logo
DNA project hopes to reunite African Americans in Illinois with ancestral relatives in Africa

DNA project hopes to reunite African Americans in Illinois with ancestral relatives in Africa

Chicago Tribune04-08-2025
Ever since an at-home DNA test revealed a Nigerian ancestry, life-long Evanston resident Tina Penick has reflected on what might have been.
'What if we lived in Nigeria? What would that look like?' Penick mused. 'What would our experiences be?'
A pause, and then one more question.
'What would my name have been?'
For African Americans, the transatlantic slave trade severed connections to country, culture, language and family—seemingly forever.
Today, a state initiative called the Illinois Family Roots Pilot Program aims to help African Americans recover their ancestral histories by introducing them to DNA relatives across the ocean.
This state-funded project, created through a bill sponsored by Rep. Carol Ammons of Urbana and budgeted at $500,000, provides free DNA tests and genomic analysis through The African Kinship Reunion (TAKiR) research project, led by principal investigator and researcher LaKisha David at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
All Illinois residents are eligible to participate, David said.
Through genetic analysis and genealogical research — called genetic genealogy —TaKiR identifies and explores familial connections lost due to a history of human trafficking and enslavement. The aim of this project is to give descendants of enslaved people 'the opportunity to trace their roots back to their ancestral homelands, to reconnect with their ancestral heritage,' according to the language of the Family Roots state bill.
Until recently, African Americans researching their genealogy could typically only trace back to the time their ancestors arrived in this country, because enslaved people rarely had surnames, and written records, if they existed at all before the 1870 census, were often poorly maintained and lost over time, according to the National Archives and other sources.
In the Illinois project, a total of 1,600 DNA kits will eventually be distributed around the state, David said.
The city of Evanston, through its Reparations Committee, is one community that is partnering with Family Roots to provide residents with DNA kits to begin learning about their ancestry. The first of 250 kits were distributed during the city's annual Juneteenth celebration, and additional kits were provided during the committee's July meeting to any interested resident.
Another DNA kit distribution will take place Thursday, Aug. 7 from 9 to 10:30 a.m. at Evanston's City Hall, 909 Davis Street, Evanston.
'My hope is that Evanston residents that take this test and receive their results feel more grounded and rooted in who they are,' said Robin Rue Simmons, chairwoman of the Evanston Reparations Committee and founder and executive director of FirstRepair, a nonprofit reparations support organization. 'I hope they gain more clarity in their demands and in their case for racial justice and healing, and that they are able to celebrate a culture that has been stripped away. It's very important we know our history.'
In 2019, Evanston was the first city in the United States to launch a reparations program for Black residents in response to past practices of housing discrimination within the city.
But reparations programs go beyond financial repair, Simmons noted. They are about reconnecting with a lineage that was lost—and this is where the Family Roots project comes in, she said.
'My vision for this program is that it strengthens the Black community and it increases our leadership, our vision, our pride, and our ability to reach our full potential and be fully repaired,' Simmons said. 'This program gives us an assist in repairing ourselves—at least by giving us access to understanding our lineage. From there, we can explore, self-educate, embrace and uplift our culture.'
David explained that identifying participants' relatives in Africa—and within the United States, too— leads to the building of family trees, restoring a family line that had been lost. By speaking with living relatives in Africa, Black Americans can gain a better understanding of the region from which their ancestors came and ask about family histories and any stories that have been passed down through the generations, David said.
Relatives are identified from a DNA database of individuals from Africa and the United States.
'I'm hoping to give people a more cohesive family narrative,' David explained. 'There's something in knowing about yourself that triggers psychological well-being and contributes to your sense of self.'
Finding familial roots across the Atlantic can also restore cultural connections. This was true for Simmons, who participated in DNA testing several years ago and learned she shared genetic markers with the Balanta ethnic community of Guinea-Bissau. This led to her traveling to the country with a group of other Black Americans and experiencing the culture up close.
'I felt that I was being welcomed home,' Simmons said. 'I felt immediately that I'd found the missing pieces to my family story and my legacy as well.'
The Family Roots Pilot Program's focus on connecting relatives is something Simmons hopes to experience.
'It was transformative for me to go to my ancestral home and meet the village of my foremothers, but to actually meet a direct relative would be incredible,' she said.
Kimberly Holmes-Ross volunteered to have her DNA tested in order to build on discoveries her late mother made when she took a DNA test several years ago that connected her ancestry to Ghana.
A fourth-generation Evanstonian, Holmes-Ross has deep roots in the community, but she is hoping her test will reveal deeper roots in Africa. If connected to a relative, she would like to ask questions about family life, their traditions and customs, and the special events they celebrate, she said.
'We're only able to trace our family as far back as when we were brought over from Africa, so I think having that connection to the motherland would be satisfying,' Holmes-Ross said.
'I'd really like to find out what we are rooted in,' she added.
Penick said she would like to understand more about her own Nigerian roots in order to pass this information along to her grandchildren. She would also like to see if she shares distant family in Africa with other Evanston residents, she said.
'A lot of people here in Evanston, I feel like we're in some way connected,' she said. 'It would be interesting to know how true that is!'
Simmons said she hopes the Family Roots pilot program will be expanded into a long-term program that all Illinois residents can partake in.
'This is an incredible example of reparations in hyper-local communities,' Simmons said. 'Our hope is that other communities that are advancing reparations will consider this as a model and invite Dr. David's science into their reparations programs.'
For more information, visit takir.org.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

