Puerto Rico – Genealogy Resources

 

Coat of Arms Puerto Rico

 

Hola amigos: I found other resources to trace your Puerto Rico ancestry.  These resources and organizations will get you started tracing your Puerto Rican roots. ES

 

Coat of Arms Of Puerto Rico Image

 

By Lauren Gamber

 

Books

• The Family Tree Resource Book for Genealogists edited by Sharon DeBartolo Carmack and Erin Nevius (Family Tree Books)

• Finding Your Hispanic Roots by George R. Ryskamp (Genealogical Publishing Co.)

• From Colonia to Community: The History of Puerto Ricans in New York City by Virginia E. Sánchez Korrol (University of California Press)

• Not of Pure Blood: The Free People of Color and Racial Prejudice in Nineteenth-Century Puerto Rico by Jay Kinsbruner (Duke University Press)

• The Puerto Rican Nation on the Move: Identities on the Island and in the United States by Jorge Duany (University of North Carolina Press)

• Puerto Rico in the American Century: A History Since 1898 by César J. Ayala and Rafael Bernabe (University of North Carolina Press)

 

Organizations and Archives

• Florida International University Libraries Latin American and Caribbean Information Center

Green Library 225, University Park Campus, Miami, FL 33199, (305) 348-3142, <lacic.fiu.edu>

• The Hispanic Genealogical Society of New York

Old Chelsea Station, Box 474, New York, NY 10113, <www.hispanicgenealogy.com>

 The Hispanic Society of America

613 W. 155th St., New York, NY 10032, (212) 926-2234, <www.hispanicsociety.org>

• Hunter College Center for Puerto Rican Studies (Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños)

695 Park Ave.,Room E1429, New York, NY 10065, (212) 772-5688, <centropr.org>

• Institute of Puerto Rican Culture (Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña)

Box 9024184, San Juan, Puerto Rico 00902, (787) 724-0700, <www.icp.gobierno.pr>

• NARA Northeast Region—New York City

201 Varick St., 12th Floor, New York, NY 10014, (866) 840-1752, <archives.gov/northeast/nyc>

• New York State Archives

Cultural Education Center 9C71, Albany, NY 12230, (518) 474-6926, <www.archives.nysed.gov>

• Puerto Rican/Hispanic Genealogical Society

Box 260118, Bellerose, NY 11426, <rootsweb.ancestry.com/~prhgs>

• Puerto Rico Department of Health, Demographic Registry

Box 11854, Fernandez Juncos Station, San Juan, Puerto Rico 00910, (787) 767-9120, <www.salud.gov.pr/Programas/RegistroDemografico>

• Puerto Rico General Archive (Archivo General de Puerto Rico)

Instituto de Cultura, Box 9024184, San Juan, Puerto Rico 00902, (787) 725-1060, <www.icp.gobierno.pr/agp>

From  Family Tree Magazine

 

Spain Genealogy Links

 

Hola amigos: This is a list of Spain Genealogy Links to help you search your ancestors from Spain. ES

 

Spain Coat of Arms Image

 Ancestry.com – Spain Database Search including voters lists, censuses, WW2 records..
Albacete Diocese, Catholic Parish Records 1550-1930
 images of parish records
A Spanish Language Translator at Google Translate translate words or webpages to or fromSpanish – English
Alta Vista Translation Aid    can translate text or a webpage for you: English to Spanish and Spanish  to English. Great free online service!
Andalucia GenWeba part of the Mediterranean GenWeb Project; created in an effort to help researchers find local resources and  reference information.
Basque Genealogy Homepage search over 17,000 records
The Basque Country general information on Basque heritage
The Basque House (Spanish) database of more than 6,500 Basque surnames 
Baque Surname List
Browse World’s Largest Obituary Database – at Genealogy Bank search obituaries in 100s of newspapers going back over 200 years
Buber’s Basque Page; list of surnames researched
Canary Islands Descendants Association – Louisiana
Canary Islands GenWeb a part of the Mediterranean GenWeb Project; created in an effort to help researchers find local resources and reference information.
Canary Islanders of Louisiana
Cuidad Real Diocese, Catholic Parish Records 1530-1930  images of parish records
Cuidad Rodrigo Diocese Parish Records, 1550-1930 images of parish records
Cyndi’s List – Spain, & the Basque Country / España,  y El País Vasco largest private collection of genealogy links on the web

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Cyndi’s List – Central & South America
Family History Centers in Spain
Galicia Surnames
Genealogy in the Canary Islands
Genealogy of the Kings of Spain
Genealogy Spot – Spain
Hispania Civic Heraldry coats of arms of families
Hispanic Genealogy (in English)
Hispanic Surnames Database over 27,000 names
Index to the ” History of Cuban Families ” Vols 1-9 (Ed Elizondo)
Jewish Sephardic Genealogy
La Riojan Emigrants to the Americas (1880-1936)
American Hispanic War in Puerto Rico 1898
Magellan; List of survivors of the first voyage around the world
Message Board – Spain read and post messages on names you are researching 
National Library of Spain
Northeastern Mexico Settlers 1700-1726. Some details are given on 81 surnames

