Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where was your family during WWII?
The US.
Can you give more background on when both sets of grandparents immigrated?
is it possible you were adopted?
In the 30s, I think. They went to Pittsburgh, where the neighborhoods were ethnically separated then, so they were living in communities of Czech and Polish people.
I really don't know. No, I'm not adopted. I have two siblings and we all look similar. I have features from both parents.
it’s unlikely they came in the 30s because that was after restrictive immigration caps took effect. Can you get any more detail on when they arrived? how old were they when your parents were born? When were your parents born?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those who are upset about the suggestion of incest should realize how often Dna tests are showing it...here is a study where 1 in 7000 people in a DNA bank had parents who were siblings or parent and child. https://hcn.health/hcn-trends-story/consumer-dna-tests-uncover-hidden-epidemic-of-incest/ and there's a paywalled Atlantic story from earlier this year on the same topic. the odds of that vs two secret Ashkenazi Jews finding each other and having kids don't seem that different.
People who get their DNA done are not a random population sample. Many are people looking for answers. Anyway a few people here have chimed in to say that they have the same high percentage of Ashkenazi Jewish DNA.
There is no reason for you to keep insisting that there is a traumatic explanation. If so, OP will learn from further research. This post is in the Religion forum.
It's not weird at all for people from a common ethnic origin to have lived in the same small neighborhood in the first half of the 1900s. In my family's ethnicity, men got mail order brides from the homeland.
Also, in some global cultures, it's okay for uncles to marry nieces and more tolerated for first cousins to marry. Like European royalty (Queen Victoria). It wasn't considered incest. So there's that.
It's very common for people of the same background to marry but it's very uncommon for people concealing the same background to find each other and marry.
It's very common for people whose parents are both Ashekenazi Jews to have 90% or more Ashkenazi DNA but it's very uncommon for someone who never knew they had Jewish heritage to have that high a percentage of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those who are upset about the suggestion of incest should realize how often Dna tests are showing it...here is a study where 1 in 7000 people in a DNA bank had parents who were siblings or parent and child. https://hcn.health/hcn-trends-story/consumer-dna-tests-uncover-hidden-epidemic-of-incest/ and there's a paywalled Atlantic story from earlier this year on the same topic. the odds of that vs two secret Ashkenazi Jews finding each other and having kids don't seem that different.
People who get their DNA done are not a random population sample. Many are people looking for answers. Anyway a few people here have chimed in to say that they have the same high percentage of Ashkenazi Jewish DNA.
There is no reason for you to keep insisting that there is a traumatic explanation. If so, OP will learn from further research. This post is in the Religion forum.
It's not weird at all for people from a common ethnic origin to have lived in the same small neighborhood in the first half of the 1900s. In my family's ethnicity, men got mail order brides from the homeland.
Also, in some global cultures, it's okay for uncles to marry nieces and more tolerated for first cousins to marry. Like European royalty (Queen Victoria). It wasn't considered incest. So there's that.
Anonymous wrote:Those who are upset about the suggestion of incest should realize how often Dna tests are showing it...here is a study where 1 in 7000 people in a DNA bank had parents who were siblings or parent and child. https://hcn.health/hcn-trends-story/consumer-dna-tests-uncover-hidden-epidemic-of-incest/ and there's a paywalled Atlantic story from earlier this year on the same topic. the odds of that vs two secret Ashkenazi Jews finding each other and having kids don't seem that different.
Anonymous wrote: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.
So is being Jewish an ethnicity, not a faith?
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:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where was your family during WWII?
The US.
Can you give more background on when both sets of grandparents immigrated?
is it possible you were adopted?
In the 30s, I think. They went to Pittsburgh, where the neighborhoods were ethnically separated then, so they were living in communities of Czech and Polish people.
I really don't know. No, I'm not adopted. I have two siblings and we all look similar. I have features from both parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where was your family during WWII?
The US.
Can you give more background on when both sets of grandparents immigrated?
is it possible you were adopted?
In the 30s, I think. They went to Pittsburgh, where the neighborhoods were ethnically separated then, so they were living in communities of Czech and Polish people.
I really don't know. No, I'm not adopted. I have two siblings and we all look similar. I have features from both parents.
Anonymous wrote:Why did you report posts on the other thread that told you that is possible, and then the one saying nobody is 99% Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry.
I mean sure, you could be, if they immigrated recently a everyone married only Ashkenazi Jews, but since you just found this out, what are the chances of that?
Your mom and dad are both unaware and both married the same DNA people?
And so did your grandparents? So, completely unaware of their background and yet here you are?
Logically, this is not possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did you report posts on the other thread that told you that is possible, and then the one saying nobody is 99% Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry.
I mean sure, you could be, if they immigrated recently a everyone married only Ashkenazi Jews, but since you just found this out, what are the chances of that?
Your mom and dad are both unaware and both married the same DNA people?
And so did your grandparents? So, completely unaware of their background and yet here you are?
Logically, this is not possible.
Well I think it’s possible because assimilation and hiding a Jewish background was more common than you’d think in the 1900s. But probably there’d be some family stories about it.
It's possible. But the odds that both of OP's parents were from families that hid their very Jewish heritage is small. OP, another sad possibility (if your post is real) is that you are the product of incest.
Now there's a twist!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did you report posts on the other thread that told you that is possible, and then the one saying nobody is 99% Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry.
I mean sure, you could be, if they immigrated recently a everyone married only Ashkenazi Jews, but since you just found this out, what are the chances of that?
Your mom and dad are both unaware and both married the same DNA people?
And so did your grandparents? So, completely unaware of their background and yet here you are?
Logically, this is not possible.
Well I think it’s possible because assimilation and hiding a Jewish background was more common than you’d think in the 1900s. But probably there’d be some family stories about it.
It's possible. But the odds that both of OP's parents were from families that hid their very Jewish heritage is small. OP, another sad possibility (if your post is real) is that you are the product of incest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where was your family during WWII?
The US.
Can you give more background on when both sets of grandparents immigrated?
is it possible you were adopted?