January |
Sunday,
January 8, 2012 |
Program: |
Writing the Family History: Creative Concepts for a Lasting
Legacy
|
Location:
|
Adas Israel,
Washington, D.C.
|
Time: |
1:00 PM - Schmooze
1:30 PM - Short Business Meeting, Announcements, and Program
|
Speaker: |
Sandra MacLean Clunies, CG (click
here for bio) |
 |
Many researchers and family historians
can assemble charts, documents, photos, artifacts – but are not yet
comfortable with writing the narrative family history. The personal
stories of both ancestors and the present generation – i.e., what are we
doing to leave a record of our lives for the future, as well as sharing
stories from the past?
This presentation outlines 20 simple elements to consider, and engages
the audience is some participation as well. It was generated after an
article of Sandra's was published in the National Genealogical Society
Quarterly: "Writing the Family History: Creative Concepts for a Lasting
Legacy" by Sandra MacLean Clunies, CG, who is a past winner of the NGS
Family History Writing Contest (Putting Family History into Context: A
Special Issue of the National Genealogical Society Quarterly NGSQ vol.
88, December 2000.
Many who hear this presentation come up afterwards and say they have now
lost their fears and are now inspired to go home and start writing down
the stories! With the December talk showing how to produce a final book,
this could then add the important dimension of unique, personal, and
very meaningful content to such a project. It follows my grandmother’s
adage that “you can eat an elephant if you cut it into small enough
pieces”! This presentation demonstrates the “small pieces” that anyone
can start to write.
This program will reflect a natural progression from the December
program presented by Marlis Humphrey. |
|
February |
Sunday,
February 12, 2012 |
Program: |
Your Jewish Roots in Poland: JRI-Poland, the Records and More …
|
Location:
|
|
Time: |
1:00 PM - Schmooze
1:30 PM - Short Business Meeting, Announcements,
and Program
|
Speaker: |
Mark Halpern (click
here for bio) |
 |
This presentation from Jewish Records Indexing-Poland
www.jri-poland.org
will cover Jewish records and research from the various parts of Poland
– Congress Poland, Russian Pale of Settlement (Bialystok area), Austrian
Galicia, and Prussian Poland records. The presentation will demonstrate
what kind of information can be found in each sort of record and how to
find out what records are available for one's town. Sample searches will
show ways to utilize the JRI-Poland database in order to get the most
out of your research.
Click
here for a list of
links to key Polish research sites. |
|
March |
Sunday,
March 11, 2012 |
Program: |
“The Jews of the Sudan”
|
Location:
|
|
Time: |
1:00 PM - Schmooze
1:30 PM - Short Business Meeting, Announcements,
and Program
|
Speaker: |
Jeffrey Malka, M.D.
(click
here for bio) |
 |
Learn about the little-known history of the intrepid Jews
who in the late nineteenth century settled in the uncharted lands at the
junction of the Blue and White Niles, prospered, established the only
B'nai B'rith lodge in the heart of Africa, and whose members later had
an significant impacts on Israel and world Jewry in present times. Dr. Malka speaks on this subject with in-depth personal knowledge, as his
grandfather Shlomo Malka was the Chief Rabbi of the Sudan from 1904 to
1949. Dr. Malka was born in the Sudan and lived there until he was 10,
with several later visits up to 1956. |
|
|
Workshop: |
Beginner's Workshop |
Time: |
3:00 PM |
|
This workshop will be led
by JGSGW Past Presidents, Arline Sachs and Faith Klein.
After finding out what
the people are doing or know now, we will talk briefly about writing
down what you already know or think you know and then interviewing as
these are the first steps. There will be a discussion about the handout.
Faith will lead the group to the Jack Klein Memorial Library and Faith
will explain the genealogy materials there. Jack Klein was the second
President of JGSGW.
Attendees will receive a copy of 7th edition of “Jump-Start Your Jewish
Genealogy Research: A Beginner’s Guide.”
The workshop is open to JGSGW members only.
