Not necessarily. Depends on the Era too. There are and were people who would not admit to having a relationship with a Jewish man. It was probably something that she wouldn't talk about. Which is very sad.
Wow! ...1. Grandma might have had a affair with a Jewish guy got pregnant and didn't tell Grandpa, and thought the child was his OR the pregnancy happened before they was married and Grandpa knew the child was not his and married her anyway and raised the child as his own.
@@People-Business-And-Ideas true. Everyone today can learn in five sec we are all the same specie Sapiens with drops of Néandertal. But hell no, there are still people everywhere thinking "wow, is this a human? What a weird color. Hate it."
I did got my DNA tested over myheritage. Found a lot of cousins 3th to 5th grade in America from my father's side of the family. DNA and stuff like that is really fascinating
True, but I have a feeling Italians Jews genetic mix may come different in term of results. It would be actually a nice 'experiment. They might have a separate cluster, unique to them, since Italian Jews involve not only Jews who roots predate the Ashkenazim/Sephardim spilt, as well as other sub-groups, some of them Sephardic, others of Ashkenazim extraction.
My wife found out that both her paternal grandparents were Jewish, which came as a surprise particularly as her father regularly expressed anti semitism, and hid family history. . She only found out that her grandparents died in the camps when she was in her 30's. Inherited trauma is real.
Well, that's not anti-semitic at all! I don't know you, but even if you're Jewish, falling into these behavioural tripes to link groups of people is not acceptable.
Likely a Jewish man displaced by WW1, got with grandma while gramps was working and she didn't have anybody around. Very common as couples often didn't spend much time together in that era. It was work and war for men.
If our Dna had anything to do with the food we like I would be eating myself some Welsh, English, Scottish, French and Swedish food. Guess who doesn't like Welsh, English, Scottish, French and Swedish food? Well, I do love me some French bread and maybe the odd dish.
@DCEU TV ? I don’t know where that came from. But I meant that people simply adapt to the environment they live in, so I guess their complexion changes too
@@emiliak2597 When the Jews came to Europe they only married their own kind, or the native white people who were willing to convert, who continued to live in those communities. So Ashekenazis are essentially a subset of white people/Jews who bred with their own for centuries. The European converts was what turned them lighter skinned.
This is not uncommon, people from all over the world who are doing DNA find out that there were a few big oops in the family and secret adoptions. Sometimes people might wish they didn't find out.
Even if they didn't share the same grandfather, they both supposedly share the same grandmother, which means that they should have at least some DNA in common with each other. The fact that they have 0% in common leads me to believe that this case doesn't have anything to do with his grandmother getting some jewish d on the side.
Uh, the other guy was from his ‘grandfather’s’ second family after he left George’s grandmother, so they don’t actually have the same grandmother. George’s grandmother refused to divorce Louis (which it seems like he wanted to after finding out she cheated on him) because of her Catholic faith (some Catholic, cheating on your husband like that), which forbids divorce. So Louis wasn’t able to move on and marry the woman who was more faithful to him then his own wife was.
Not surprised. I always thought he was Jewish with an anglicized name. His Jewish roots make a lot of sense- that is where he gets his wisdom, vast imagination and storytelling skills from:). Some of the best authors of all time, many of them Nobel prize winners, are Jewish.
Are you really saying that ""wisdom"" and imagination" are because of race or ethnicity (genetics), instead of life experiences and cultural environment??? The last guy who said something similar had a rectangular mustache.
@@Studiosmediamilk Lol it's so funny to see normies starting to finally catch on. Welcome to the real world. The same people who taught us about Nazis and how bad they are, are in fact not so different. Jews believe they are god's chosen and their souls are of a higher order to gentiles. They are a very ethno-centric people and many do harbor these beliefs.
@@trrt2719 No, it's his paternal grandfather. They say it's his father's side at 0:30. Plus, the non-genetic grandfather was named Louis Martin. Last name is passed down on the dad's side.
This is why names should be passed down on the mothers side. You only know you're related to the females and the males side can easily have this happen.
Wow so his grandfather lived his whole life thinking he was his grandson. Unless they knew but never told him anything? This is one hell of a way to find out.
From periods during the great wars 70% of men were raising children that were not biologically theres. Imagine fighting Nazi's and Imperialists in the rain, mud and snow, and your wife betrays you like this. Do yourself a favor and take the Red Pill. Coach Greag Adams Better Bachelor It will save you from the humiliation, save you money, time, emotion, energy and save your life.
there is some debate but it is more than a religion. Culturally, ethnically and genetically there are distinctions. That's why we differentiate between Sephardic and Ashkenazi too not by the religious distinctions like Orthodox Jews vs ___ Jews for example. The small genetic pool for hundreds of years also means that there are higher instances of some medical problems within the Ashkenazi population. It is very interesting.
Being culturally Jewish and religious are both distinct and connected in ways that are different than other religions. Both internal and external forces over a long enough period created distinct genetic groups. Even when Jews traveled, by choice, or more often by force, they did not intermarry with the local population for significant periods of time. Formal conversion to the religion is also relatively difficult. In opposition to the missionary nature of Christianity for example (ironically), someone really has to work to convert, so it is seen as a genuine choice. So, although there is racial diversity over the 5000 year history of the religion, they are distinct subsects of those populations.
@@ZoOnTheYT to add to this, they were prohibited from intermarrying, and even living in certain areas/towns and from holding certain occupational positions. Things started getting better toward the end of the 1800s and then they got worse again.