We Are The Chosen

In each family there is one who seems called to find the ancestors.
To put flesh on their bones and make them live again,
to tell the family story and to feel that somehow they know and approve.
Doing genealogy is not a cold gathering of facts but, instead,
breathing life into all who have gone before.
We are the storytellers of the tribe. All tribes have one.
We have been called, as it were, by our genes.
Those who have gone before cry out to us,
"Tell our story!" So, we do.
In finding them, we somehow find ourselves.
How many graves have I stood before now and cried? I have lost count.
How many times have I told the ancestors,
"You have a wonderful family; you would be proud of us."
How many times have I walked up to a grave and felt somehow there was love there for me?
I cannot say.
It goes beyond just documenting facts.
It goes to who am I and why I do the things I do.
It goes to seeing a cemetery about to be lost forever to weeds and indifference and saying,
"I can't let this happen." The bones here are bones of my bone and flesh of my flesh.
It goes to doing something about it.
It goes to pride in what our ancestors were able to accomplish,
how they contributed to what we are today.
It goes to respecting their hardships and losses,
their never giving in or giving up,
their resoluteness to go on and build a life for their family.
It goes to deep pride that the fathers fought and some died to make and keep us a Nation.
It goes to a deep and immense understanding that they were doing it for us.
It is of equal pride and love that our mothers struggled to give us birth.
Without them we could not exist, and so we love each one, as far back as we can reach.
That we might be born who we are. That we might remember them. So we do.
With love and caring and scribing each fact of their existence,
because we are they and they are the sum of who we are.
So, as a scribe called, I tell the story of my family.
It is up to that one called in the next generation to answer the call
and take my place in the long line of family storytellers.
That is why I do my family genealogy,
and that is what calls those young and old to step up
and restore the memory or greet those whom we had never known before.
2003 posting by: Lloyd Ray Timmons, Sr.
...and if sometimes we are lucky,
we will be the one at the Christmas dinner who is asked questions
and who can tell the stories and identify the pictures.
And if we are really lucky -
we can find another younger soul in the family to take up the cause.
2003 addendum by: Leigh C. Smith

The Allen County Lines quarterly periodical of the Allen County Genealogical Society of Indiana on page 8 of the September 2008 issue has the same poem credited to Della M. Cummings Wright; rewritten by her granddaughter Dell Jo Ann McGinnis Johnson; edited and reworded by Tom Dunn in 1943. An internet search repeats this source.

What Is A Genealogist?

A full-time detective

A thorough historian

An inveterate snoop

A confirmed diplomat

A keen observer

A hardened skeptic

An apt biographer

A qualified linguist

A part-time lawyer

A studious sociologist

An accurate reporter

An hieroglyphics expert,

AND . . .

A complete nut!

(author unknown)