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Online English to Spanish to English Dictionary
Royal House of Bourbon
Spanish National Library
Spanish Yellow Pages – Telephone Directory
 Spain Genealogy Forum
Spain White & Yellow Pages Telephone Directories 
Uncastillo (Zaragoza) -  Surname List (Spanish)
Valencia GenWeb a part of the Mediterranean GenWeb Project; created in an effort to help researchers find local resources and reference information. (in Spanish)
Villa De Balmaseda: Genealogias Balmasedanas (Spanish) Families who lived in Villa De Balmaseda from 1830-191

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Cemeteries

Toledo Memorial Stones Jewish Interments

Censuses

1510 Census of Valencia

Military

The Conquistadors - A list of over 760 individuals that served the King with Cortes and
stayed in Mexico 1519-1521
The Conquistadors of the Yucatan (Mexico) - A list of 160 of the individuals that served the King
with Francisco de Montejo from 1526 to 1546.
The Coronado Expedition - A list of 322 settlers that served with the Captain Francisco
Vazquez de Coronado. The expedition set out for New Mexico and Arizona but made it
as far north as Kansas from 1540 to 1542.
The Onate Expedition - A list of the 336 settlers that served with the Captain General
Juan de Onate. The expedition set out to settle New Mexico in 1598-1600.

Passenger Lists

Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild – Spain Ports of Departure
Magellan; List of survivors of the first voyage around the world

Sociedad Puertorriqueña de Genealogía, SPG

En la página electrónica de la Sociedad Puertorriqueña de Genealogía de San Juan , Puerto Rico, encontrará información general sobre su sociedad , su prestigiosa revista, Hereditas, un completo Centro de Orientación para la Genealogía y una minuciosa lista de enlaces hacia el excitante mundo de la genealogía hispana. La Sociedad Puertorriqueña de Genealogía es donde cientos de puertorriqueños se han asociado con el fin de investigar sus raíces borincanas.

La Sociedad Puertorriqueña de Genealogía (SPG) es una corporación sin fines de lucro  con los siguientes objetivos:

  • Fomentar el estudio científico de la genealogía puertorriqueña.

  • Cooperar con la preservación de los documentos históricos de Puerto Rico.

  • Promover actividades educativas (seminarios, conferencias, exhibiciones, etc.) relacionadas con la búsqueda de las raíces de los puertorriqueños.

La SPGinauguró el Centro FamilySearch, un acuerdo entre la SPG, la Facultad de Derecho de la Universidad Interamericana y FamilySearch Internacional que cuenta con los mejores datos de genealogía existentes. El Centro está ubicado en el segundo piso en el Centre de Acceso a Información.

Himno de la SPG

“Cuando mis hijos crezcan”

Cuando mis hijos crezcan,

Yo seré viejo

Les dejare La Herencia

De mi experiencia y mis consejos.

Cuando mis hijos crezcan,

Serán las verdes ramas

Que adornaran las frondas

De una nueva Floresta…

Yo Seré el tronco seco

De las raíces muertas

Que recogerá el fruto

de una nueva Cosecha.

Cuando mis hijos crezcan

Yo estaré satisfecho

De haber hecho una Obra

Que vivirá en el tiempo

Y peinaran mis canas

Mis adorables nietos

Y peinaran mis canas

Mis adorables nietos

Y peinaran mis canas

Mis adorables nietos

[ tomado de la canción “ Cuando mis hijos crezcan” del trío Las tres Guitarras

The Best Genealogy Apps

Hola amigos: One of these programs or genealogy Apps could help you explore your roots, build a family tree, and record life events important to you and your family. Check them out. ES

 

 

 

Family Tree Google Image

 

By Jill Duffy

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2403077,00.asp

Every family seems to have at least one hobbyist historian, someone who is dead set on finding the documents that prove your heritage, maps that show your purported homeland, and missing dates from tombstones. Don’t we all have that one aunt or great-grandfather or cousin who just loves to show off the dusty leather-bound book listing all the births, marriages, and deaths that tell the story of your family’s collective past? A few very good genealogy software packages and services make it easy for you join in your obsessive relative’s quest to trace your roots, whether you’re a beginner or an experienced hobbyist.

If you’ve ever had a budding interest in family research and record-keeping, but didn’t know where to start, these software applications—all of which are reasonably priced—can help you get going. The very best not only gives you access to the research databases but also guide you on how to use them. Within a few hours, you can cobble together several generations’ worth of information, which you can build on over a few days to create a chart or other keepsake for family members, or over a lifetime if you decide to commit to the hobby. A genealogist’s work is never done.

