Anonymous wrote:Racists will say you are Jewish. Jews will say you are not.
Anonymous wrote:What DNA company did you use? 99% is really high for Eastern European Jews. Most Jews I know who have done the test are surprised in the other direction and are much more mixed than they think they are. I would do another test with another company to double check. You could very easily have some Jewish background, but even people who 100% know all their ancestors emigrated straight from a shtetl, are more mixed in terms of DNA.
Anonymous wrote:Jewish law doesn’t address DNA, as far as I know. Do a genealogy search to see who your ancestors were. If your mother is Jewish, whether or not a “practicing” Jew, you are Jewish under Jewish law.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So, I thought I was of Polish/Czech Catholic ancestry, but my at-home DNA test indicates 99% Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry.
By Jewish law, does this mean I am "officially" Jewish? I was raised Catholic and know nothing about the religion. (But am going to research, as I'm interested in knowing my family's story).
Nope. Unless your mother is a practicing Jew, your DNA really doesn't matter for much.
Anonymous wrote:So, I thought I was of Polish/Czech Catholic ancestry, but my at-home DNA test indicates 99% Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry.
By Jewish law, does this mean I am "officially" Jewish? I was raised Catholic and know nothing about the religion. (But am going to research, as I'm interested in knowing my family's story).
Anonymous wrote:So, I thought I was of Polish/Czech Catholic ancestry, but my at-home DNA test indicates 99% Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry.
By Jewish law, does this mean I am "officially" Jewish? I was raised Catholic and know nothing about the religion. (But am going to research, as I'm interested in knowing my family's story).