KEARSTIN CANTRELL | Opinions Editor
When I started making my family tree online, I didn’t think I’d become as enthralled with it as I did.
What started as a way to kill an hour quickly turned into killing five hours.
Five hours later I found out that on my dad’s side of the family, one of my great-grandfathers was an Irish immigrant. His grandfather? A French immigrant. And his grandfather? A German immigrant.
[perfectpullquote align=”left” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=”30″]So what does that mean for me? It means I’m a mutt.[/perfectpullquote]
So what does that mean for me? It means I’m a mutt.
I’ve always known that my dad’s side of the family was Irish. His side of the family made it to the United States only four generations ago.
What I didn’t realize was how far back immigration reaches in my family.
This discovery stopped me in my tracks and made me think about the current refugee and immigration “crisis” in the United States.
According to migrationpolicy.org, immigrants currently make up 13.5 percent of the United States population. Yet somehow, we look down on these people.
We look down on these people who want to better their lives, the lives of their children and the lives of their children’s children by coming to live in the United States. So much so that if they’re from certain countries, we don’t even permit their entrance.
Think about this.
According to census.gov, only 2 percent of the United States population consists of Native Americans and Alaska Natives as of 2014. That’s including those who are of more than one race.
So unless you are part of that 2 percent and are strictly Native American or Alaska Native, you would not be here today if it weren’t for immigration.
Let that sink in. You would not be here if it weren’t for immigration.
If it weren’t for immigration, my family tree would not extend from Winibald the German Saloon Keeper to me, the German-French-Irish-Lord knows what else-American mutt.
So, if you have a spare hour (or five), dive into your family’s heritage. It may change the way you see immigration.
You can get a two-week free trial on ancestry.com. Which is plenty of time to find out that your fifth great-grandmother was some kind of heroine from a far away land.
If you don’t have a spare hour (or five) to dive into your family’s heritage, you can still make an effort to appreciate all that immigration has done for you, your family and the world.
We’re all just mutts after all.