From Mail online - By LAURA HOUSE FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA
At just six-weeks-old, Roshani Priddis was adopted by
Australian couple Bruce and Narelle Priddis after her Sri Lankan mother and
father were unable to care for her due to extreme poverty.
The now 28-year-old lived a loving, comfortable childhood in
Tamworth, New South Wales, where she chased her dreams of becoming a singer.
But despite this, the former X Factor star felt as though
something was missing and often looked at photos of her mother taken on the day
she was adopted.
Appearing on 60 Minutes on Sunday night, Ms Priddis revealed
her dreams of meeting her birth mother as she travelled to her home country to
meet her mother Violet for the first time in 28 years.
'My life could have been so incredibly different and not
really a life at all,' Ms Priddis told reporter Allison Langdon.
'She's a big part of me but I don't know who she is...it's
weird loving someone so much that you don't know.'
Ms Priddis' Australian mother passed away in 2010 after a
three-year battle with cancer...and her dying wish was for her daughter to
finally meet with Violet.
'Her interest in this doesn't stop just because she's
crossed over... she's very much behind this,' the passionate artist said, who
hired a private investigator to assist with the search.
After years of searching, Ms Priddis finally received the
news that Violet had been found and not only was she alive and well, but she
couldn't wait to meet.
Once in Colombo, Sri Lanka with the 60 Minutes team and her
supportive father, brother and boyfriend by her side, Ms Priddis said she felt
'at home in a way.'
After 28 years, three months, five days and 'serious
butterflies', Ms Priddis was soon face to face with the woman who brought her
into the world.
'Time stood still and it's just so emotional,' a teary-eyed
Ms Priddis said, 'it was instant familiarity I didn't know what to expect.'
Violet revealed the pain involved in letting go of Ms
Priddis for the sake of her wellbeing, and in a final twist, revealed her
daughter had brothers and sisters as well.
'I feel a great happiness,' Violet said, 'Now that I’ve met
her, my fears about what might have happened to her have disappeared.'
The young star spent time with her family, getting to know
them and going through old photos with them to share her childhood.
'It feels so good,' Ms Priddis said, 'I didn't know how good
it was going to feel.'
And when asked what Mrs Priddis would be thinking, Ms
Priddis said she would be happy.
'She would be beyond happy,' she added.
A 'proud and humbled' Roshani has since taken to Facebook to
thank her 5,700 fans for their support and offer advice to those on journeys of
their own.
'Goodluck on your journeys. Each and every one of us had a
unique story,' she wrote.
'My biggest advice is, have an open heart with no expectations.
Adoption is the truest and most selfless manifestation of love itself, no
matter what the outcome of your journey to your motherland.....xxxx.'
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