These packages all cater to different users. Some are great for beginners, while others are designed for the truly dedicated. Some encourage you to share what you find and learn via the Internet and to connect with other people online who are searching for their roots. Other programs leave all their default settings switched to “private.”

Explore your past, map your roots, and patch together that family tree with one of these apps for tracing your ancestry.

FEATURED IN THIS ROUNDUP:

Ancestral Quest

$29.95

Genealogy enthusiasts can do some serious work with Ancestral Quest, a straightforward and no-nonsense program for recording family history. Casual family historians may find it intimidating, though. Ancestral Quest is one of the most precise tools on the market for mapping a family tree, and the downloadable app is very cost-effective. The program is highly solutions-oriented, and is perfectly designed for those who want to accurately record what they know and how they know it about their family. Ancestral Quest does provide a lot of links to additional information, should you choose to use them, with partners such as Roots Web Project and FamilySearch.org. Most important of all, Ancestral Quest is thorough and deep. There are even special tools for dealing with different surname patterns (when the father’s surname isn’t what carries through lineage), sections devoted to Jewish history, and a lot of synchronicity with genealogy maintained by the Latter Day Saints. Read the full review ››

Ancestry.com (2012)

Free to $34.95 per month

Ancestry.com lets anyone build a family tree for free, and with a paid subscription, makes an incredible number of resources easily accessible. With a free online account, you can create family trees, but you can’t search the archives that Ancestry.com makes available, and these are what make the service so valuable. These archives include census data, obituary indexes, military records, immigration documents—thousands of registries from different states, provinces, counties, and countries. It costs $12.95 per month for a six-month membership for U.S.-only data, and up to $34.95 per month if you want international information included, too. The program goes to great lengths to make it easy for novices to pick up genealogy as a hobby and focuses on exploration (which can sometimes lead you astray) and sharing. It’s simple and straightforward to use, but beware of exploring too far off the path, as Ancestry.com’s “hints” aren’t always valid. Read the full review ››

Family Tree Maker (2012)

$39.99 for Windows version; Family Tree Maker for Macs 2 $69.99)

Our Editors’ Choice for family history software is Family Tree Maker because it leverages all the great online research tools of its online companion service, Ancestry.com, while also letting anyone build beautiful family trees using installed software. Family Tree Maker is essentially the standalone version of Ancestry.com (free to $44.95 per month, 4 stars), and it integrates tightly with the site. It has everything you need to trace your roots and record the stories of your ancestors. You can upload photos, voice recordings, text notes, and videos and attach them as records to a person the same way you would with more archival documents. You can even explore maps where family events took place. Family Tree Maker goes to great lengths to make it easy for novices to dabble in genealogy and share what they uncover, as well as explore the histories of other families online. Read the full review ››

Legacy Family Tree Deluxe 7.5

From $29.95

The feature-rich genealogy software Legacy Family Tree Deluxe 7.5 has all the tools you’ll need to record your personal history, particularly if you’re a more experienced family historian looking for a new tool. The downloadable (or shrink-wrapped and shipped) software for Windows can easily keep you busy recording numerous details of the people closest to you. It also has some thorough suggestions of sources to investigate for possible records related to each person in your tree, as well as a checkbox for ticking off the research you’ve completed or marking research “to-do.” While it has a wealth of tools and features, the user experience can be choppy, particularly if you’re new to genealogy as a hobby. It doesn’t offer the same guidance as some of the other products, but it does have some interesting features. Legacy Family Tree Deluxe is a fine option if you’re reasonably well versed in genealogy as a practice already.

 

 

Overcome Your Toughest Genealogy Problems

 Hola amigos: Today I found this article about “brick wall” solutions to genealogy problems: a book written to help us overcome genealogy research obstacles like recording errors, names changed, family mysteries,… .” The book was not written by a single individual. Rather, this book is a collection of difficult problems solved by genealogist everywhere.” ES

Brickwall Solutions Book Image

500 Brickwall Solutions to Genealogy Problems, by Family Chronicle Magazine; 418 pg; Paperback; ISBN 978-0-9731303-1-7; 2003; Item MM002

By Family Roots Publishing

All genealogists face research obstacles. Recording errors may lead someone to check records based on middle names or unfamiliar nicknames. Sometimes locations seem to disappear off the map when churches and cemeteries move, or roads close and fall into disrepair. What happens when records are misread, or graves turn out to be empty, or when people change their name? These are just a few of the problems genealogists face everyday. Genealogists around the globe have made breakthroughs in resolving these types of difficult problems through creative research and a never-give-up attitude to overcoming obstacles.

Family Chronicle magazine called these breakthroughs “Brickwall Solutions.” Recognizing the value the stories and the examples behind these solutions can have for the day to day genealogists, Family Chronicle collected hundreds of these stories from contributors around the world. The compiled result is 500 Brickwall Solutions to Genealogy Problems, the perfect lead by example book to solving unique research problems.

