died. The news left Pintado devastated. The whole world needs to know the
facts, she told me. I have found my mother, my father, my brothers in record time. And we get on great. We talk every day sometimes. But I need justice.
Laura Figueredo, one of Pintado's close friends, said she understood her dilemma and has even
spoken to her about it. I've told her, you have your mother and your father. Why keep going after
the others in court? Figueredo said. I said, forget about it. Just enjoy what you have. Finish the chapter. Close the book.
This summer, Pintado was back at home in Campo de Criptana. It was a hot Saturday morning,
and she and Monreal were preparing for a large family lunch.
Her children chopped vegetables, and Monreal lit the grill downstairs.
If there was a rift between Pintado and her neighbors,
it seemed to be mending, even if slowly.
A local baker making the rounds through the town
stopped by for a bread delivery and a quick chat.
And so did several women who lived across the street.
When lunch was ready,
Pintado and Monreal sat at the table as their children served food.
The couple talked about when they were young
and spent long evenings under the windmills that sit above the town.
At one point, there was a bar in one of them.
Even in a place as traditional as Campo de Criptana,
things could change, Monreal said.
Pintado was thinking about her mother again.
She had hired a new lawyer, she said,
who was asking for more documents in the case.
There are going to be some names on those papers that we're getting,
she told Monreal.
I'm sure of it.
But what if those people are a hundred years old? Her husband asked.
We have the name of a midwife now, she said. But is she responsible for anything? Monreal said.
He tried changing the subject. Pintado's birthday was coming up and Pilar would be taking the train
to spend the weekend with them. During Pintado's search for coming up and Pilar would be taking the train to spend the weekend with them.
During Pintado's search for her mother, her birthday felt more like the anniversary of her kidnapping.
But now, there was cause to celebrate.
Monreal said he was planning a surprise.
Pintado smiled, thinking about her mother.
We lost 45 years and you can't get those back, she said.
But when I see my mother now, it's like looking at a girl with new shoes.
She tells everyone she sees in the street,
they stole my daughter, but now we've found each other.