The joy of genealogy and family history


See the reasons why people do genealogy and family history. Connect with your family and your ancestry at worldvitalrecords.com. Find your ancestry.

Tags: , ,

24 Responses to “The joy of genealogy and family history”

  1. AustinWorthington says:

    @EcKoWR Is it in tree form, as in just names connected by lines? Because names stay the same in all languages.

  2. AustinWorthington says:

    I go back to the 300s.

  3. shatros says:

    I would like to point out that many German companies that deliberately helped to kill jews, owned by the same families today are selling their products to the United States. Does this mean that the people who own such products share in the guilt of murdering Jews?

  4. shatros says:

    Exactly what is your point? As I said, the nazis used a lot of resources to kill jews and others. If you do a good deed and some evil person twists that into murder than thanks you for your good deed, does that turn your good deed into evil making you evil? In effect you are implying that the LDS and IBM are guilty of assisting the nazis. VW and Mercedes were used by the nazis to kill jews. Does this mean that people who drive those vehicles today are guilty of helping the nazis?

  5. shatros says:

    Genealogy is one way people connect with the past and helps them relate to history, a worthy pursuit for any individual. I had absolutely no interest in history until I started to look up my family tree and discovered many of my ancesters participated, for better or worse, in many historical events.

  6. shatros says:

    trader0108, the nazis used a lot of resources to do their evil deeds. I do not know the answer to your questions though if I am reading between the lines correctly, it seems you are really asking did IBM conspire with the LDS to help the nazis kill jews. I doubt either would be true. I also would say that is is a meaningless pursuit. If you went after everyone or everything that the nazis used, you would be going after most of the world.

  7. kadetsuna says:

    My family tree goes back to a Norman knight who lived in the 11th century.

  8. 450jordan says:

    I go back to the 1200s.

  9. nukunonu says:

    my family tree goes back 500 years

  10. Wordlord72 says:

    Great video…many things I experianced as well its a great hobby to have its connecting people around the world

  11. trader0108 says:

    These two book titles give documentation that the LDS genealogical records were used by the Nazi’s in WWII to find out who were jewish in Europe: (1) “Mormonism in Germany; a history of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in Germany between 1840 and 1970″, by Gilbert W. Scharffs , and (2)”The Nazi State and the New Religions” by Christine Elizabeth King. This documentation is implied from letters of praise to the LDS from the Nazi’s, and recovered LDS jewish files stolen by Nazi’s.

  12. caroleinmn says:

    Really, really stupid post from a really, really ignorant (in more ways than one) person.

  13. alfredo6243 says:

    Man who cares they are all DEAD DEAD dEAD gone.

  14. supertrinko says:

    i thought they just asked who the jews were, as before the war started, they acted like friendly soldiers that the people could trust, after they actually got the jew’s into the trains that head to the camps, that’s when things changed

  15. bigbuggie5 says:

    no! There was no genealogy computer database back then!

  16. OpeningDoors2ThePast says:

    Wow! David’s ancestor was a scribe for Martin Luther? That’s a great find! This is a very good presentation on how genealogy makes you feel and how exciting it is.

  17. trader0108 says:

    Did the Nazi’s use LDS genealogy data, to help find out who were the Jewish in WWII ? Did the LDS genealogy library use IBM card sorting machines in the 1930′s to process genealogical data, the same way that the Nazi’s used IBM card sorting machines to find the Jews in Europe, as referenced in the book “IBM and the Holocaust” ? Did the LDS genealogy library give to the Nazi’s, Jewish genealogical data already punched onto IBM punch cards, to help the Nazi’s locate and persecute Jews in Europe ?

  18. MORT2316 says:

    I enjoyed it! ljm Morthorst, Maul,Smith, Sudbrink, Skorupska..etc.

  19. fancifelle says:

    One helpful thing is to realize people may have mispelled their name on ship records, or changed their name on the arrival/ship for various reasons. This happened with one of mine. Another dead line was reawakened when I saw that a census had their names mispelled.

  20. kenyahsas says:

    Wonderful watch!

  21. EcKoWR says:

    i have a family tree that goes back 200 years ago but i havent been ablke to read it because its in another language.my father knows and i will soon find a way to decipher what it says.

  22. Elyse90505 says:

    I also have alot of videos on genealogy and I am making more!

  23. kneedownbrown says:

    I’m planning to research my family tree over the summer and currently know very little about how to do it. Can you recommend a software package that helps you to organise all your photos and information?

  24. 7yvette7 says:

    These are real stories by real people! I especially like Harvey’s way of tying together the whole purpose of genealogy and family history at the end of the video.

Leave a Reply