The book was not written by a single individual. Rather, this book is a collection of difficult problems solved by genealogist everywhere. The editor credits each story’s solution to inspiration and hard work as well as efficient and experienced research techniques. Contributing stories were selected for their inspiring, insightful, and professional resolution to difficult research problems. Each story inspires and gives ideas for new ways to overcome common, and sometimes less common, problems faced by family historians everywhere.

Here are some story titles taken from the book:
· County Poorhouses
· Nun Sense
· Website As A Brickwall Solution
· Funeral Sign-In Books
· Searching Family Mysteries
· Follow the Females
· Glove Marks the Spot
· The Many Wives of Cassidy
· Microfilm Mistakes
· Mapping Your Ancestors
· Different Registered Name
· Maternal Lines and Unusual Names
· They Changed Their Name
· The Mystery of the Non-Existent Grave

The list goes on and on. 500 times actually. I could not possibly list the entire table of contents in one blog. However, 500 Brickwall Solutions is an apt title. Each story runs from a few paragraphs to a couple of pages in length. Contributors are listed, sometime with contact information, at the end of each story. Many of the stories are funny and exciting, while all demonstrate what a little inspiration, creativity, and mostly perseverance can do in solving almost any problem.

 

Genealogy Not Only For Humans

Hola amigos: Genealogy is not only for humans – products have a genealogy too. Products, like humans , are traceable – from manufacturing to product supply chain networks – there is data to research and trace in business.  Apriso, a manufacturing software provider, Launches Global Trace and Genealogy Solution. Apriso’s solution for global traceability and genealogy, referred to as G-TAG™, helps manufacturers to ensure brand integrity by providing the necessary framework for collaboration and visibility in order to perform detailed quality investigations and root cause analysis. Solution includes global repository for detailed product trace abilityand genealogy data; processes spanning from manufacturing to product supply networks.

Aprisco Image

LONG BEACH, Calif.,  (BUSINESS WIRE) –Apriso, a leading provider of manufacturing software solutions, today announced a new software and services solution, Global Trace and Genealogy, referred to as GTAG(TM). This new Apriso offering — with open integration with other systems along the supply chain — can deliver the necessary manufacturing intelligence and product genealogy data to improve accuracy and power trace ability initiatives across global manufacturing operations.
Industry research suggests a key impediment to success with product trace ability initiatives is the proliferation of multiple data repositories for manufacturing product genealogy, trace ability and quality intelligence, resulting in poor data accuracy and untimely access to data. Apriso has overcome this challenge with a collaborative solution built on the FlexNet platform for global manufacturing operations management. This platform-centric solution serves as a track and trace “hub” that spans the needs of manufacturers and supply chain partners. This highly flexible approach to global trace ability and genealogy helps manufacturers to:
– Improve collaboration — between manufacturers and trade partners to better coordinate corrective actions, reducing manual and time-consuming tasks prone to error
– Centralize track and trace reporting — to provide better insight into product genealogy and packaging hierarchy at any time
– Handle high volumes of trace ability data — without impacting operational performance, as data is received from plants, suppliers and logistics providers
– Capture detailed global trace ability and genealogy data automatically — from multiple sources, to help reduce risk, protect brand equity and meet compliance objectives
– Establish unique product identification schemes — that utilize existing RFID and barcode scanning technologies, leveraging these existing investments
– Address the escalating challenge of counterfeit products — by providing readily available, detailed product pedigrees to demonstrate product authenticity
“Few enterprise application software providers offer a global repository for product genealogy and trace ability data capable of spanning both internal systems and complex supply chain operations,” explained Chris Will, chief technology officer at Apriso. “Yet this capability is absolutely required to ensure brand protection while minimizing warranty claims, managing Maintenance, Repair and Operations (MRO) and complying with domestic and international laws required to maintain regulatory compliance. Apriso’s GTAG solution enables these capabilities.”
Ensuring brand integrity is a critical, visible benchmark of a manufacturer’s success. Apriso’s solution for global trace ability provides a framework for collaboration and visibility to perform detailed quality investigations and root cause analysis. With a unified data model that captures and persists standardized data across production, quality, maintenance, inventory and along the supply chain, manufacturers can more effectively take corrective actions and perform continuous improvement that addresses both structured and unstructured quality activities and operations processes.
Apriso’s GTAG solutions will be offered with specific, industry focused best practices so as to offer more capabilities “out-of-the-box.” Initial solutions will be made available for manufacturers in the hi-tech, automotive, aerospace and defense, consumer goods and other industries.
About Apriso Corporation
Apriso is a software company dedicated to helping its customers transform their global manufacturing operations. It does so by enabling manufacturers to achieve and sustain manufacturing excellence while adapting quickly and easily to market changes. Apriso’sFlexNet is a BPM platform-based software solution for global manufacturing operations management. Apriso supports global continuous improvement by delivering visibility into, control over and synchronization across manufacturing and the product supply network. Apriso serves nearly 200 customers in 40+ countries across the Americas, Europe and Asia. Customers include GM, Volvo CE, Honeywell, L’Oreal, Trixell, Lockheed Martin, Bombardier, Textron Systems, MBDA, Saint-Gobain and Essilor. Learn more at: www.apriso.com .

