A woman recently went viral for her journey to reconnect with her Latino roots. In a TikTok video posted on January 10 that has since gone on to amass 1.5 million views and over 200,000 likes, Christy Checketts of Logan, Utah, shows herself with a tear running down her cheek while swaying to Bad Bunny’s “Debí Tirar Más Fotos.”

Her caption reads, “POV you’re adopted from Colombia and grew up Mormon in Idaho and listening to Bad Bunny makes your soul feel alive but you have no idea what he’s even saying.”

Speaking exclusively toBored Panda, the 36-year-old revealed that her video just scratched the surface of a powerful story intertwined with the complexities of the Mormon religion and South American culture—all against the backdrop of Colombia’s troubling history with corrupt international adoptions.

Now, she’s started a GoFundMe to finally meet her birth mother in person and hopes her journey can inspire other adoptees struggling with questions about their past.

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The content creator is unclear about the rest of the details, which is part of why she so desperately wants to return to Colombia. She knows that some time afterward, she was placed in an orphanage in Bucaramanga, but her biological mother still had access to her.

Woman discovers disturbing truth about her adoption while raised by a Mormon family, looking surprised.

In Checketts’ case, the lawyer was a member of the LDS Church to whom her adopted parents were “very spiritually connected.” It’s unclear to what extent any Mormon members or authorities were aware of the questionable nature of this or any other adoption, but the now ex-mormon did reveal that her birth mother was baptized into the church. “She was under the assumption that it would help her keep me somehow.”

Now, she has a negative view of the religion. “She asks, ‘Are you still Mormon?’ And I’m like, ‘No,’ and she says, ‘Good, they’re crap.’” For her part, though, she left the church years ago. Checketts just wants to help others “find peace even if it means being in the religion.”

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The Logan-based yoga instructor also makes it clear that she had a good relationship with her parents, who passed away in 2015, around the time she connected with her biological family over Facebook. “I love and appreciate them both more than words can say,” she wrote on herGoFundMe page.

Nevertheless, she did confide that she always felt like an outsider in the traditionally white community of Idaho Mormons. “It’s like, you’re brown. You’re Mexican. So I’m not white,” she said.

She felt like there was a lot of “conditional love” in her community. “We’ll be here for you as long as you stay in this box. But as soon as you step out of this box, we have a problem.”

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However, when it comes to Latino culture, Checketts feels “connected to a home I desire to know.” Since posting her journey on TikTok, she’s received a wave of support from other Colombians and Latinos.

“All Latín in the club we are fam,” said one viewer.

“Hey — Colombian! My family always has room for one more at the table,” said another. “Seriously. You are us. We are you. That’s how this works.”

Many simply said, “Come home.”

Checketts has started a GoFundMe so that she can take her two children to visit her biological family in Colombia

Woman in orange dress holding a baby, related to shady adoption story.

That’s precisely what Checketts plans to do. Her GoFundMe aims to raise $4,000 so that she can take her two children to visit her biological family in Colombia, a story she hopes will inspire others in similar situations.

“I want to go home.”

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