[Geder
Genealogy has begun a series of 'Guest Posts' by African Ancestored
genealogists, historians and cultural evangelists. Contact us at
geder.genealogy(at)gmail.com if you would like to contribute.]
ANCESTRAL SPIRITS
By Sharon
Leslie Morgan
There is an African proverb that says “You are not dead as long as someone remembers your
name.” I am reminded of that bit of wisdom almost every day.
I was the one person in my family who
inherited a compulsive need to know: Who am I? Who are my people? What legacy
did they leave behind?
My thirst has been quenched through
genealogical research, guided by the unwavering influence of ancestral spirits.
At every step along the way, I have felt the presence of long-dead people who
yearn to be found so they can be remembered and live again. I experience their
presence on the hallowed grounds of historical homesteads. I hear their
whispers in courthouses, leading me to documents of their lives. They guide my
footsteps on back roads and in unmapped cemeteries.
The longing to know is especially
poignant for African Americans because so much of our history has been obscured
or excluded. In the end, all we know for sure is that we are part of one big
family, united by our history of enslavement.
African familial bonds are evident in our enduring cultural heritage,
along with the scientific reality of Africa as the birthplace of humanity. We
are all part of a continuum, on one end represented by parents and grandparents
who have passed on and, on the other, children and grandchildren whose lives
have just begun.
Today, I can proudly say I remember
Ailsie, Bettie, Rhody, Tom, Wash, Louie, Arthur, Delores…. and more than a
thousand others, spanning centuries back to the slave markets of West and East
Africa.
The desire for posterity to remember my
name is what led me to create Our Black Ancestry as a portal for African
American family history. Our ancestors are calling. Let them take your hand and
lead you backward into the mists of time so you can walk forward with pride.
***
Sharon
Leslie Morgan is the founder of OurBlackAncestry.com, a website devoted to African American genealogy. She is the
co-author of Gather at the Table: The Healing Journey of a Daughter of Slavery and
a Son of the Slave Trade,
to be published by Beacon Press in October 2012.
