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The world's least alike twins


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VIDEO: ON THE DUTCH TWINS
Dateline NBC
Twins: One black, one white
They were a loving couple with a simple dream: to have children. When they did, they found themselves pushed painfully into the headlines, known around the world.
Dateline NBC
Loving them both no matter what
The parents have no idea how they have set of twins, one black and one white -- but they're trying, for their sons' sake, to go on as normal.
Dateline NBC
Koen and Tuen speak out
For ten years, we have been following the Stuart family. For the parents it's been painful... but what has it been like for their children? Hear the first interview with the Stuart boys themselves.
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From toddlers to 4 years olds
As Wilma and Willem Stuart watched their babies grow from toddlers to rough and tumble 4 year olds, each with his own distinct personality, they never had the luxury of forgetting the extraordinary circumstances of the boys’ birth.

Wilma: It’s something that runs through your mind at least once or twice a day, everyday, every week, always. And they thought  it always would. 

The toddlers went to a small preschool several days a week,  as they played with other kids in their racially mixed neighborhood. The boys were already aware that the first thing adults noticed about them was their different skin colors. 

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Willem: Sometimes, they make jokes about it then they lay in the sun. Teun wants to get as brown as Koen is. And then after 15  minutes they lay on the back, on the belly, then they hold their hands together. Koen says “I won.  I am the brownest.” Then they'll laugh.

Wilma and Willem had been purposefully frank with the boys about their differences and what makes them so special. Wilma said Koen had two daddies because a doctor wasn’t careful. 

Wilma: Did he pay enough attention when he made you? “No, he didn’t. He mixed the colors from another daddy and that’s why I am brown, and Teun is white.”  

On some level, they understood.

Wilma: How many daddies does Koen have?

Koen: Two. 

Teun: Two. 

Wilma: A white one-- 

Teun and Koen: And a brown one.

Wilma: When I talk with him about his two daddies, he's always saying “I’ll keep this one, I don’t the other one.” So, cute, yeah. He doesn’t need the other one yet.  Maybe later when he is older.   

Then like now, the twins attracted looks and often unwanted attention. Koen was particularly aware of it.

Wilma: He walks up to these people saying, you don’t need to stare at me like that. People don’t expect children to be that frank but they are.  We teach them to be because they need, they need to be able to defend themselves against this kind of stuff when they are alone later.  

Teun and Koen at 8 years old
“Dateline” visited the boys again in 2002 when they were 8 years old. We found Tuen and Koen to be happy, healthy boys who loved tennis, swimming, and wrestling with each other.

It only took a few minutes with the boys to see how close they really were.

Wilma: I think they’re like real siblings. They love and hate. I mean, they fight occasionally and they hug and they take care of each other.  And I think they have a pretty normal relationship.

Not only with each other, but with other kids. It’s grownups who had trouble.  And they always asked the same questions.

Willem: Are they brothers? And then I can say, yes, they are twin brothers. But always you have to go through the first steps again.                              

The greater challenge was consoling Koen when people assumed he had been adopted.

Wilma: You see people looking at him as being the strange part of the family. Sometimes, it bothers me. Not everybody has the guts to come up and ask.  They’re just staring and wondering and making their own stories.  And that’s not nice.

Since the boys so often had to defend the fact that they are twins, the Stuarts thought it might be fun to celebrate being twins.

In 2002 they planned to attend the Twins Day festival in Ohio, an annual event for twins from all around the world.  The Stuarts were especially looking forward to the “least alike” competition. 

But then a few weeks before the festival the Stuarts were crushed to learn that Koen and Teun would not be allowed to participate because festival organizers concluded they weren’t really twins.

They checked with several doctors, who told them that the Stuart boys were biologically half-brothers. The festival, unfortunately, is for medical biological twins. 

Wilma: I was very disappointed.  But I was also a bit angry.  I told them that you need to ask yourselves, “What makes a twin?”  Is it a biological fact?  Or is it the fact that you grow in the same womb, being born on the same day, growing up together?  I think these things make a twin.  

The boys were devastated. The Twins Festival was scratched off the itinerary and the Stuarts went ahead with their trip to America. But Wilma understood that pressures from outside their family had increased— and would only get tougher for her boys as they got older.

Wilma: I think these are the easy times.  They’re little.  You talk a bit here and there.  But when they’re really starting puberty, I think that’s gonna be a very hard time.

Tuen and Koen at 11 and 1/2 years old
And she was right. This summer, we visited the boys again—they’re now 11 and  ½ — and discovered that the constant questions they faced about whether they really were twins had begun a painful cycle for the boys, especially for Koen.

Raising their children Koen and Tuen has been a continuing journey. The family has faced a series of ups and downs. But through it all, Wilma and Wilem  say the greatest gift has been the incredible friendship their two boys share.

Curry: Well, what’s the best part about being twins?

Tuen: You’re never alone.

Koen: Yeah.

It has been three years since we last checked in on the Stuart family.

Curry: Why do you allow us to come into your lives? Why is it that you do this?

Wilma: It’s good for us just to, every now and then, sit down and really talk about this.  Because this is not what we do everyday, you know.  We have to go to work and school and— so our day to day life is not about this.

Wilem: No.

Wilma: It’s just about having these two boys grow up and be healthy, be happy. 

