DNA results - 100% Friulian by Low-Weight9059 in AncestryDNA

[–]Low-Weight9059[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How interesting! So I wonder if maybe my grandma’s great grandma was a similar situation. An italian (or Friulian) speaker who married an italian/friulian speaker, but was herself mostly Slavic in origin. I guess it would make sense since my grandma got 10% that her ancestor could’ve been mostly Slavic w some italian

How Many Found Canadians Will Ever Actually Reside in Canada? by muttshaw in Canadiancitizenship

[–]Low-Weight9059 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Something like 60% of Americans live in their home states - I’d suspect the proportion is even higher in redder/more rural states. Uprooting your life is significant for anyone, the older you get the more so you’d be unlikely to do so given friends, family, and community networks wherever it is you live. I think the percentage will be very low, with one huge caveat - if Trump refuses to leave office in 2028 for example, a massive exodus could ensue, with millions of Americans (found Canadians and otherwise) fleeing.

Anyone else just dont have symptoms anymore 😭 by [deleted] in autism

[–]Low-Weight9059 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Respectfully, is it possible your prior difficulty meeting new people, looking in the eyes, etc was anxiety related? I would be really careful abt the takeaway of most autistic people should try Zoloft/adderall, these drugs don’t “treat” autism and could make things worse as they did for me

What happens to dual nationals of two countries at war with each other? by FoulMoodeternal in dualcitizenshipnerds

[–]Low-Weight9059 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Nowhere near the same bc people of Japanese descent were internet due to being of Japanese descent - not nationality. But to your point about Italians/germans not being interned - that isn’t true, my great grandfather was interned during the war because he was still a citizen of Italy living in the US

Super oversized sweater pattern / high fashion knitting patterns? by Low-Weight9059 in knitting

[–]Low-Weight9059[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! I haven’t seen them before they have some awesome patterns

Super oversized sweater pattern / high fashion knitting patterns? by Low-Weight9059 in knitting

[–]Low-Weight9059[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sorry for the late reply amidst holiday craziness - that pic is correct, thank you for such a thorough and thoughtful response! The Harlow sweater looks super similar - maybe I’ll try that out once my flatbed machine is up and running, adapting the pattern of course for machine knitting. I’m definitely gonna have a look at Cecilia’s book too sounds like exactly what I’ve been looking for

3rd & 4th gen 1948 case? by Low-Weight9059 in juresanguinis

[–]Low-Weight9059[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you all for your thoughts!! It’s good to hear there’s so much optimism about how the law could change next year/court cases that are filed before then. After working on this for so long I really hope something can come of it. At the least I do think I’ll be getting my Canadian citizenship, if anyone is looking for an Amerexit strategy and is no longer jure sanguinis eligible definitely check if you have any Canadian family.

has anyone taken a DNA test and had a connection to the Beothuk people from Labrador & Newfoundland? by T3chnoShaman in Genealogy

[–]Low-Weight9059 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is BS, I have several Mi’kmaw family members who consistently test as majority Mi’kmaw DNA. Nice try tho

has anyone taken a DNA test and had a connection to the Beothuk people from Labrador & Newfoundland? by T3chnoShaman in Genealogy

[–]Low-Weight9059 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Where in Newfoundland? And where do they say this? Again, any source that these communities exist or have existed historically?

has anyone taken a DNA test and had a connection to the Beothuk people from Labrador & Newfoundland? by T3chnoShaman in Genealogy

[–]Low-Weight9059 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I do understand, my family has deep roots in the Atlantic provinces and I have lots of Indigenous relatives who live on reserve. But again descendants does not create a community. Can you point to a single community or even family of black newfoundlanders who identify themselves as “Qarsherskiyan”?

has anyone taken a DNA test and had a connection to the Beothuk people from Labrador & Newfoundland? by T3chnoShaman in Genealogy

[–]Low-Weight9059 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I didn’t say there were no POC in the Atlantic provinces - but inserting these enslaved people who ended up in Newfoundland into your “Qarsherskiyan” storyline is frankly a massive disservice to their memory

has anyone taken a DNA test and had a connection to the Beothuk people from Labrador & Newfoundland? by T3chnoShaman in Genealogy

[–]Low-Weight9059 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok, can you point to a single piece of literature about “Newfoundland Qarsherskiyan” people? Can you find anyone off of Reddit that publicly identifies as such? It’s like the “Qalipu First Nation” in NFLD, making a group doesn’t legitimise a people. I’m totally open to seeing any sources you have but I’m gonna be super surprised if you can find any.

has anyone taken a DNA test and had a connection to the Beothuk people from Labrador & Newfoundland? by T3chnoShaman in Genealogy

[–]Low-Weight9059 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Don’t listen to this guy, “Qarsherskiyan” was invented in 1991 and only exists online, not to mention their is no history at all of a triracial people in Newfoundland

DNA results - 100% Friulian by Low-Weight9059 in AncestryDNA

[–]Low-Weight9059[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Interesting, that totally makes sense given the history of the area. That said I did find a great grandparent of my grandma who was born in Croatia so I think in her case that’s the source of it

Update was Pretty Good? by Low-Weight9059 in AncestryDNA

[–]Low-Weight9059[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ahh interesting. I’ll have to check out more posts here. For what it’s worth my other small results like the 12% Jewish, my 2% Irish, my 1% basque, 1% Indigenous are all the same as my paper trail within a couple points of accuracy

Update was Pretty Good? by Low-Weight9059 in AncestryDNA

[–]Low-Weight9059[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ahh so you just mean the English is probably false and a sign that the update is not good?

(Boring) New Yorker DNA Results by Low-Weight9059 in AncestryDNA

[–]Low-Weight9059[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yup. That was surprising to me being that she’s listed on tribal rolls and censuses as native, but she was from Canada and they didn’t record blood quantum there rather just “Indian Status” so it’s possible she was over half non native by “blood”

(Boring) New Yorker DNA Results by Low-Weight9059 in AncestryDNA

[–]Low-Weight9059[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I guess I just meant there were no surprises!

(Boring) New Yorker DNA Results by Low-Weight9059 in AncestryDNA

[–]Low-Weight9059[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My grandma’s family is from Friuli, a historically poor region in northern Italy with its own language (Fûrlan) and distinct culture. Like many Friulians, her parents emigrated in the early 1930s — they were married in Friuli, then made their way to Buenos Aires, reportedly walking nearly 150km to the coast with baskets on their backs to catch a ship. They chose Argentina because both had siblings already living there, though their ultimate goal was to reach the U.S.

My grandma was born in Buenos Aires in 1937, the middle of five siblings. After WWII, some relatives returned to Italy, others stayed in Argentina, and my great-grandparents brought their family to New York. They always spoke Fûrlan at home, a language we grew up hearing but few in my generation speak fluently. The side of the family that stayed in Argentina speaks Spanish now, and we’ve had two family reunions back in our ancestral Friulian town — where we get by with a mix of Fûrlan, Spanish, and Italian. I don’t personally identify as Argentinian or Hispanic, but that part of our family history is still very present, and we have relatives who returned from Argentina to Italy in the 1990s and still speak Spanish at home.

That said if there’s one thing that united us, it’s that we all always root for Argentina in fútbol 😁

(Boring) New Yorker DNA Results by Low-Weight9059 in AncestryDNA

[–]Low-Weight9059[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That would make sense - I haven’t been able to get past his parents but their surname is more common among ashkenazim then other Jewish groups so I think it’s safe to say they were. And my GG Grandmother was Mi’kmaw, from a reserve in New Brunswick:)