Space is limited and pre-registration is
required. Email registration
requests to
|
|
April |
Sunday,
April 15, 2012 |
Program: |
“The Chosen Folks: Writing about the Jews of Texas”
|
Location:
|
|
Time: |
1:00 PM - Schmooze
1:30 PM - Short Business Meeting, Announcements,
and Program
|
Speaker: |
Dr. Bryan Edward Stone (click
here for bio) |
 |
Dr. Stone’s talk will focus on the themes of his recent book, “The
Chosen Folks: Jews on the Frontiers of Texas.” By addressing specific
topics such as the transient sixteenth-century Sephardim who may have
been the first Jews in the state, the establishment of permanent Jewish
communities in Texas, and later immigrations such as the Galveston
Movement, Stone explains the intricacies of Texas-Jewish identity. The
ways that Texas Jews defined themselves in opposition to others with
whom they shared their state — and in opposition to Jews elsewhere —
provide insights into how Jews construct and maintain their distinctive
identity in places where they are an extreme minority. As such, the
historical insights of The Chosen Folks are relevant to Jewish
communities across the United States. |
|
May |
Sunday,
May 6, 2012 |
Program: |
Finding
Living People on the Internet
|
Location:
|
|
Time: |
1:00 PM - Schmooze
1:30 PM - Short Business Meeting, Announcements,
and Program
|
Speaker: |
Ron Arons (click
here for bio) |
 |
Why search for living people? You might find cousins you never knew
before. You might find people who might know more about your family than
can be found in genealogical documents. This talk provides scores of
websites to find almost any living person whether you know their surname
or not (yes, you read correctly). Ron will provide numerous real-life
examples of how these websites can be used individually and together. |
|
June |
Sunday, June 10, 2012 |
Program:
|
Annual Meeting
Note: This meeting is for members only.
Annual Luncheon and Membership Appreciation Meeting
|
Location |
Potomac Community
Center, Potomac, MD |
Time: |
12:30 PM - Luncheon
|
|
1:00 PM - Program
|
|
Speaker:
Zack A. Wilske,
"Bureau of Naturalization Records for Genealogists" |
 |
This
presentation will use examples drawn from naturalization case and
correspondence files to introduce researchers to the Bureau of
Naturalization file series that is part of the records of INS now stored
at the National Archives in Washington, DC. The records, which document
the years 1906-1944, contain thousands of case correspondence files for
aliens and citizens who had questions or concerns about nationality and
citizenship. A newly available name index makes these previously
under-utilized records accessible to Genealogists. The presentation
focuses on Bureau of Naturalization file but will include examples of a
wide array of early 20th century immigration and nationality records.
There were
two handouts at this meeting: one for
INS Subject & Policy Records, the other
for the Name Index to Bureau of Naturalization Correspondence Files,
1906-1946. They have been combined into one PDF file - click
here. Note that these
are the description of the records, not the records themselves.
Zack Wilske is a historian with the US Citizenship and Immigration
Services (USCIS). His research interests include the history of the
Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) and the uses of INS records
for genealogists and historians. He has presented regularly at the
National Archives and several genealogy conferences, including the 31st
IAJGS International Conference on Jewish Genealogy in Washington, DC in
2011. |
|
July |
Wednesday, July 11, 2012 |
Program: |
Tour of the
"Attachments" Exhibit at the National Archives
|
Location:
|
|
Time: |
10:30 AM
|
Curator/Guide: |
Bruce Bustard (bio) |
 |
JGSGW Members only. Advance registration required
- send email to
A specially arranged guided
tour of the new exhibit “Attachments:
Faces and Stories from America's Gates”
led by the Archives senior curator.
“Attachments” tells the stories of 31 men, women, and children who found
themselves at the gateways to America between 1880 and the end of World
War II. Their stories are told through original documents and
photographs that were “attached” to government forms, and draw from a
few of the millions of immigration case files at the National Archives.
The exhibition explores both physical and emotional
“attachments” -- the attachment of immigrants to family and community,
and the attachment of Americans to their beliefs about immigrants and
citizenship. |
|
September |
Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2012 - TWO Lectures |
Program: |
Finding Place of Birth in Federal Records |
Location:
|
National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Room G-25, use Penn. Ave. Entrance to Research Center
|
Time: |
11:00 AM |
Speaker: |
Susannah E. Brooks |
|
Susannah E. Brooks explains where one might find place of birth in
National Archives records, which is essential for additional research at
the local and state level in the U.S. and abroad.
Susannah E. Brooks has been a volunteer genealogy staff aide at the
National Archives and Records Administration in Washington, DC for 14
years and is the
corresponding secretary of the Mid-Atlantic Germanic Society (MAGS). She
specializes in German, 19th and 20th C. general US research. |
|
|
Program: |
Jewish and Holocaust-related Records at
the National Archives
|
Location:
|
National Archives, Washington, D.C.
Adams Room - use Constitution Ave. Special Events Entrance (to right of
outside staircase, at ground level).
|
Time: |
1:00 PM
|
|
Speaker: Miriam Kleiman, Public Affairs
Specialist (click here for bio). |
 |
This program was arranged
exclusively for JGSGW Members.