Apriso and FlexNet are registered trademarks of Apriso Corporation. All other trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
SOURCE: Apriso Corporation

 

African Americans Genealogical Research At No Cost

 

Hola amigos: I found this article about African American research at  no cost and I am sharing it with you.: Afrigeneas.com, Christine Charity’s site , Cindy’s List, Freedmen, Heritage Quest, Law Country Africana, Free African Americans.

 

 

Slaves Auction Image

 

By: Karin D. Berry

Researching African-American and slave ancestry can be challenging because you’re tracing not just your own family tree but also those of slave owners. But as more documents and databases are moved onto the Internet, research is becoming somewhat easier — and, at least at these sites, less costly.

AfriGeneas: Founded in 1999, Afrigeneas.com is the granddaddy of African-American genealogy sites. The research community’s features include an afternoon chat Monday to Friday as well as a Tuesday-night chat; a mailing list; and message boards. The site, which collects information from descendants of slave owners, has numerous searchable databases, including death and marriage records, census records, library records, slave data, surnames and state resources. There are also more than 30 forums to post messages, including Slave Research, Caribbean Research and Free Persons of Color. You can find the site on FacebookTwitterMySpace andYouTubeHow the site can advance your research: The interactive Guide for Beginners lays out the basics of black-genealogy research on the Internet.

Christine’s Genealogy Website: Another mainstay, Christine Charity’s site updates visitors with the latest in African-American genealogy, with links to news stories and contributions from researchers. Check the site often for updated Searchable Data and Transcribed Data. Other valuable links are to the National Archives blog and Freedmen’s Bureau Online. How the site can advance your research: It has extensive genealogy links.

Cyndi’s List of Genealogy Sites on the Internet (African American Category): Cyndi Howells has compiled thousands of genealogy-related links on her mega-site since 1996. How the site can advance your research:The African-American category has dozens of links to genealogy websites, all at your fingertips.

Free African Americans of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland and Delaware: Creator Paul Heinegg describes the site this way: “The history of the free African American community as told through thefamily history of most African Americans who were free in the Southeast during the colonial period.” It contains the content of two books that chronicle family histories based on microfilm materials available at the archives of those five states. The materials include census records, tax lists, wills, deeds, “free Negro registers,” marriage bonds, parish registers and Revolutionary War pension files. How the site can advance your research: Valuable for those who have traced their families to the Colonial period, late 1600s to 1810.

The Freedmen’s Bureau Online:According to the home page, “TheBureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands … often referred to as the Freedmen’s Bureau, … supervised all relief and educational activities relating to refugees and freedmen, including issuing rations, clothing and medicine.” Related links on the page include those for the Freedmen and Southern Society Project, as well as Freedmen’s Bureau marriage registers in Arkansas and Tennessee. Records are categorized into labor records,marriage records, murder and outrages. How the site can advance your research: Provides access to theFreedmen’s Bureau extensive records.

HeritageQuest Online: Described as “a comprehensive treasury of American genealogical sources — rich in unique primary sources, local and family histories, and finding aids,” this site provides free access through most public libraries to the census, Freedman’s Bank records, the Periodical Source Index (PERSI), genealogy and local history books, Revolutionary War records and the LexisNexis U.S. Serial Set. Contact your local library to see if you can access the site with your library card number. How the site can advance your research: Allows access to the census and to Freedman’s Bank records, which have detailed financial info about account applicants, dependents and heirs going back to the end of the Civil War.

Lowcountry Africana: Research is limited to Florida, Georgia and South Carolina. The site has its own freestanding research aids, including a custom search engine, an online research library, videos, articles about research methods, and search capabilities for user-submitted documents. How the site can advance your research: Subscribe to the Lowcountry Africana Collection and receive emailed updates of user-submitted records.

Karin D. Berry is a newspaper journalist and freelance writer who has been researching her family historysince 1987. Her articles, book reviews and op-ed articles have been published in Essence, Black Enterprise, the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Cleveland Plain Dealer, the Macon Telegraph, the Baltimore Sun, the Evening Sun, Emerge and the Philadelphia Daily News.

For more on geneaology and help in finding your roots, chec out our Geneaology Guide.

 

Why do we care about our ancestors?

Hola amigos: I have a new book for you: Ancestors And Relatives by Eviatar Zerubavel. He tells us that “the rise of genetic testing has made genealogy more popular than ever – and transformed our concept of  identity.” I agree with him: now we are always  hearing about DNA in the TV, the newspapers, movies… and my fascination with genealogy is with me since ROOTS!  Zerubavel wrote:  ”Genealogy may indeed be “the second most popular American hobby after gardening and the second most visited category of Web sites after pornography.”  ES

Ancestors and Relatives Book Image

BY EVIATAR ZERUBAVEL

This article is an edited excerpt from the new book “Ancestors & Relatives,” from Oxford University Press.

