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Do you believe in fate? Japanese man born to wealthy parents is accidentally switched at birth and e

thesolar65

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Japanese man switched at birth and grew up in poverty, only to discover the infant he had traded places with had grown up in luxury

By Julian Ryall, Tokyo

3:02PM GMT 28 Nov 2013

A Japanese man born to wealthy parents grew up in poverty after being given to another couple in a hospital six decades ago, while the infant who took his place went to live a privileged life of private tutoring, university and is today head of a property firm

The 60-year-old man - who has declined to give his name - was raised reliant on hand-outs from the state after the man he thought was his father died when he was just two. The woman he considered his mother had to support his three older brothers and there were few comforts in their one-room apartment as he grew up.

The man had to study at night-school while working day shifts in a factory before finding steady employments as a driver with a transport company. He never married and helps take care of three men who are not his brothers, including one who has suffered a stroke.

Meanwhile, the infant that was given to the man’s biological parents was born 13 minutes later at the San-Ikukai Hospital, in Tokyo’s Sumida Ward, and grew up in relative affluence.

The boy had a personal tutor, went to university and is the head of a successful real estate company. His three other brothers work for major companies, according to media reports.

Questions were only raised when the three brothers of the man who was given to the wealthy family recently realised that he bore little resemblance to any of his relatives.

In 2011, the family requested access to hospital records and DNA tests subsequently confirmed the mistake.

The error apparently happened when a midwife took the new-born babies away to be bathed and then returned them to the wrong mothers.

Speaking to media in Tokyo, the man condemned to a life of hardship described his shock at learning the people he grew up believing to be his parents and brothers were unrelated to him.

“I wondered how on earth this could have happened,” he said. “I could not believe it. To be honest, I did not want to accept it.”

The Tokyo District Court on Tuesday ordered the hospital to pay the man Y38 million (£227,346) in damages as a result of the mix-up, significantly less than the Y250 million (£1.5 million) the plaintiffs had been seeking.

“The links between the man and his real parents were severed and the man was forced to grow up in a poor home,” Judge Masatoshi Miyasaka said in his ruling. “The mental anguish he went through was enormous.

“There were far-reaching differences between the two family environments and the plaintiff suffered an unreasonable loss as a result,” the ruling said.

“It is impossible to assess the scale of the pain and disappointment both the parents and the man had to suffer, as they were deprived of opportunities to enjoy their parent-child relationship for ever.”

The man’s biological parents both died before the error came to light and he is still coming to terms with the impact of the events of 60 years ago.

“I might have had a different life,” he said.

“I want [the hospital] to roll back the clock to the day that I was born.”

He is particularly angry at never having the opportunity to meet his real parents.

“As I saw picture of my parents, I wanted to see them alive,” he said. “For months, I could not hold back the tears every time I saw their pictures.”

He added that the woman who raised him as her son may have suspected that something was amiss.

“I think my foster mother may have sensed it,” he admitted, pointing to the physical differences between himself and his brothers.

The man who grew up impoverished would have been the oldest son in the family had he come home with his biological parents, leaving a question mark over the position of the man who took his place if he took over the family business, as is often the case in Japanese families.

His three real brothers, who insisted that the DNA test be carried out on the man they grew up believing was their oldest brother, have told their biological brother that they want to build a relationship and make up for the years they have lost.

"I was happy to hear that and it's what I want to do," the man said.

The hospital initially attempted to have the case dismissed on the grounds that the 10-year statute of limitations had run out. The court dismissed that claim and ruled that the statute of limitations only began when the results of the DNA tests were confirmed.

The hospital has not confirmed whether it will appeal the ruling.

Japanese man born to wealthy parents is accidentally switched at birth and endures life of poverty - Telegraph

@levina @Srinivas @jbgt90 @DRAY @Flamingo @Alpha1 @Janmejay @danish_vij @joekrish @Armstrong
@desert warrior
Does any one remember "The Prince and the Pauper" by Mark Twain. I just posted be cause I likes the story and could be made into a movie!!
 
the guy is a wuss, hes 60 years old and is seeking compensation and angry. Life is what you make it, sure for the first 2 decades you struggled, but you could have made a life for yourself. Life is what you make of it, especially in a country like Japan where there is no BS like caste and ethnic discriminiation, they are purely homogenous in that regard.

Reminds of a story i read a few years ago, similar situation switched at birth but was discovered when both kids turned 2 years old. Both family decided to raise the wrong kids as their own, the story was published when the kids had turned into their teens.
 
lol classic :cheesy:

I wonder if this had been in China, would this be a communist plot?

But seriously though, is there a farmer version of me somewhere in China. lol
 
Wow!!!!
Early in the morning i get to read a complete movie script.....it sounds like a typical Bollywood movie.
Reminds me movies like Seeta-Geeta...Salman khan's Judwa.
I know...i know the man in this story didnt have a twin.
But frankly speaking i think this man is still lucky that he came to know the truth in his lifetime.He could have died in poverty without realizing that he belonged to a very rich family....without getting the money that he'll get now.
Yet it must be really emotionally draining for him.
How much really can the money compensate for the love of his lost parents????


