Sushmita Sen Moved To Tears After Daughter Alisah Writes Essay On Adoption! Watch Video
From winning the title of Miss Universe at the age of 18 to being a mother at 25, after adopting her daughter Renee, Sushmita Sen shattered all stereotypes and is a perfect example of a strong woman.
From
winning
the
title
of
Miss
Universe
at
the
age
of
18
to
being
a
mother
at
25,
after
adopting
her
daughter
Renee,
Sushmita
Sen
shattered
all
stereotypes
and
is
a
perfect
example
of
a
strong
woman.
She
adopted
one
more
girl
and
named
her
Alisah
who
turned
10
this
year.
The
actress
often
shares
lovely
pictures
and
videos
of
the
trio
on
her
Instagram
feed
and
they
are
always
an
absolute
delight.
Recently,
Sushmita
Sen
had
a
proud
mommy
moment
when
her
youngest
daughter
Alisah
penned
an
essay
on
adoption.
Alisah's
essay
left
Sushmita
in
tears
and
the
actress
shared
a
video
of
her
daughter
reciting
the
essay.
She
captioned
it,
"You
gave
life
in
such
a
way,
that
you
saved
one"
#alisahsen
❤️
#10yrsold
#essay
#adoption
❤️She
had
me
in
tears!!!
This
magnitude
of
love,
acceptance,
security,
purity
&
honesty...the
divinity
in
her
convictions...uffff!
Just
listening
to
her
opens
the
heart!!!
#sharing
#truth
#kindness
#bornfromtheheart
I
love
you
guys!!!"
(sic)
In
an
earlier
interview
with
film
critic
and
journalist
Rajeev
Masand
on
'Women
We
Love',
Sushmita
revealed
how
her
daughter
Renee
reacted
when
she
learnt
that
she
was
adopted.
The
actress
said,
"We
played
opposites,
tall
short,
and
all
that.
I
then
said
adopted
and
biological.
So
Renee
said
'I'm
adopted?'
I
said
yes,
biological
is
boring.
You
are
special,
you're
born
from
the
heart.
And
then
she
would
tell
everyone
else,
'You're
biological?
You're
boring'.
I'm
so
glad
that
it
worked
both
times
like
magic."
In
the
same
interview,
the
actress
also
revealed
that
she
wanted
the
girls
to
find
out
about
their
real
parents
once
they
turn
18.
So
when
Renee
was
16,
Sushmita
gave
her
an
envelope
containing
the
details
of
her
real
parents.
She
explained
to
her
that
she
could
go
to
court
and
look
at
the
names
of
her
biological
names
in
an
envelope.
Speaking
about
it,
she
told
Masand,
"I
told
her
that
I
don't
know
if
they
have
names
of
biological
parents
in
there,
but
that
information
is
rightfully
hers.
I
didn't
want
to
give
her
the
wrong
information
and
break
her
heart.
She
asked
me,
'Why
do
you
want
me
to
go
and
find
out?'
I
said,
'I'm
not
saying
go
find
out,
I'm
saying
you
have
a
right
to
know.
She
gave
it
a
moment's
pause
and
said,
'No,
I
don't
want
to
find
out.'