Miriam Kleiman will speak about Jewish and Holocaust-related records at
the National Archives. She will discuss finding aids to these materials
and efforts by the National Archives to make these records more widely
available via microfilm and online. She will also provide a "walk
through" of the National Archives Public Vaults permanent exhibition,
highlighting records relating to the Jewish experience in America. |
|
October |
Sunday,
October 14, 2012
|
WORKSHOP – Members only!
|
"Ancestral Footprints in the UK" (A webinar)
|
Location:
|
|
Time: |
11:00 AM
|
|
Speaker:
Mark Nicholls, Chairman,
Jewish Genealogical Society of Great Britain (bio) |
 |
Workshops
are open to JGSGW members only. Non-members may join on the day of the
workshop. NO advance registration is required.
The focus of this workshop will be to show the sorts of records that
can be researched to trace people who came through the UK and who may
have stayed there for a while and permanently. Mark will also cover the
ports of entry, records of immigration (or rather the lack of them),
places that people lived in, and general living conditions.
Mark
Nicholls will give his presentation from his home in England and time
will be provided for Q&A.
NOTE: What is a webinar?
The term webinar is short for Web-based Seminar, a presentation,
lecture, workshop or seminar that is transmitted over the Web,
specifically a
portmanteau
of web & seminar, to describe a specific type of web conference.
|
|
Bagels, yogurt, and beverages will be provided for those attending both the
Webinar and the afternoon meetings. |
Time: |
1:00 PM - Schmooze
1:30 PM - Short Business Meeting, Announcements, and SIG Meetings
|
SIG meetings: |
Special Interest Group meetings |
|
At 1 PM we will have our
usual Schmooze, followed by a brief meeting conducted by President Jeff
Malka.
When the meeting is over, we will break into the SIG Sessions. SIG Hosts
will do a presentation on a project, new resource or other item of
interest to the assembled group. At that point, the floor is open to
Q&A. Questions that require research will be recorded and answers sent
to members of the group. The session will last 45 minutes and then by
voice vote, we will decide whether people want to continue with their
current session OR switch to another group. We will do one or the other,
but not both.
The SIG Sessions that are planned are as follows:
SIG |
Host |
Suwalki-Lomza |
Harvey Kabaker & Michael
Richman |
Galicia |
Milt Goldsamt |
Litvak |
Bill Yoffee |
Beginners |
Harris Weinstein |
|
|
November |
Sunday,
November 11, 2012 |
Program: |
"My Trip Back to the Holocaust"
|
Location:
|
|
Time: |
1:00 PM - Schmooze
1:30 PM - Short Business Meeting, Announcements, and Program
|
|
Speaker:
Esther
Safran Foer, Director, 6th and I Historic
Synagogue (bio) |
 |
In 2009 Esther and her oldest son went to Ukraine to
visit the shtetlach her parents came from. They wanted to walk the
ground her ancestors had walked on. Esther wrote, "In fact, we found
much more than we expected. Even 70 years after the Holocaust it is
still possible to go back and find new information." |
|
|
Workshop: |
Beginner's
Workshop
|
Time: |
3:00
- 5:00 PM |
|
This workshop will be led by Vera
Finberg, JGSGW Librarian and Faith Klein, JGSGW Past President.
Jewish family history does not have to be a mystery. This workshop will
explain how to organize the information you know, where to conduct
searches and how to use Internet resources to get started doing Jewish
genealogy.
Faith will lead the group on a tour of the Jack Klein Memorial Library
and explain the genealogy materials there. Jack Klein was the second
president of the JGSGW.
Class size is limited to 20. Participation is limited to members only.
Advance registration is required at
|
|
December |
Sunday,
December 9, 2012 |
|
Special: The JGSGW
Library (at B'nai Israel) will be open 10:00 am - noon. |
|
|
Program: |
"Pastrami on Rye: An Overstuffed History of the Jewish Deli"
|
Location:
|
|
Time: |
Noon - Schmooze
12:30 PM - Short Business Meeting, Announcements,
and Program
|
|
Drawing:
there will be a drawing for genealogy-related
Chanukah presents. |
|
Speaker: Ted Merwin, Ph.D. (bio) |
 |
Ted Merwin
presents an interactive, multimedia lecture on the changing place of the
Jewish Deli in American life.
In New York,
Baltimore, and other American cities, the delicatessen was the lifeblood
and the linchpin of the Jewish community. The "soul food" and atmosphere
it dished up became a quintessential part of American culture for Jews
and non-Jews alike. But as Jews moved into the suburban middle class,
the deli lost its bite, giving way to other ethnic restaurants and
cuisines. Can the deli be resurrected?
Merwin, an assistant professor of religion and Judaic studies at
Dickinson
College, will show how the deli, which
originated in Germany and Eastern Europe, developed in this country into
a neighborhood institution on par with the synagogue. He will also
discuss how the deli became an icon of both television shows and films
about the Jewish experience, ranging from
"When Harry Met Sally" to
"The Larry David Sandwich"
episode of Curb Your Enthusiasm. |
|
|