2009’s Top 25 Gen Blogs: Tracing the Tribe is #10

The 25 most popular genealogy blogs of 2009 were named by ProGenealogists.com

I’m delighted to report that Tracing the Tribe – The Jewish Genealogy Blog is listed as number 10, among some very distinguished company.

The blogs were evaluated based on overall content, Technorati rating and industry experience.

Here’s Heather’s introduction, followed by the complete list:

Genealogy blogging is all the rage and on the rise. A Google search for genealogy blogs currently results in nearly half a million options, with over seven times that number for “family history” blogs. Nielsen Buzz Metrics BlogPulse shows a steady trend for genealogy and family history blogs with spikes correlating to celebrity family history activity in the news. Of the millions, 25 surface as the most popular all-around genealogy blogs, with a tie for 25th place according to rankings from Technorati.

Top 25 Genealogy Blogs as of 3 April 2009:

1. About.com Genealogy (Kimberly Powell)
2.
Eastman Online Newsletter* (Dick Eastman)
3.
Genea-Musings (Randy Seaver)
4.
Creative Gene (Jasia)
5.
Dear Myrtle (Pat Richley)
6.
AnceStories (Miriam Midkiff)
7.
Genealogue (Chris Dunham)
8.
footnoteMaven (Anonymous)
9.
Genetic Genealogist (Blaine Bettinger)
10.
Tracing The Tribe: The Jewish Genealogy Blog (Schelly Talalay Dardashti)
11.
GenaBlogie (Craig Manson)
12.
Olive Tree Genealogy Blog (Lorine McGinnis Schulze)
13.
Steve’s Genealogy Blog (Stephen J. Danko)
14.
24-7 Family History Circle (Juliana Smith)
15.
TransylvanianDutch (John Newmark)
16.
GenDisasters (Stu Beitler)
17.
http://blog.familytreemagazine.com/insider/ (Diane Haddad)
18.
Think Genealogy (Mark Tucker)
19.
California Genealogical Society and Library Blog (California Genealogical Society)
20.
The Genealogy Guys (George G. Morgan and Drew Smith)
21.
CanadaGenealogy, or, ‘Jane’s Your Aunt’ (Diane Rogers)
22.
Ancestry Insider (Anonymous)
23.
GenealogyBlog (Leland Meitzler)
24.
Ancestor Search Blog (Kathi)
25.
Tie Hugh Watkins Genealogue (Hugh Watkins) /its a tie!/
25.
Tie Legacy News (Legacy Tree Software) /its a tie!/

Thank you, ProGenealogists.com.

Uploading the library: YouTube, iTunes, Flickr

Digital media is the way to go, and the Library of Congress (Washington DC) is doing just that.

It is loading audio archives to iTunes, posting YouTube videos, and has already loaded photo archives, in January 2008, to Flickr.

The photo archive has been viewed about 15.7 million times; 3,100 photos were uploaded at first and added about 50 a week since then. iTunes has received 39 uploaded podcasts, and plans are to upload 100 videos to YouTube .

Those resources include early films, author interviews, first-person oral history and LOC resources.

All of this means that the LOC’s resources – which includes some 15.3 million digital items – are becoming easier to use and more accessible to people around the world.

“The Library of Congress launched the first U.S. agency-wide blog two years ago and continued its pioneering social-media role with initiatives such as the immensely successful Flickr pilot project,” said Librarian of Congress James H. Billington. “We have long seen the value of such interaction with the public to help achieve our missions, and these agreements remove many of the impediments to making our unparalleled content more useful to many more people.”

To keep on top of LOC’s plans and announcements, follow its Twitter page, sign up for RSS feeds or email alerts, and follow its blog.

For more information go to LOC.gov, and a new individualized website myLOC.gov.

Look for other federal agencies as well to participate in new media. On March 25, The General Services Administration announced agreements with Flickr, YouTube, Vimeo and blip.tv that will allow other federal agencies to participate in new media. GSA plans to negotiate agreements with additional providers.

Uploading the library: YouTube, iTunes, Flickr

Digital media is the way to go, and the Library of Congress (Washington DC) is doing just that.

It is loading audio archives to iTunes, posting YouTube videos, and has already loaded photo archives, in January 2008, to Flickr.

The photo archive has been viewed about 15.7 million times; 3,100 photos were uploaded at first and added about 50 a week since then. iTunes has received 39 uploaded podcasts, and plans are to upload 100 videos to YouTube .

Those resources include early films, author interviews, first-person oral history and LOC resources.

All of this means that the LOC’s resources – which includes some 15.3 million digital items – are becoming easier to use and more accessible to people around the world.

“The Library of Congress launched the first U.S. agency-wide blog two years ago and continued its pioneering social-media role with initiatives such as the immensely successful Flickr pilot project,” said Librarian of Congress James H. Billington. “We have long seen the value of such interaction with the public to help achieve our missions, and these agreements remove many of the impediments to making our unparalleled content more useful to many more people.”

To keep on top of LOC’s plans and announcements, follow its Twitter page, sign up for RSS feeds or email alerts, and follow its blog.

For more information go to LOC.gov, and a new individualized website myLOC.gov.

