Mother Sees Her Son After 27 Years, Thanks to Facebook

British woman, 62, refused to quit, finds son in Hungary via social network.

ByABC News
May 29, 2009, 11:31 AM

LONDON, June 1, 2009 -- Had it not been for Facebook, who knows when, or even if, a British woman would have reunited with the son she hadn't seen in the 27 years since he was allegedly kidnapped by her estranged husband.

Gavin Paros was taken from his mother, Avril Grube, in 1982. Separated and living in Liverpool at the time, Grube had won custody of her 3-year-old son. But while exercising his visitation rights one weekend, her Hungarian husband allegedly fled with the boy to his native land.

Over the years, Grube, 62, and her sister Beryl Wilson never gave up on Gavin. The two sisters had repeatedly contacted the Hungarian embassy and even took their case to former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Their efforts were to no avail, until one day in March of this year when Wilson Googled her nephew's name and discovered that Gavin Paros was on Facebook, the social-networking site.

Wilson e-mailed him but received no reply because, as it turned out, he was not a frequent Facebook user. Once again, Wilson did not lose hope. She e-mailed two of his children and a friend of his she found on his "friends" column. Her persistence paid off when Paros wrote back to his aunt and they arranged to speak via Skype, the Internet telephone service.

Communication between mother and son has not been easy, Wilson told ABC News. Paros, now 29, barely speaks English and Grube's 2008 heart stroke left her with a speech impediment.

But Grube, who now lives in Poole, Dorset, isn't hiding her feelings, Wilson said, noting that her sister keeps repeating, "'My beautiful son," and software that translates English into Hungarian helps the two understand one another.

Through their conversations, Paros has learned that his mother suffers from chronic nose bleeds and diabetes and that she had a stroke last year. He also learned that his mother remarried 15 years ago. After many years of solitude, she married a man disabled since birth, whom she thinks of as her soul mate, Wilson said.

Meanwhile, Grube has learned that her son is a master plasterer and lives in Hungary with his wife and three children.