JGS Toronto. Free Virtual Meeting. Ralph Cilevitz. He thought his family was wiped out in the Holocaust. Sunday, 18 December 2022, 10:30 AM ET. #events #announcements #jgs-iajgs
JEWISH GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY OF TORONTO
Speaker: Ralph Cilevitz
He thought his family was wiped out in the Holocaust
Then he discovered 75,000 distant relatives
Sunday, 18 December 2022, 10:30 AM ET
VIRTUAL MEETING: Join from Home
Virtual doors open at 10:20 am. ET.
RALPH CILEVITZ will relate the story of how he discovered new connections and relatives.
There are over 75,000 descendants of the same man, Aba Kukla, who lived in a tiny shtetl in Lithuania in the late 1700s. His nine children went on to produce large families of their own, creating a sprawling family tree that, only now, with the advent of DNA testing, can be fully visualized.
Ralph has made it his mission to track down all possible relatives in Canada and abroad. His tree is still growing. It may now be the largest documented Ashkenazi family in the world.
To register for the 18 December virtual event , please go to jgstoronto.ca/register. You will then receive an immediate acknowledgement plus the link to access the event on 18 December.
The presentation will be recorded. It will be available to JGS Toronto members in the “Members Only” section of the Society website a few days after the event. It will also be available to non-member registrants for one week after the event in the “Registration” location.
To our guests, consider joining our membership for only $40.00 per year by Clicking Here or consider a donation by Clicking Here to assist us in continuing our mission providing a forum for the exchange of genealogical knowledge and information. (Canadians receive a CRA tax receipt.)
Tel 647-247-6414 twitter: jgsoftoronto
facebook: Jewish Genealogical Society of Toronto
Jerry Scherer
Vice President, Communications
JEWISH GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY OF TORONTO
Speaker: Ralph Cilevitz
He thought his family was wiped out in the Holocaust
Then he discovered 75,000 distant relatives
Sunday, 18 December 2022, 10:30 AM ET
VIRTUAL MEETING: Join from Home
Virtual doors open at 10:20 am. ET.
RALPH CILEVITZ will relate the story of how he discovered new connections and relatives.
There are over 75,000 descendants of the same man, Aba Kukla, who lived in a tiny shtetl in Lithuania in the late 1700s. His nine children went on to produce large families of their own, creating a sprawling family tree that, only now, with the advent of DNA testing, can be fully visualized.
Ralph has made it his mission to track down all possible relatives in Canada and abroad. His tree is still growing. It may now be the largest documented Ashkenazi family in the world.
To register for the 18 December virtual event , please go to jgstoronto.ca/register. You will then receive an immediate acknowledgement plus the link to access the event on 18 December.
The presentation will be recorded. It will be available to JGS Toronto members in the “Members Only” section of the Society website a few days after the event. It will also be available to non-member registrants for one week after the event in the “Registration” location.
To our guests, consider joining our membership for only $40.00 per year by Clicking Here or consider a donation by Clicking Here to assist us in continuing our mission providing a forum for the exchange of genealogical knowledge and information. (Canadians receive a CRA tax receipt.)
Tel 647-247-6414 twitter: jgsoftoronto
facebook: Jewish Genealogical Society of Toronto
Jerry Scherer
Vice President, Communications
JEWISH GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY OF TORONTO
Speaker: Ralph Cilevitz
He thought his family was wiped out in the Holocaust
Then he discovered 75,000 distant relatives
Sunday, 18 December 2022, 10:30 AM ET
VIRTUAL MEETING: Join from Home
Virtual doors open at 10:20 am. ET.
RALPH CILEVITZ will relate the story of how he discovered new connections and relatives.
There are over 75,000 descendants of the same man, Aba Kukla, who lived in a tiny shtetl in Lithuania in the late 1700s. His nine children went on to produce large families of their own, creating a sprawling family tree that, only now, with the advent of DNA testing, can be fully visualized.
Ralph has made it his mission to track down all possible relatives in Canada and abroad. His tree is still growing. It may now be the largest documented Ashkenazi family in the world.
To register for the 18 December virtual event , please go to jgstoronto.ca/register. You will then receive an immediate acknowledgement plus the link to access the event on 18 December.
The presentation will be recorded. It will be available to JGS Toronto members in the “Members Only” section of the Society website a few days after the event. It will also be available to non-member registrants for one week after the event in the “Registration” location.
To our guests, consider joining our membership for only $40.00 per year by Clicking Here or consider a donation by Clicking Here to assist us in continuing our mission providing a forum for the exchange of genealogical knowledge and information. (Canadians receive a CRA tax receipt.)
Tel 647-247-6414 twitter: jgsoftoronto
facebook: Jewish Genealogical Society of Toronto
Jerry Scherer
Vice President, Communications