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They Say We Descend From… — Is It True?
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Every family carries a story: that we descend from a king, from royalty, from someone the world remembers. Nia brings back the legend she mentioned weeks ago — and asks the elder, at last, if it's true. Jeliba won't answer true or false. He teaches her to weigh it: where did the story come from, and what kind of knowing is it? A tale can be false without a single liar in the chain — memory grows in the direction of dignity, and for a people whose names were taken, "we come from kings" was not vanity but armor. Then the reframe: kings are cheap in a story; to trace a real ancestor, by name, from a real record, is the harder and greater thing. One is a wish; the other is a resurrection. And a second story handled with more care still — the claim of Native ancestry — because a nation is not gone, and belonging is the nation's to grant, by their rolls and their rules, not a DNA estimate's. Honor why we carry these stories. Test what they claim. Don't crown yourself until the evidence does.
Resources for this episode:
- Record the story first. Before testing a family legend, capture it fully — who tells it, and how far back it goes. Free interview guides: StoryCorps (storycorps.org).
- Test oral tradition against the record using the databases from earlier episodes: FamilySearch (free, familysearch.org), the National Archives (free, archives.gov), and Ancestry (often free at your library).
- On Native ancestry — start with the nation, not a DNA test. Belonging is determined by tribal governments. Learn the difference between ancestry and citizenship through the National Congress of American Indians (ncai.org) and each nation's own enrollment office.
- On DNA and tribal claims: a percentage or a haplogroup cannot make you a citizen of a nation, and cannot name a specific tribe. Use it as a compass, and let each nation's rules stand.