Family History Project

Category: Culture and History
Submitted by: Igor from Australia
Submitted on: Tue 11 Nov, 2008
Rating:


This suggestion is based on the idea that Scotland is now implementing (see article below).

I think something like this would be great for Macedonia and particularly great for the Macedonians in the Diaspora who can visit Macedonia and then find out all they can about their family history, all from one place.

More than that, by giving them the chance of finding their roots going back (potentially) centuries, it will also help re-iterate the importance of our history, identity and cultural heritage as Macedonians and may help lift the pride in who we are and our name. It could do a lot.

Since the Turkish Archives (the Ottomans were avid and meticulous record-keepers) have now been opened to Macedonians, this project is now feasible. All it takes is an investment in digitalising and translating the information in the Turkish archives. Furthermore, the Macedonian Orthodox Church may also have some archives of Christenings, Weddings and so on which could also be of immense value.

All of this should be collated together into one database, for such a purpose.


What needs to be done?

First we should collate the information we can from the Turkish archives, Church records and whatever else we can get our hands on, then digitalise it all, put it in a database and index it.

Once we have all the data and stored in such a way that it can be searched, then the Ministry of Culture could then post a tender for building a 'geneology' building (like a modern library) in the Macedonian capital, Skopje.

It would be much like a library with a whole bunch of computers and surrounded by history books of the Ottoman and perhaps Byzantine time periods, relating to Macedonia where Macedonians can research their family history - it would all be connected to the newly established database, based on the collation of all information from the period.

A family-history research centre (or library) where Macedonians can build their family trees, work out where their families have migrated to and from over the last few centuries, what their names and surnames were, what land titles they owned and even when they died and how, would be fantastic.

It would surely create a much larger interest in Macedonian history amongst a great number of Macedonians as well as help create a pride about being Macedonian.

At the very least, it would help so many Macedonians understand that the Macedonians now have what their forefathers didn't have, but always dreamt of, a free Macedonia (well, part of it) and that might help them see the importance of keeping the Macedonian name, culture, identity and securing the country.

I'd travel to Macedonia specifically for that.
 

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See the article below for Scotland's initiative:

Scotland to lure back diaspora
25 February, 2008

EDINBURGH - Scotland has long attracted crowds of tourists drawn by golf and whisky, but now the new government, which wants independence from London, says it is giving the sector a higher priority.

There is a strong emphasis on appealing to Scotland's diaspora through projects such as a family history complex in Edinburgh which aims to entice more foreigners to visit Scotland to research their Celtic roots.

The Scotland's People Centre will allow visitors to access well over 60 million records of births, deaths, marriages, wills, land ownership and coats of arms dating back to 1553, under one grandly domed roof for the first time.

It should open in June and organisers hope it will appeal to overseas visitors from countries such as the United States, Canada and Australia, to which Scots have historically migrated.

Another example is Homecoming Scotland, a year-long program of events in 2009 to mark the 250th anniversary of national poet Robert Burns's birth targeted at the diaspora.

The projects were planned before the election last year of the pro-independence Scottish National Party (SNP), but highlight the kind of event it is backing as it bids to show Scotland can stand on its own two feet economically.

Tourism Minister Jim Mather told AFP that he saw the sector not only as a way of boosting the economy, but also of raising the world profile of this country of five million people - and even enticing some Scots in exile to move home.

The tourism sector "has to become bigger" as the nation considers a possible move towards independence, he added.

"Tourism has an importance beyond its direct economic impact," he said.

It is "essentially our advertising voice to the world, our empathetic connection to the world, our ability to bring back the Scots diaspora - 29 million people out there - getting them to consider buying more Scottish produce, coming back for further visits, buying a home in Scotland, investing in Scotland, coming back to Scotland full-time."

The government is consulting on plans to extend devolution to full independence. Polls suggest Scots are in favour of more powers for Scotland, with some going further and indicating majority support for independence.

"This is a fantastic time for Scotland because things are changing," Mather added. "There is a mood of can-do coming through."

But not all of the government's efforts to promote tourism - a sector worth STG4 billion ($A8.55 billion) and providing nine per cent of all Scottish jobs in 2006 - have met with universal approval.

Plans by United States tycoon Donald Trump to build a huge golf complex near Aberdeen, in northern Scotland, were vetoed by local councillors last year amid opposition from environmental campaigners and some residents.

Amid concern about the negative signal this could send to foreign investors, the decision was called in for review by Edinburgh, which is expected to rule on whether it can go ahead in the coming months.

The main opposition Labour party also criticised the government after it unveiled a new STG125,000 ($A267,000) slogan for the country, "Welcome to Scotland", last year, accusing it of lacking imagination.

Professor John Lennon, director of the Moffat centre for travel and tourism business development at Glasgow Caledonian University and a government adviser on tourism, said the sector was now getting a higher priority.

Scotland aims to increase tourism revenues by 50 per cent by 2015, he said, in a target set in 2006 under the previous administration.

And officials were beginning to "major up" their focus on heritage and family history, he added.

"The idea that you appeal to the ethnic communities outside Scotland...that's a very strong latent market that Ireland has been very good at tapping into," he told AFP.

"This crowd are saying it's important, (we) need to understand how competitive it is."

http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/news/travel/scotland-to-lure-back-diaspora/2008/02/25/1203788193225.html





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Ratings & Comments

Rating By: Anthony from Australia
Subbmitted: Tue 11 Nov, 2008
Rating Given: 

I think it's a great idea.

I also think it would be great to have a Macedonian Family Tree website which begins by individuals tracing their family and recording their current family history, but then it can also develop deeper into tracing back much older generations, with the ability to upload historical documents.

This could tie in nicely with correlating Ottoman records for particular villages and regions.

Rating By: Jalaal from Algeria
Subbmitted: Sat 21 Feb, 2009
Rating Given: 

good man

Rating By: John from Canada
Subbmitted: Sun 22 Feb, 2009
Rating Given: 

Good!

Rating By: ihl from Yemen
Subbmitted: Sun 22 Feb, 2009
Rating Given: 

lylyul