Why do we consider Barack Obama a black man with a white mother rather than a white man with a black father? What are the implications of knowing, as we now do, that chimpanzees are genetically closer to humans than they are to gorillas? Why did the Nazis believe that unions between Germans and Jews would produce Jews rather than Germans? Are sixth cousins still family?

In order to even address, let alone answer, such questions, we must first examine our unmistakably social visions of genealogical relatedness. What we need, in other words, is a sociological understanding of ancestry and descent.

As evident from the wide popularity of the television series “Who Do You Think You Are?” and the dozens of websites (such as Ancestry.com,Family Tree DNA, and FamilySearch) and software programs designed to help people construct their family trees and discover hitherto unknown ancestors and relatives, we certainly have a tremendous fascination with genealogy. Every day thousands of “root seekers” comb libraries, cemeteries, and the Internet in an effort to quench their seemingly insatiable “thirst for tracing lineages.” Genealogy may indeed be “the second most popular American hobby after gardening and the second most visited category of Web sites after pornography.”

Such deep obsession with ancestry (“progonoplexia”) is by no means a distinctly modern fad. Indeed, it goes back thousands of years to Hesiod’s Theogony and the Bible. Nor is it a peculiarly Western phenomenon, as evident from various forms of ancestor worship all over the world. Traditionally aristocratic, however, it is nevertheless becoming increasingly democratized. Over the past several decades, the range of Americans exhibiting interest in genealogy, for example, has clearly expanded “from those claiming descent from the Mayflower or from Southern aristocrats, to include the descendants of African slaves and immigrants.” Our current fascination with genealogy has also been getting a tremendous boost from the growing popularity of genetic ancestrytesting.

Not only does genetics enhance our awareness of hereditary disease risk as well as the ability to reconstruct national histories and establish paternity, it has also prompted the rise of recreational genomics. Dozens of companies now offer genetic ancestry tests that allow us to measure our genealogical proximity to distant relatives, define ourselves ethnoracially in terms of fractional, seemingly precise amounts of Europeanness, Africanness, and Asianness, as well as trace the Paleolithic ancestor or ancestress from whom we supposedly descend. Indeed, genetics can now essentially “demolish or affirm a family’s most cherished beliefs and stories with just a bit of saliva and a cotton swab.”

As manifested in identity labels such as “an Italian American” or “a Kennedy,” despite the modern meritocratic rise of the self-made individual, who we are still depends at least partly on whom we descend from. Thus, throughout the Muslim world, for example, descendants of the Prophet still bear the honorific title sayyid or sharif. By the same token, in the United States, a so-called Indian blood quantum formally indicating a person’s degree of Indianness in terms of a fractional amount of Native American ancestry still constitutes the official basis for federal recognition as an “Indian” as well as the main criterion of membership in particular Native American tribal nations. This is the context within which a person is officially defined as being “seven thirty-seconds Cherokee, two thirty-seconds Kiowa, and two thirty-seconds Choctaw,” and words like purebloodmixed-bloodfull-blood, and half-breed are still commonly used as nounlike identifying labels.

Furthermore, our ancestral background affects not only how others see us but even how we experience ourselves. Indeed, knowing who our ancestors were is fundamental to our sense of who we are. Consider, for example, the way PBS describes its four-part television mini-series “African American Lives 2″:

Henry Louis Gates, Jr. returns as series host to guide notable African Americans on a search for their ancestry. Genealogical investigations and DNA analysis help Maya Angelou, Don Cheadle, Morgan Freeman, Peter Gomes, Linda Johnson Rice, Tom Joyner, Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Chris Rock and Tina Turner discover where they come from and who they are.

Indeed, after undergoing a genetic test to learn more about his African ancestry, a deeply moved Don Cheadle tells Gates: “You start feeling more grounded when you can reach back and go … ‘This is who I am all the way back.’”

By the same token, given the long history of human migrations, we often feel nostalgic about the long-lost time “when place, identity, culture and ancestry coincided.” “Standing on the land that ancestors knew” can thus

produc[e] a sense of genealogical connection that is sometimes explained … as an inexpressible sense of spiritual affinity, and often experienced bodily in “shivers down the spine” and “goosebumps.” … [It] is often imagined as a shared physical experience that links ancestors to their descendants across time.

That explains diasporas’ attachment to their ancestral homelands, as manifested in African Americans’ special feelings toward Africa, Jews’ deep historical ties to the land of Israel, and the “homecoming” journeys (that is, genealogical or “roots” tourism) of Americans, Canadians, and Australians of Irish and Scottish descent to Ireland and Scotland.