One of the world's most polluted cities has banned single-use plastics

time3 days ago

One of the world's most polluted cities has banned single-use plastics

LAGOS, Nigeria -- LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — Nigerian shop manager Olarewanju Ogunbona says he uses Styrofoam and plastic packs at least five times a day — nothing unusual in the megacity of Lagos, one of the world's most plastics-polluted urban areas. The city's over 20 million people contributed 870,000 tons of the world's 57 million tons of plastic waste in 2024. Lagos state authorities last month imposed a ban on single-use plastics, but residents say weak enforcement and the absence of alternatives have weakened its effectiveness. Under the law that kicked off on July 1, the use of single-use plastics such as cutlery, plates and straws is banned and offenders risk their businesses being shut down. However, other forms of plastics, which make up a smaller percentage of the city's waste, are still in use. The ban is far from being fully implemented, as some shops still display Styrofoam packs on their shelves. 'Sellers are still using it very well,' said Ogunbona, who continues to buy his Styrofoam-packed meals. In Geneva this week, countries including Nigeria are negotiating a treaty to end plastic pollution. Such talks broke down last year, with oil-producing countries opposed to any limits on plastic production. In large part, plastics are made from fossil fuels like oil and gas. Lagos generates at least 13,000 tons of waste daily, almost a fifth of which is plastics, officials have said. In the absence of a proper waste management system, most of it ends up in waterways, clogging canals, polluting beaches and contributing to devastating floods. Although the state government has promoted the ban on single-use plastics as a major step, watchdogs are skeptical. 'Its effectiveness is limited without strong enforcement, affordable alternatives for low-income vendors and meaningful improvements in the city's overwhelmed waste management systems,' Olumide Idowu, a Lagos-based environmental activist, told The Associated Press. The Lagos state government did not respond to a request for comment. With the quest for a better life driving millions of Nigerians to Lagos, some in the city are finding ways to manage the pollution. Recent years have seen a rise of private waste managers and sustainability groups helping to tackle the crisis. At a sorting site in Obalende, a bustling commercial suburb adjacent to the upscale Ikoyi neighborhood, two women with razor blades scraped labels from plastic soft drink bottles. They uncapped the bottles and threw them into different nets, ready to be compressed and sold for recycling. Competition has become tougher as more people join the work, the women said. The informal network of waste collectors sell to, or sort for, private waste management companies. They can make around around 5,000 naira ($3.26) a day. But far more work is needed. Manufacturers have a key role to play in tackling the plastic waste problem, according to Omoh Alokwe, co-founder of the Street Waste Company that operates in Obalende. 'They need to ... ensure that the plastics being produced into the environment are collected back and recycled,' Alokwe said. Experts also call for a behavioral change among residents for the law banning single-use plastics to be effective. Lagos residents need alternatives to plastics, shop owner Ogunbona said. Otherwise, 'we will keep using them."

DNA project hopes to reunite African Americans in Illinois with ancestral relatives in Africa
DNA project hopes to reunite African Americans in Illinois with ancestral relatives in Africa

Chicago Tribune

time04-08-2025

  • Chicago Tribune

DNA project hopes to reunite African Americans in Illinois with ancestral relatives in Africa

