Last night I was watching my new favorite TV show Who Do
You Think You Are? sponsored by Ancestry.com which jolted my memory that I
never told you about our genealogical Christmas. I meant to, but new stuff kept
popping up and I forgot about it, so here goes, better late than never.
From the time she was a teenager my sister was convinced
that some other nationality got tossed into the two ingredient mix that is my mother’s
pure Irish background and my father’s equally pure Portuguese one. It revealed itself, she believed, on the top of her head. My sister’s
hair is so formidable, so frizzy, so large, that she has to wear it long with
the sides pulled up or you’d never see her face. When we were kids I used to
torment her by calling her little Dr. Zorba. (Okay, that dated me.) While I
admit that no one else in the family comes close to sporting a head of hair of
such magnificent proportions I never found it especially indicative of an unknown
genetic code. But my sister couldn’t let it go – the subject of her hair popped
up endlessly over the years. So now
that DNA testing is possible she signed up with Family Tree DNA, which I just
found out is the official sponsor of the DNA portion of Who Do You Think you
Are? They sent her a kit with instructions for swabbing both sides of her mouth,
re-packing the swabs in special vials, and returning them for analysis.
I knew she’d already done it, but I told her I thought she would
be disappointed because we already have a document that one of our Portuguese
relatives from Hawaii (my father grew up in Maui) obtained from the Mormon Church
which keeps genealogical records on almost everybody even if they aren’t Mormon.
Ours is pretty impressive and goes back to the 1600’s, showing a long line of
Portuguese people with cool names, all from Funchal, the capital city of the
Madeira Islands, a Portuguese archipelago situated in the north Atlantic Ocean.
All of them appeared to be Roman Catholics, as was my father.
“I KNOW there’s something there,” my sister argued. “Just
wait – you’ll see.”
It takes six weeks for the report to come, but it handily
arrived a few days before Christmas – all 26 pages of it which she printed
out from the computer. Christmas morning she bounded in my front door bearing
both the envelope with the pages and a grin that rivaled the cat who swallowed the canary.
“I told you so!” she crowed, waving it at me. “You are NOT
going to believe it either!”
Two seconds later everybody in the house congregated in
the family room to hear the story. My mind raced, trying to imagine what it
could be, but all I could think of was maybe some African influence due to the
location of Africa and the trade routes.
“Our family was not originally Catholic,” she began. “We
were Jewish – on both sides of the Portuguese line. Our father’s father’s family
traces back to the Sephardic Jews and his mother’s side shows two branches of Ashkenazi
Jews, both of which explain THIS.” She
grabbed a fistful of hair on both sides of her head and held it out as Exhibit
A.
“During the Inquisition the Catholic Church was obliterating
the Jews, so they either got out of Portugal, or assimilated to save their
lives. It looks like ours assimilated and married Portuguese people and then
over the generations became Catholics by choice.”
Wow --talk about a zinger! But before I could wrap my brain around that there was more. At the
top of the analysis it breaks down the percentages of every nationality which
shows up in the test. My sister, despite the hair and the fact that she’s a little
darker than I am, showed up as mostly Irish with Portuguese coming in at second
place. The Irish side showed no real surprises other than the fact that my Irish grandfather had a tiny bit of English (which would have come as an unwelcome surprise due to "the troubles" that caused the Irish great suffeirng).The real stunner was that there was a THIRD category. My sister is twelve per cent Bedouin!
I could barely absorb it all. My sister’s face is my face
and we are both small (we clearly got our size from the Portuguese), but she is
a tiny bit darker and of course has THE HAIR. Yet here’s the thing. When it
came time to meet up with our faraway relatives I chose to go to Ireland -- though
I think it was more a matter of Ireland calling me home -- while she went eagerly without hesitation twice
to Hawaii. And yet her DNA favored the Irish. The analysis from Family Tree also
comes with the names of people all over the world who share a large portion of
your DNA. The one who matches her best is a 20 year old singer living in
Britain whom we found on You-Tube. His face is her face too, only framed with a
mop of blond curls. He has an Irish name, but not one I ever heard mentioned in
our family. We looked up some more matches online and found lots of accomplished
people, including several writers, (and one very handsome gigolo in Brazil),
none of whom look like us, or share the same family names.
Initially I thought I was piggy-backing on her analysis and
didn’t need to spend the money to get my own. But this is not so. My percentages
could be different and the people I match with could be different as well because
we all inherit different amounts of the same DNA. Eric is urging me to do the test and I’m thinking
about it. Before all this started I really didn’t care, but for some reason I think maybe now I need to know. Everyone featured
on Who Do You Think you Are? is moved to tears by what they learn on the show.
While I wouldn’t go that far, I do think that in a subtle way I am changed by
the discovery. But how? I don’t know that yet, but I find myself thinking about
it a lot which is why I think I need to see my own results.
Last night before I went to bed I read a story on the internet
about a federal judge from Montana forwarding a racist email to his friends about President
Obama and thought immediately of my sister’s anyalsis. Sephardic Jews! Ashkenazi
Jews! Twelve per cent Bedoin! Who knew? Could it be that maybe we’re less the
human race and more the human family?
It’s sure beginning to look like it. Maybe it’s time
to act like it too.
4 comments:
I read your geneaological blog yesterday. I found it fascinating. It has been on my mind ever since. I did not know that each child would receive different percentages of DNA identitites. I was taught that if, for example, your mother was Scotch and Irish and your father was English that all children were 1/4 Scotch, 1/4 Irish and 1/2 English. The individual characteristics came out by which dominant genes showed up (dark eyes or blue eyes). So thank you for posting. I really enjoyed this.
I thought the exact same thing, Hilda.I was amazed when she told me that I would need to do it too to learn my gentic profile. The whole thing was fascinating. I would never in a million years have guessed what it revealed. If she hadn't been so convinced about her hair we would still not know. It was worth it.
This is very interesting, Tess. I, too, am amazed at how much the DNA testing shows. I didn't think our heritage would show up. That is intriguing. I saw a photo of my grandmother as a young woman, and now I know where all the blonds come from! I of course did not get the lovely whitish blond my family has. Mine is reddish, or it was until it fell out...now we know what color it is. Keep up the good work.
Oh, we all have THAT color hair now -- thank heavens for L'Oreal and other augmentations! :-)It is fun to see old photos and find resemblances. My sister and look like our Irish mother.
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