@thesolar65 Please dont attempt to make this into a movie.JMHO.:p:
 
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Wow!!!!
Early in the morning i get to read a complete movie script.....it sounds like a typical Bollywood movie.
Reminds me movies like Seeta-Geeta...Salman khan's Judwa.
I know...i know the man in this story didnt have a twin.
But frankly speaking i think this man is still lucky that he came to know the truth in his lifetime.He could have died in poverty without realizing that he belonged to a very rich family....without getting the money that he'll get now.
Yet it must be really emotionally draining for him.
How much really can the money compensate for the love of his lost parents????


@thesolar65 Please dont attempt to make this into a movie.JMHO.:p:

If I make a movie I will be in a situation where this fellow was (just before it was discovered)....:P

Atleast he did ;) look on the bright side

Yeah, the proverb can be changed "Naughty begins at Sixty"...;)

the silver linning is that he finaly united with his real family and they accept him, a happy ending

O.K if at all his "Pet aur pet ke neeche" is alright then he could use some of his money....:azn:
 
So, The parents now should get the DNA tested before moving out of hospital.
 
Japanese man switched at birth and grew up in poverty, only to discover the infant he had traded places with had grown up in luxury

By Julian Ryall, Tokyo

3:02PM GMT 28 Nov 2013

A Japanese man born to wealthy parents grew up in poverty after being given to another couple in a hospital six decades ago, while the infant who took his place went to live a privileged life of private tutoring, university and is today head of a property firm

The 60-year-old man - who has declined to give his name - was raised reliant on hand-outs from the state after the man he thought was his father died when he was just two. The woman he considered his mother had to support his three older brothers and there were few comforts in their one-room apartment as he grew up.

The man had to study at night-school while working day shifts in a factory before finding steady employments as a driver with a transport company. He never married and helps take care of three men who are not his brothers, including one who has suffered a stroke.

Meanwhile, the infant that was given to the man’s biological parents was born 13 minutes later at the San-Ikukai Hospital, in Tokyo’s Sumida Ward, and grew up in relative affluence.

The boy had a personal tutor, went to university and is the head of a successful real estate company. His three other brothers work for major companies, according to media reports.

Questions were only raised when the three brothers of the man who was given to the wealthy family recently realised that he bore little resemblance to any of his relatives.

In 2011, the family requested access to hospital records and DNA tests subsequently confirmed the mistake.

The error apparently happened when a midwife took the new-born babies away to be bathed and then returned them to the wrong mothers.

Speaking to media in Tokyo, the man condemned to a life of hardship described his shock at learning the people he grew up believing to be his parents and brothers were unrelated to him.

“I wondered how on earth this could have happened,” he said. “I could not believe it. To be honest, I did not want to accept it.”

The Tokyo District Court on Tuesday ordered the hospital to pay the man Y38 million (£227,346) in damages as a result of the mix-up, significantly less than the Y250 million (£1.5 million) the plaintiffs had been seeking.

“The links between the man and his real parents were severed and the man was forced to grow up in a poor home,” Judge Masatoshi Miyasaka said in his ruling. “The mental anguish he went through was enormous.

“There were far-reaching differences between the two family environments and the plaintiff suffered an unreasonable loss as a result,” the ruling said.

“It is impossible to assess the scale of the pain and disappointment both the parents and the man had to suffer, as they were deprived of opportunities to enjoy their parent-child relationship for ever.”

The man’s biological parents both died before the error came to light and he is still coming to terms with the impact of the events of 60 years ago.

“I might have had a different life,” he said.

“I want [the hospital] to roll back the clock to the day that I was born.”

He is particularly angry at never having the opportunity to meet his real parents.

“As I saw picture of my parents, I wanted to see them alive,” he said. “For months, I could not hold back the tears every time I saw their pictures.”

He added that the woman who raised him as her son may have suspected that something was amiss.

“I think my foster mother may have sensed it,” he admitted, pointing to the physical differences between himself and his brothers.

The man who grew up impoverished would have been the oldest son in the family had he come home with his biological parents, leaving a question mark over the position of the man who took his place if he took over the family business, as is often the case in Japanese families.

His three real brothers, who insisted that the DNA test be carried out on the man they grew up believing was their oldest brother, have told their biological brother that they want to build a relationship and make up for the years they have lost.

"I was happy to hear that and it's what I want to do," the man said.

The hospital initially attempted to have the case dismissed on the grounds that the 10-year statute of limitations had run out. The court dismissed that claim and ruled that the statute of limitations only began when the results of the DNA tests were confirmed.

The hospital has not confirmed whether it will appeal the ruling.

Japanese man born to wealthy parents is accidentally switched at birth and endures life of poverty - Telegraph

@levina @Srinivas @jbgt90 @DRAY @Flamingo @Alpha1 @Janmejay @danish_vij @joekrish @Armstrong
@desert warrior
Does any one remember "The Prince and the Pauper" by Mark Twain. I just posted be cause I likes the story and could be made into a movie!!
Yes it does remind me of the book :) did not know any one even read Mark Twain still:)
 

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