Taunting by other kids, pulling the racecard on each other
t 11 and a half years of age, Koen and Tuen have hit some bumps in the road and Wilma and Wilem continue to worry,  like all parents, that their children will face cruelty and hardship. But unlike all parents, they have additional things to worry about especially when it comes to Koen.

Curry: You are trying to raise him to be strong enough to deal with the future that you can’t protect him from?

Wilma: Yeah, absolutely. Yeah.

Teun and Koen are like any brothers: they love each other but when they fight, they go straight for the jugular.

Curry: So have they ever pulled the race card on each other?

Willem: Oh yes, they have. 

Curry: Because they know that’s where it hurts.

Willem: Well, when you want to hit someone, you want to hit them good.

But now that they are older other kids in town, they also know how to hit the boys where it hurts, and it is usually directed at Koen.

Curry: You’re worried about the possibility of racism.

Wilma: Oh yes, absolutely—

Just last summer, Wilma was with Koen when another boy started chanting “Who’s your daddy” at him on the street.

Wilma: I stopped.  And I thought, “This is a very important moment.” I was not gonna say anything.  He had to do it by his own.  And he stopped and he turned at this child.  And he said, “I at least have a daddy.”  I thought, “Yes.  This is it, this is good.” I was very proud of him.

Koen can now stand up for himself, but the last few years have been particularly rough for him and, as always, the curiosity of strangers has been a burden.

Wilma:  They’re always wondering whether Koen’s my child.

Curry: And they say this in front of Koen?

Wilma: Oh yeah.

Curry: Is this your son?

Wilma: Yeah. 

Curry: And when you say "Yes," they say—

Wilma:  “Are you married to a black man?” “No, I’m not.” He knows where children come from.  So he knows what these questions are about.

Koen now understands the implied infidelity in strangers’ questions— years and years of questions.

When was it one question too many? By the time he was 9 or 10 years old, Koen had had enough. He didn’t want to be the source of curiosity anymore. And in the Netherlands which is overwhelmingly white, he just wanted to blend in.

Wilma: He really did not like his curls.  And his color, he wanted to be white. I always firmly told him, Koen, this is who you are, this is your color and this is your hair, and we love you very much. This is it, this is you.

Willem: You gotta live with it.

Wilma: Yeah, right. You cannot blow it out of proportion. Because that will make him more and more insecure.

It’s been more than eight years since they’ve had any contact with Koen’s biological father —his desire to be part of Koen’s life was not as great as the Stuarts had hoped. They no longer know where he is.

Wilma: We just wanted to have someone explain to Koen what it means to be black and he needs to know about black people.  He has to see them, talk to them, play with them.  But we didn’t succeed in that, and that’s bad.  You know, we really think that’s bad.

For the Stuarts there was yet another challenge to face. Koen, sick of the unwanted attention, no longer acknowledged to outsiders that he was a twin.

Wilma: Being a twin was not open for debate.

Curry: He would say he was not a twin.

Wilma: He was not.  No, he was not a twin.

Curry: Why?

Wilma: Because the next question would always be, “How is that possible?”   I think he did not have words enough yet to explain.

'World's least alike twins'
This year, organizers of the twins festival the Stuarts had been uninvited from four years ago  had a change of heart and declared the boys twins after all. The Stuarts decided to go, hoping the trip might help Koen and Tuen rediscover their love of being twins.

Wilma: There was no negativity. There was this woman saying to them, “Gosh you’re a twin. You must be special. You’re cool... you’re cool.’ The reactions they all got were all very positive.

The boys had a blast and the whole family was fixated on the twins’ winning the “least alike competition.”

Wilma:  Being chosen there to be "least like" twins was very important to them. They were very afraid that they were not going to win.

They all wondered what the twins who could bump Koen and Teun to second place might look like— and decided they had a pretty good chance. They won the title, of course.

Wilma: They are the world’s most least alike twin.

For the boys, recognition of their status as twins  was priceless.

Wilma: It was great. They had a great time. It’s an ultimate acceptance of the world outside that they really are a twin, and not just two boys.  I think it’s really important to them. 

For the two boys, being celebrated for their differences finally answered all the questioning looks, nasty teasing, and outright expressions of disbelief they've endured all these years. Not only are Koen and Teun twins, they are the world's most least alike twins.

Curry: And what makes you so happy about having—winning the least alike competition? 

Tuen: They think we are not real twins—real twins.

Curry: So you proved something.

Koen: Yeah.  It felt great.

Tuen: Great.

The medal they received was proudly displayed. Their mother says it has changed the boys’ feelings on being twins—at least as far as the outside world is concerned. At least for now.

Curry:  Koen has evolved in his thinking about being a twin.

Wilma: Yeah, absolutely.  He has, in that way, grown. He’s able now to explain what happened.  And I think he came to terms with that as a fact. And that now he is learning to accept himself and be proud of himself.  And yeah, I think, in that way, he has evolved a long way. 

Curry: And if anybody ever asks you again are you twins, what do you say, Koen?

Koen: Yes.

Curry: Yes.  And what do you say, Tuen?

Tuen: Yes. I say watch NBC.

So, what will happen to Tuen and Koen as they approach their teen years? How will the fact that they're of different races affect them as they begin to date, and look for a job? We'll let you know...we'll be checking in to see how the "ordinary" challenges of growing up are handled by these extrarordinary boys.

© 2009 msnbc.com  Reprints


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