Why Was Ernest Hausmann Adopted As a Child? A Look At Michigan LB’s Troubled Childhood & Background

Michigan LB Ernest Hausmann, born in Uganda as one of 23 siblings, was put up for adoption. Take a look at his upbringing in America.

Michigan linebacker Ernest Hausmann’s journey began thousands of miles from Ann Arbor, in Uganda. As a child, he faced the harsh reality of being placed for adoption.

His birth parents, battling severe illness and deep poverty, made the difficult choice that ultimately changed the course of his life. That decision carried a backdrop of hardship and early trauma.

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The Troubled Childhood Behind Michigan Linebacker Ernest Hausmann’s Adoption

Michigan Wolverines linebacker Ernest Hausmann has carried a story of displacement, searching, and resilience throughout his young life. Born in Uganda as one of 23 siblings, his childhood was marked by illness and loss.

His parents, both battling AIDS, faced deteriorating health that ultimately forced them to place him for adoption. At just five years old, he left the only home he had ever known and traveled more than 9,000 miles to Nebraska. The move brought safety and opportunity, but it also left scars of isolation and unanswered questions.

For nearly two decades, Hausmann wrestled with feelings of abandonment and anger toward both his birth and adoptive families. He often wondered why he had been sent so far away to live in a world without familiar voices or faces.

The long silence was broken only when he eventually reconnected with his mother and made the journey back to Africa, seeking clarity about his past.

Although adoption provided him with a new life, the transition was far from smooth. He was adopted at age two but did not arrive in the United States until three years later. The delay left a gap in his childhood memories that he still carries.

“Not a whole lot, I remember,” Hausmann said. “My brain’s kind of blocked off a lot of the events that kind of happened before I was adopted. I think God really did that for a reason… Some of those events were traumatic and might have slowed me down from reaching my full potential.”

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While much of his early childhood is lost to memory, one experience remains sharp.

“I remember vividly the flight coming to America. My dad and I just doodling, he’s trying to teach me the alphabet, how to write my name. As soon as I got off the plane, I’m walking to the airport and see an old family. That stuck with me. Anything before that, my brain just blocks off.”

That moment marked the beginning of his new life, one he has approached with gratitude despite the pain that preceded it.

Today, when Hausmann steps onto the football field, he brings with him more than a helmet and playbook. He carries a powerful story rooted in resilience, faith, and purpose that connects his past in Uganda to his present at Michigan. Off the field, he has even dedicated himself to providing wells to impoverished villages worldwide.

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