All posts by Kathy Kirkpatrick

Notices from IAJGS

The European Jewish Congress reports that that the Swedish government has decided to appoint a special investigator that will map out obstacles and opportunities for Jewish life in Sweden and make proposals for a national strategy to strengthen Jewish life.

The investigator will examine the conditions for Jewish life today and present proposals to ensure its survival and development. The focus will be on the transmission of Jewish culture and Yiddish to younger and future generations.

The work will be carried out in close dialogue and collaboration with the Jewish community in Sweden and will be reported by 15 December 2023.

The study is part of Sweden’s commitments following the Malmö International Forum for Holocaust Remembrance and Combating Antisemitism.

To read more see: https://eurojewcong.org/news/communities-news/sweden/swedish-government-appoints-special-investigator-to-strengthen-jewish-life-and-culture/

The Wall Street Journal posted an article in their May 21-22, 2022 issue entitled, The Math Behind a Lack of Genetic Privacy. In the online edition it is called, Its too Late to Protect Your Genetic Privacy. The Math is Explaining Why.

 See: https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-obscure-math-exposing-our-genetic-secrets-11653039002.

While you personally may not have taken a DNA test, the article explains that they can track you down from a cousins’ DNA that was submitted to one of the genetic DNA testing companies.

The article explains, “people have about 6,800 cMs. A child inherits half their DNA—one set of chromosomes—from each biological parent. So child and parent will have around 3,400 cMs of DNA that match… For every “degree of relatedness,” the length of shared cMs halves. An uncle or grandparent, one degree removed from parents, shares half as much DNA on average. That is 25%, or about 1,700 cMs. One more degree removed: A first cousin or great-grandparent shares half again, or around 850 cMs. And so on.”

The article includes a graphic depicting how much DNA you share with distant relatives-going to the third great-grandparents. “Even with all these halvings, very distant relatives out to fifth cousins share so much identical DNA that a common ancestor is the only possible source.”

“It is easy to find distant relatives, because a typical individual has so many: according to various methods, around 200 third cousins, upward of 1,000 fourth cousins and anywhere from 5,000 to 15,000 fifth cousins… An adopted child who doesn’t know his biological parent still shares 3,400 cMs with that person, and hundreds of centiMorgans with numerous cousins from that parent’s family. The child, or generations from now that child’s descendants, could upload their DNA to a database and by looking for matches with others who have uploaded theirs, discover some of those distant cousins. That would be enough to reconstruct his family tree and identify the parent, even though the parent never uploaded their DNA—the exact same process used to identify DNA in cold cases.”

According to data from the International Society of Genetic Genealogy, the scale of testing is enormous: around 21 million samples on AncestryDNA, 12 million at 23andMe, 5.6 million at MyHeritage and 1.7 million at FamilyTreeDNA.

Call to Meeting for 18 July 2022

Our next meeting will be a Round-Table discussion. We would like each of you to talk about a great research experience, travel adventure in pursuit of family or research, family reunion or DNA connections, something we can all enjoy!

Also, please remember to keep your membership active (or start it).

We still need chairs for membership and activities committees, and members in all committees. Please participate!

It’s been suggested that we rotate the program responsibility for each month to different members of the group (or interested parties). You can present the program yourself or work with us to locate a speaker on a topic of your choice of benefit to all (or most). Our next scheduled presentation is in March 2023, so there are lots of opportunities!

No meeting on 20 June

We have been unable to obtain a speaker for 20 June, so we’ll have a board meeting instead of a regular meeting. We suggest that you take advantage of the GRIP Evening Programs announced earlier by Banai in email to all members. Also, the talks from RootsTech are still available for free online at https://www.familysearch.org/rootstech/.

If you have ideas or are willing to present a talk in July (or any other month), please let a board member know (Kathy, Paula, Josh, Banai, Gary).

Meeting Reminder

Title: Deep Genetic Genealogy: A Survey For Researchers of All Levels

Speaker: Guest Speaker: Adam Cherson, Author of “Historicity of the Tribe of Levi: A Genetic Perspective” (in print)

Part 1: Cultural Genography

Part 2: Rabbinical yDNA Lineages

Part 3: Levi-Cohen Tribal Tree

Part 4: Q & A

Description: In this first-ever presentation Adam will give an overview with illustrations of various unique approaches to genealogical research, including everything one needs to know to get started.

Monday May 23, 7pm Mountain/ 9pm Eastern/ 8pm Central/ 6pm Pacific/ 3am (May 24) UTC/GMT

You are invited to a Zoom meeting.
When: May 23, 2022 07:00 PM Mountain Time (US and Canada)
Register in advance for this meeting:
https://ancestry.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJUoceCspz4uE9ECi34vlYCCBDtBXJ56_GLm After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

More information on 23 May meeting

Title: Deep Genetic Genealogy: A Survey For Researchers of All Levels

Speaker: Guest Speaker: Adam Cherson, Author of “Historicity of the Tribe of Levi: A Genetic Perspective” (in print)

Part 1: Cultural Genography

Part 2: Rabbinical yDNA Lineages

Part 3: Levi-Cohen Tribal Tree

Part 4: Q & A

Description: In this first-ever presentation Adam will give an overview with illustrations of various unique approaches to genealogical research, including everything one needs to know to get started.

Monday May 23, 7pm Mountain/ 9pm Eastern/ 8pm Central/ 6pm Pacific/ 3am (May 24) UTC/GMT

You are invited to a Zoom meeting.
When: May 23, 2022 07:00 PM Mountain Time (US and Canada)
Register in advance for this meeting:
https://ancestry.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJUoceCspz4uE9ECi34vlYCCBDtBXJ56_GLm After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

Call to Meeting May 23 at 7pm MST

 Adam Cherson will be speaking about three of his projects: Cultural Genography, Rabbinical Lineages Index, Levi-Cohen Tribal Tree. The topics all involve Y-DNA analysis, but it’s tailored to be of interest to DNA novices as well. I believe it will be a bit of a promotion for fee-for-service offerings, but the subjects are incredibly interesting. 

Many thanks to Josh and to Bill Elkus for making this possible.

You are invited to a Zoom meeting.
When: May 23, 2022 07:00 PM Mountain Time (US and Canada)
Register in advance for this meeting:
https://ancestry.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJUoceCspz4uE9ECi34vlYCCBDtBXJ56_GLm After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

Zoom link to meeting 26 April 2022

https://ancestry.zoom.us/j/98993858307?pwd=TzhwUklLcWdIdEIzUE1CdjluVE5iZz09

April 26 – This is a Tuesday! Rabbi Samuel Spector of Congregation Kol Ami has agreed to meet with us there (2425 East Heritage Way, Salt Lake City) for a combination in-person (masked and vaccinated) and Zoom meeting. He will talk about the history of Kol Ami, the state of the Utah Jewish Community, and the significance of family history/traditions in Judaism.

Query

I received this inquiry and hope some of you can assist:

“I’m a utah resident, looking for lost relatives between the years 1914-1924 who arrived at Alice Island from Russia, Byelarus, lived for a period of time in Rochester NY, then disappeared. One male adult, four young teenage kids ( three boys and a girl). MyHeritage, JewishGen, local data in Russia- none are helpful.
Your advise please?

Thank you,”
Janna Zamir
801-201-5138 cell/text