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eLearning Series: Geneology
My Family Tree is Important to Me
( 50 articles in this series )
Preserve
Your Family History For Future Geneologists
Have you ever wished you could ask your Great-Uncle
George how soldiers felt about World War I or your Great-Aunt
Georgina how she weathered the Great Depression? Or perhaps
you rue the loss of your Grandmother Gretel’s recipe for delicious
German strudel? Family traditions and lore can be completely
lost in a generation or two if families do not actively take
steps to preserve their history. A family history is a legacy,
and preserving your legacy for your grandchildren and great-grandchildren
can be an invaluable gift. You don’t have to sit down and write
out a laborious record of your family history, however, in
order to preserve your legacy, although that would indeed be
an incredible gift. Small projects and new family traditions
can instill an invaluable sense of history in future generations.
If your house burned down tonight and you could only save
one of your belongings, what would it be? A frequent reply
to that question is “family photos.” As the old saying goes,
“A picture is worth a thousand words.” Nothing is more interesting
than realizing you have your grandfather’s nose or your great-grandmother’s
eyes. Photos can become disorganized, scattered, and, in the
end, meaningless, however, if you don’t take steps now to compile
them into some semblance of order and to share them with younger
generations. Ask family or friends if you can copy any original
photos that you don’t own. Describe the people in the photographs,
either orally or in writing. Regale your children and grandchildren
with anecdotes about your summer trips to the beach or the
day you caught the prize-winning fish. Placing your photos
in a scrapbook is a particularly powerful way to preserve their
meaning and message, and be sure to incorporate captions and
other written descriptions of the pictures. Also, don’t forget
to include other important documents, such as birth certificates,
old report cards, or original art work, poetry, or songs in
the scrapbook. Even if you are not artistically inclined, the
acid-free scrapbook paper and glue will preserve your photographs
and memorabilia for years to come, so just slap them onto the
paper as best you can. A lovingly-composed scrapbook will really
become a family treasure.
Another
way to capture an image is on video. On a lazy Sunday
afternoon, take your home video camera and sit down with an
older family member. By asking certain questions, you can mine
their memories for gems of wisdom and valuable family anecdotes.
You can also help steer the interview so that it is relatively
chronological or comprehensive. Perhaps the interviewee may
even want to prepare his answers beforehand. Ask about family
residences, including physical descriptions or even a room-by-room
verbal tour. Sensory descriptions are particularly interesting.
Talk about ethnicity and religion and its impact on family
traditions or customs. Ask family members about major historical
events. Move the discussion from childhood friends to high
school events to college, career, and romance. Perhaps you
could even interview people from the past, such as old friends
or current spouses, about the interviewee. Also encourage your
family members to share the disappointments and struggles that
they faced as well as the life lessons and wisdom that they
gained. A permanent record of not only your family member’s
memories but also the way they looked and talked is an invaluable
gift to future generations.
If you don’t have a video camera, then use
a tape recorder;
and if you don’t have a tape recorder, then use a pen and pencil
to record your family history. Start a journal, and include
not only thoughts and feelings but also descriptions of current
events and culture. Such a record will be fascinating to your
descendants, no matter how mundane it may seem in the present.
There are numerous book and internet sites about journaling
or writing a memoir that can help you get started.
Finally, make your family history an interactive experience
for your children and grandchildren. Visit the house where
you grew or the country from which your grandparents immigrated.
Seeing a place first-hand will give future generations a sense
of their background and roots. Permanent edifices also provide
valuable clues about the economy, architecture, and culture
of the time in which family members lived. In addition, make
your grandmother’s German strudel with your children, or teach
them how to play a harmonica like their Great-Uncle George.
Pass your skills and wisdoms down to them in ways they can
enjoy. Such highly sensory experiences are not easily forgotten.
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by SolveYourProblem.com
: 2006
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