Cheadle’s comment about feeling more grounded, of course, also underscores the tragic plight of most American descendants of African slaves, who know so little about their ancestral past. When trying to trace their ancestors, they usually hit a “genealogical brick wall,” as their African ancestral lines “[run] into dead ends in that mysteriously dark mausoleum called slavery.” No wonder so many African Americans opt to undergo genetic ancestry testing.

Their predicament also resembles that of children of anonymous sperm donors, who have no genealogical context within which to “make sense of themselves.” People who experience such “genealogical void” often have serious identity problems, since “our psychological integrity depends very much upon … the extent to which we feel linked to our genealogical roots.”

Like having no navel, the very embodiment of our genealogical embeddedness, lacking a sense of ancestry is tantamount to being “cast out upon [a] sea of kinless oblivion.” That explains why striking a person’s name from his or her family’s genealogical records used to be one of the most dreaded punishments in China. It also explains the identity crisis often prompted by the realization that one was actually adopted, and the quest of many adoptees to find their “real” parents. Being cut off from their ancestral past, they often experience genealogical “bewilderment” and deprivation leading to the deep sense of existential vacuum captured in the following testimonies:

I don’t feel I know who I am. … [T]he fact that you don’t know who you are stays with you for life. … I still feel I have no identity. I don’t think anybody can appreciate it when they have not experienced this vacuum.

I stand before the mirror and ask, “Who am I?”

As exemplified by a book actually subtitled “A Quest for Wholeness” that portrays children who have been separated from their “natural clan” as having a major part of their identity missing, no wonder adoptees are sometimes considered somehow incomplete.

Yet even children who were not adopted sometimes wonder if they may have been switched mistakenly with someone else at birth, very much like children of anonymous sperm donors who fantasize that their father is a celebrity or people who insist against all evidence that there must be “some Jewish blood” running in their family. Many African Americans likewise fantasize about having “some Indian blood” in their veins, as famously evidenced by Zora Neale Hurston’s quip about being “the only Negro in the United States whose grandfather … was not an Indian chief.” As historian Claudio Saunt explains, “If you are a slave or an African American living in Jim Crow America, who wouldn’t want to be associated with someone like Crazy Horse or Geronimo?” And comedian Chris Rock, implicitly invoking the widespread rape of African slaves by their white owners, adds: “It’s easier to say ‘We got a little Indian in us’ than say ‘We got raped a few times’ … It sounds much better. Goes down a lot smoother.” It is the tremendous psychological appeal of such “genealogical fantasies” that has arguably made Hans Christian Andersen’s little children’s story “The Ugly Duckling” such a classic.

New revelations about our ancestors’ identity may even change the way we see ourselves. (Such revelations, claims Sarah Jessica Parker, “changed everything about who I thought I was. Everything.”) And while they often entail some pleasant surprises, they may also lead to great disappointments, as did the genetic ancestry test that ended Oprah Winfrey’s fantasy about her Zulu origins. Some geneticists, in fact, even recommend that persons undergoing such testing be provided with access to identity counseling.

Such “genealogical epiphanies” also affect the way we experience newly revealed “genealogical others.” Particularly disorienting in this regard are newly revealed parents and offspring, as so evocatively captured, for example, by Sophocles in “Oedipus the King” and Marcel Pagnol in “Manon of the Springs.” But as one is reminded by the song “Shame and Scandal in the Family,” which includes lines such as “You can’t marry this girl. I have to say no. This girl is your sister, but your mama don’t know” (later rebutted, however, with “Your daddy ain’t your daddy, but your daddy don’t know”), so, for that matter, are newly revealed siblings. After all, we are genealogically connected not only to our parents and grandparents but also to our siblings and cousins. In fact, the very same ties that connect us to our ancestors also connect us to our relatives, with whom we share them, and the extent to which we are related to those “relatives” is indeed a function of our mutual distance from the common ancestors from whom we co-descend. The more recent those ancestors, the “closer” we are.

Theorizing relatedness in genealogical terms need not be confined, however, strictly to human ties. After all, as Charles Darwin first realized, the entire natural system is actually “founded on descent” and is thereby “genealogical in its arrangement.” Genealogical connectedness is, in fact, “the linchpin of evolution,” which is “first and foremost a genealogical process.”

Indeed, long before we even knew about organic evolution (or about genetics, for that matter), we were already envisioning our genealogical ties to our ancestors as well as relatives in terms of blood, thereby making them seem more natural. As a result, we also tend to regard the essentially genealogical communities that are based on them (families, ethnic groups) as natural, organically delineated communities.

Yet nature is only one component of our genealogical landscape. Culture, too, plays a critical role in the way we theorize as well as measure genealogical relatedness. Not only is the unmistakably social logic of reckoning such relatedness quite distinct from the biological reality it supposedly reflects, it oft en overrides it, as when certain ancestors obviously count more than others in the way we determine kinship and ethnicity. Relatedness, therefore, is not a biological given but a social construct. Not only are genealogies more than mere reflections of nature, they are also more than mere records of history. Rather than simply passively documenting who our ancestors were, they are the narratives we construct to actually make them our ancestors.

