This has been forwarded to me no less than five times by five different people today alone.  If you are in any kind of breastfeeding circle, you’ve most likely already seen it.  If not, it is definitely worth viewing, so I figured it was worth a post.

Click here to see a video of a hero in China who nursed nine different babies (none of which were her own) during the traumatic aftermath of the infamous earthquake.  The mothers of the babies were either injured, missing, dead, or unable to nurse (it turns out earthquakes can make a mommy dry up – that’s a lot of stress.)

After I got past the initial phase of, “Oh my goodness, thank God for that woman and for the fact that as long as you have a nursing woman (who hasn’t just walked out of earthquake rubble), you never have to worry about running out of nourishment for babies!” I started to wonder how Americans would have reacted to a story like this taking place in their own country.

In a country where breastmilk cannot be stored next to formula in day care refrigerators and must be labeled biohazard materials, how would a mother respond to an offer to have her baby nursed by a stranger?  And if permission had not been asked, how likely would it be that a lawsuit would have followed?