Look for other federal agencies as well to participate in new media. On March 25, The General Services Administration announced agreements with Flickr, YouTube, Vimeo and blip.tv that will allow other federal agencies to participate in new media. GSA plans to negotiate agreements with additional providers.

Next year in Bahrain?

Not only is it okay to be Jewish in Bahrain, it’s even fashionable, according to this New York Times story on the tiny community of 36.

“It’s fashionable,” said Rouben Rouben, 55, an electronics dealer who proudly displays his name, a recognizably Jewish one, on the sign above all four of his shops in Manama, the capital.

Last year, King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa appointed a Jewish woman, Houda Ezra Ebrahim Nonoo, as ambassador to the United States, the first Jewish ambassador from any Arab country. The king also visited London to ask expat Jews to return, and he appointed Jewish business leaders to the Shura Council (upper house of Parliament).

The mostly older adults in the community are descendants of Iraqi and Persian merchants whose families have lived in Bahrain for centuries, say experts. Prior to 1948 and Israel’s establishment, about 600 Jews lived there, but have left over the years to Europe or the US.

However, being Jewish there is still difficult for such a small group. The last synagogue is preserved but has not been in use religiously for decades; there is also a Jewish cemetery. News stories reported on Ambassador Nounoo’s importing a London rabbi for her son’s bar mitzvah.

Jewish shops, with family names on storefronts, are still found in the old market. Back in the old days, Al Mutanabi Road was known as Jews’ Street because all businesses were closed on Shabbat.

Most Jewish merchants declined to be interviewed for the story, according to the story.

“The Jews of Bahrain are proud to be Bahraini, proud to be Arab,” said Nancy Khedouri, whose family business is a leading importer of tablecloths and linens and who has written a book on Bahrain’s Jewish history. “We are truly blessed to be living in an open and hospitable society.”

A six-member delegation from the American Jewish Committee visited Bahrain on March 18 and presented the king with its Leadership for Peace Award. Bahrain does not have diplomatic relations with Israel but agreed in 2004 to drop its boycott of companies that do business with Israel.

On the other side of the issue are those who take a cynical view, while the Shiite minority says they are discriminated against. The King is a Sunni.

Although Rouben is quoted in the story as saying “My best friends are all Muslims,” the story ends with a quote from a Bahrain University history professor, Fouad Shehab, “I’ve known Rouben for years,” he said with a smile. “I go to buy from him. I don’t feel he is a Jew.”

Read the complete story at the link above.

For more on Nonoo and her genealogy, see this GulfNews.com story.

Nonoo studied at a Jewish school – Carmel College, Oxfordshire (UK) – studied business in Britain and the US and opened a shop selling computers and computer accessories.

One of the first Jews to settle in Bahrain was Saleh Eliyahou Yadgar, coming from Basra in the late 1880s. “He began as a tobacconist and later sold flour. He then started dealing with second-hand clothes and also commenced in the material trade supplied from abroad, mainly dealing in the sale of abayas, the long black dress covering worn by Gulf women,” writes Nancy Elly Khedouri, a Bahraini Jew in her book “From Our Beginning to Present Day.”

He and the other Baghdadi Jews who arrived in Bahrain in the early 1990s settled in with ease and some of them became involved in political life. “Issac Sweiry, Meir Dahoud Rouben and Abraham Nonoo, were members of the Manama Municipality. The membership did not bring about any hatred or problems,” Nancy writes.

The Nonoo family history in Bahrain began with Abraham Nonoo “who left Iraq at the age of nine or ten with his uncle and came to Manama.” Abraham was elected in 1934 as member of the Manama Municipality. His grandson, also Abraham, was the first Jew to be appointed to the Shura (Upper) Council in 2002 and served until 2006. The post was later assigned to his cousin, Huda Ezra Nonoo.

Read the complete articles at the links above.

Uploading the library: YouTube, iTunes, Flickr

Digital media is the way to go, and the Library of Congress (Washington DC) is doing just that.

It is loading audio archives to iTunes, posting YouTube videos, and has already loaded photo archives, in January 2008, to Flickr.

The photo archive has been viewed about 15.7 million times; 3,100 photos were uploaded at first and added about 50 a week since then. iTunes has received 39 uploaded podcasts, and plans are to upload 100 videos to YouTube .

Those resources include early films, author interviews, first-person oral history and LOC resources.

All of this means that the LOC’s resources – which includes some 15.3 million digital items – are becoming easier to use and more accessible to people around the world.

“The Library of Congress launched the first U.S. agency-wide blog two years ago and continued its pioneering social-media role with initiatives such as the immensely successful Flickr pilot project,” said Librarian of Congress James H. Billington. “We have long seen the value of such interaction with the public to help achieve our missions, and these agreements remove many of the impediments to making our unparalleled content more useful to many more people.”

To keep on top of LOC’s plans and announcements, follow its Twitter page, sign up for RSS feeds or email alerts, and follow its blog.

For more information go to LOC.gov, and a new individualized website myLOC.gov.

Look for other federal agencies as well to participate in new media. On March 25, The General Services Administration announced agreements with Flickr, YouTube, Vimeo and blip.tv that will allow other federal agencies to participate in new media. GSA plans to negotiate agreements with additional providers.