Anonymous wrote:PP. Another side of my family is from Lutheran Western Slovakia. I have never been to visit but through genealogical research, I've come to understand phenomena that impacted the immigrant experience and my family. I value that. Many of my distant relatives appear to have also moved from peasants to college educated people in their country (engineers, dentists, etc.). That has necessitated leaving the little village. It still looks like a nice place to live but is small, rural, and there probably aren't many good-paying jobs there. I can watch their church services on Facebook and see the church where my relatives were baptized 150 years ago. That is very interesting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A Native American reservation. where the members look at you confused: you're a Native Amrican?
If you were American Indian you’d know it either by your CDIB or your tribal card.
Anonymous wrote:Can’t Hitler wiped it out
Anonymous wrote:A Native American reservation. where the members look at you confused: you're a Native Amrican?
Anonymous wrote:How do you figure out which ancestor to even use? The one whose last name you have? I’m from at least 8 countries and then also different cities in several of them. I went to the city where my maiden name ancestor came from. It was neat opening a phone book and seeing hundreds of my last name. I didn’t feel any ties to that place though.
When I go to the city and state that my parents grew up in, I feel like I’m home.