As such, they often entail deliberate manipulations as well as actual distortions of the historical realities they supposedly document. By selectively highlighting certain ancestors (and therefore also our ties to other individuals or groups presumably descending from them) while ignoring, downplaying, or even outright suppressing others, for example, we tactically expand and collapse genealogies to accommodate personal as well as collective strategic agendas of inclusion and exclusion. The way we construct genealogies thus tells us as much about the present as it does about the past.

Eviatar Zerubavel is Board of Governors Professor of Sociology at Rutgers University. He is the author of numerous books, most recently “The Elephant in the Room: Silence and Denial in Everyday Life” and “Time Maps: Collective Memory and the Social Shape of the Past.”

Reprinted from “Ancestors & Relatives: Genealogy, Identity, & Community” by Eviatar Zerubavel with permission from Oxford University Press, Inc. Copyright (c) 2011 by Eviatar Zerubavel.

 

http://www.salon.com/2011/11/08/why_do_we_care_about_our_ancestors/singleton/

Where Identity and Biology Intersect

Hola amigos: This is a very interesting article about DNA and how deep our DNA influences who we are. That’s what genealogy does: you learn about your ancestors and you get to know more about yourself, your source, your identity, your history.

An award winner science writer – Lone Frank -”explores the extent our genes influence us and what she calls our physical inner self. Enjoy! ES

 

DNA Results Image

 

http://www.vancouversun.com/technology/Where+identity+biology+intersect/5701618/story.html#ixzz1dyXAdIAF

 

BY SUSAN SCHWARTZ, POSTMEDIA NEWS

The Vancouver Sun

A pleasant and thoughtful fellow from New Zealand told me during a chat over a glass of wine this year of his growing interest in genealogy. It was fascinating to learn about those who had come before him, he said, and in the process, to learn more about himself: there was something satisfying about tracking down a photograph of one forebear who turned out to have a cleft in his chin – just as he did.

We can’t always explain why we take away what we do from conversations, but a mental picture of two men a few generations apart, each with a cleft in his chin, lodged itself in my memory. And it bobbed to the surface as I read award winning Danish science writer Lone Frank’s exploration of the extent to which our genes influence us.

“Because what is an interest in genetic information about? It’s about your heritage, your history, your identity,” she observes in My Beautiful Genome: Exposing Our Genetic Future, One Quirk at a Time (Oneworld, 2011).

When Frank was orphaned at 43, she felt that she was alone, “without a source, without a history.”

She became interested in tracing her heritage, to know which genetic variants had come down to her and how “these accidents of biology,” as she called them, had shaped her life, her opportunities and her limitations.

From family photographs, she can identify features she has inherited. Her chronic tendency to sarcasm comes from her paternal grandmother, her brutal directness from her father. There’s a family history of illness, including depression and suicide, and she has suffered bouts of depression.

“If I took a sneak peek at my genome, could it tell me what is in store for me? And if I know my program well in advance, can I rewrite my future?”

My Beautiful Genome is a memoir, a work about what Frank learned about herself in having her DNA tested and her genetic material mapped, and about what she learned of the broader social implications of this biological fortune-telling.

She interviewed and challenged experts in fields including personal genetics, neurology and psychology and, armed with a PhD in neurobiology and a research background, recounts in accessible and lively language what they told her.

Frank is also remarkably candid: she admits to being difficult and prickly and, based on a personality test – the results of which she shares – disagreeable, lacking in sympathy, vulnerable and more susceptible to stress than most people.

Having her genetic profile done opened a window onto what she called her “physical inner self.”

On her father’s side, there were cardiovascular problems and her gene profile showed her risk to be higher than average. But her risk for breast cancer, even though her mother and grandmother had died of the disease, was lower than average.

Testing confirmed that, indeed, she has a biological disposition to depression. Knowing that makes it easier to understand herself, “and I can use it to distance myself from stuff when I’m going down that black hole,” she said in an interview.

But learning about one’s genetics is much more than just learning about health risks. “Where it really gets exciting is at the intersection between the shell of a physical being and the person we recognize as human,” she writes.

She asked experts how much of our genetics defines personality – and how much of it can we develop as we choose.

As one Danish neurologist told her: “There is interplay between genes and environmental factors that together determine who we are as people. … A personality is a product of genes and environment, and even though we cannot, of course, freely choose who we are, we still have certain latitude. Throughout our lives.”

Frank calls her genome “information I can work with and around, information that can grant me greater freedom to shape my life and my essence … . It tells me that I am not totally free, but neither am I completely responsible for who I am and what I have ultimately become.”

 

 

 

Roots Into The Future

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