So CNN decided to jump into the genealogy program pond also. It began a theme week of programs featuring family history journeys, Roots: Our Journeys Home, on October 12 with Anthony Bourdain's Parts Unknown. The idea is that hosts of several of their regular programs will take some kind of genealogical journey and learn about their roots. Instead of creating a stand-alone program, the family history apparently will be integrated into the existing programs.
If the genealogical search in Parts Unknown is comparable to what will happen in the other programs, I'd say there's not much worth watching. The promo material from the CNN Web site said that we would see an "investigation into the puzzling history of the Bourdain’s great, great, great, grandfather, Paraguayan émigré Jean Bourdain" (let's ignore the poor editing, shall we?). Unfortunately, the amount of time devoted to Bourdain's family history was less than ten minutes (and possibly as low as five minutes) of the one-hour episode.
Bourdain already knew that his great-great-great-grandfather, Jean Bourdain, had immigrated to South America from France sometime during the 1850's and had disappeared by the 1880's. Jean went to Argentina first and then to Paraguay, and after that the family didn't know what had happened to him or when or how he died. Bourdain said he really wanted to know how his third-great-grandfather had died and where he was buried.
We learned quite a bit about the history and food of Paraguay, which is what the program normally is about anyway. (Because I'm a language geek, one of the most interesting factoids for me was that Paraguay is the only country in South America to have an indigenous language as an official language.) But what did we learn about Jean Bourdain?
There was a French colony in the Paraguayan jungle called Nouveau Bordeaux (actually Nouvelle Bourdeaux). Bourdain and a guide visited what is left of the colony, but they didn't actually say there was evidence that Jean Bourdain went there. It seemed that only three documents were found that mentioned Jean Bourdain:
• something that appeared to be a letter that said Jean's son, also named Jean, had gone to Montevideo, Uruguay in 1860 to work with his uncle in the hat business
• information from somewhere that said Jean the elder had come with 200 boxes of "fireworks" (which generated a discussion of whether they really were fireworks, which the locals couldn't have afforded, or if the word was a euphemism for weapons and Jean was actually a gun-runner of some sort)
• an 1858 death record for Jean the elder that did not give a cause of death
The researchers were able to determine in which cemetery Jean was interred but could not find his grave. Bourdain walked around the Recoleta Cemetery in Asunción, found nothing, and looked disappointed. The researcher told Bourdain that it was likely that something else had been built over whatever grave Jean Bourdain had.
And that was it. Not a very impressive beginning, in my opinion. And I'm left wondering why the family didn't know when Jean the elder had died, since Jean the younger didn't leave the area until two years later.
I'll still try to watch some of the programs scheduled for later in the week. I am pretty sure I'll miss every episode of New Day; 6:00 a.m. makes it way too early for me, whether it's Eastern or Pacific Time. It's a shame, because Chris Cuomo's story sounds interesting, and I'm wondering if the Spinozas from whom John Berman descended were Sephardic Jews. But I've already put the programs that air later in the day on my schedule. I am particularly looking forward to the journeys of Wolf Blitzer and Sanjay Gupta. And maybe I can catch the others later On Demand.
Genealogy is like a jigsaw puzzle, but you don't have the box top, so you don't know what the picture is supposed to look like. As you start putting the puzzle together, you realize some pieces are missing, and eventually you figure out that some of the pieces you started with don't actually belong to this puzzle. I'll help you discover the right pieces for your puzzle and assemble them into a picture of your family.
Showing posts with label Uruguay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Uruguay. Show all posts
Sunday, October 12, 2014
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