Ever since an at-home DNA test revealed a Nigerian ancestry, life-long Evanston resident Tina Penick has reflected on what might have been. 'What if we lived in Nigeria? What would that look like?' Penick mused. 'What would our experiences be?' A pause, and then one more question. 'What would my name have been?' For African Americans, the transatlantic slave trade severed connections to country, culture, language and family—seemingly forever. Today, a state initiative called the Illinois Family Roots Pilot Program aims to help African Americans recover their ancestral histories by introducing them to DNA relatives across the ocean. This state-funded project, created through a bill sponsored by Rep. Carol Ammons of Urbana and budgeted at $500,000, provides free DNA tests and genomic analysis through The African Kinship Reunion (TAKiR) research project, led by principal investigator and researcher LaKisha David at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. All Illinois residents are eligible to participate, David said. Through genetic analysis and genealogical research — called genetic genealogy —TaKiR identifies and explores familial connections lost due to a history of human trafficking and enslavement. The aim of this project is to give descendants of enslaved people 'the opportunity to trace their roots back to their ancestral homelands, to reconnect with their ancestral heritage,' according to the language of the Family Roots state bill. Until recently, African Americans researching their genealogy could typically only trace back to the time their ancestors arrived in this country, because enslaved people rarely had surnames, and written records, if they existed at all before the 1870 census, were often poorly maintained and lost over time, according to the National Archives and other sources. In the Illinois project, a total of 1,600 DNA kits will eventually be distributed around the state, David said. The city of Evanston, through its Reparations Committee, is one community that is partnering with Family Roots to provide residents with DNA kits to begin learning about their ancestry. The first of 250 kits were distributed during the city's annual Juneteenth celebration, and additional kits were provided during the committee's July meeting to any interested resident. Another DNA kit distribution will take place Thursday, Aug. 7 from 9 to 10:30 a.m. at Evanston's City Hall, 909 Davis Street, Evanston. 'My hope is that Evanston residents that take this test and receive their results feel more grounded and rooted in who they are,' said Robin Rue Simmons, chairwoman of the Evanston Reparations Committee and founder and executive director of FirstRepair, a nonprofit reparations support organization. 'I hope they gain more clarity in their demands and in their case for racial justice and healing, and that they are able to celebrate a culture that has been stripped away. It's very important we know our history.' In 2019, Evanston was the first city in the United States to launch a reparations program for Black residents in response to past practices of housing discrimination within the city. But reparations programs go beyond financial repair, Simmons noted. They are about reconnecting with a lineage that was lost—and this is where the Family Roots project comes in, she said. 'My vision for this program is that it strengthens the Black community and it increases our leadership, our vision, our pride, and our ability to reach our full potential and be fully repaired,' Simmons said. 'This program gives us an assist in repairing ourselves—at least by giving us access to understanding our lineage. From there, we can explore, self-educate, embrace and uplift our culture.' David explained that identifying participants' relatives in Africa—and within the United States, too— leads to the building of family trees, restoring a family line that had been lost. By speaking with living relatives in Africa, Black Americans can gain a better understanding of the region from which their ancestors came and ask about family histories and any stories that have been passed down through the generations, David said. Relatives are identified from a DNA database of individuals from Africa and the United States. 'I'm hoping to give people a more cohesive family narrative,' David explained. 'There's something in knowing about yourself that triggers psychological well-being and contributes to your sense of self.' Finding familial roots across the Atlantic can also restore cultural connections. This was true for Simmons, who participated in DNA testing several years ago and learned she shared genetic markers with the Balanta ethnic community of Guinea-Bissau. This led to her traveling to the country with a group of other Black Americans and experiencing the culture up close. 'I felt that I was being welcomed home,' Simmons said. 'I felt immediately that I'd found the missing pieces to my family story and my legacy as well.' The Family Roots Pilot Program's focus on connecting relatives is something Simmons hopes to experience. 'It was transformative for me to go to my ancestral home and meet the village of my foremothers, but to actually meet a direct relative would be incredible,' she said. Kimberly Holmes-Ross volunteered to have her DNA tested in order to build on discoveries her late mother made when she took a DNA test several years ago that connected her ancestry to Ghana. A fourth-generation Evanstonian, Holmes-Ross has deep roots in the community, but she is hoping her test will reveal deeper roots in Africa. If connected to a relative, she would like to ask questions about family life, their traditions and customs, and the special events they celebrate, she said. 'We're only able to trace our family as far back as when we were brought over from Africa, so I think having that connection to the motherland would be satisfying,' Holmes-Ross said. 'I'd really like to find out what we are rooted in,' she added. Penick said she would like to understand more about her own Nigerian roots in order to pass this information along to her grandchildren. She would also like to see if she shares distant family in Africa with other Evanston residents, she said. 'A lot of people here in Evanston, I feel like we're in some way connected,' she said. 'It would be interesting to know how true that is!' Simmons said she hopes the Family Roots pilot program will be expanded into a long-term program that all Illinois residents can partake in. 'This is an incredible example of reparations in hyper-local communities,' Simmons said. 'Our hope is that other communities that are advancing reparations will consider this as a model and invite Dr. David's science into their reparations programs.' For more information, visit

Fest at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Aurora offers taste of Africa
Fest at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Aurora offers taste of Africa

Chicago Tribune

time04-08-2025

  • Chicago Tribune

Fest at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Aurora offers taste of Africa

Kathleen Dewig of Batavia elected to be a little more adventurous with her lunch this past weekend and elected to try some authentic Nigerian food. 'I've never had this type of cuisine before,' Dewig sat as she sat in an open room with tables Sunday afternoon inside St. Joseph Catholic Church in Aurora. 'It's very spicy, and I like the spicy chicken and the rice.' A trip through Nigerian and other African cuisines, as well as food from other areas of the world, was offered Sunday at St. Joseph Catholic Church as the non-profit Sycamore-based ImaBridge Africa International group offered a two-hour International Taste Festival beginning at 12:30 p.m. Following a Mass at 11 a.m., the church featured cultural performances, an African cooking contest, kids' games and a plethora of food as the non-profit group hoped to raise money through food tickets and donations for the underprivileged in Nigeria. This year's effort focused on helping a hospital in Nigeria, organizers said. Ndifrekeabasi Ecim of Nigeria was on hand Sunday and said she was the administrator for the ImaBridge Africa-owned hospital back home. 'This is going to go a long way to help the vulnerable people – the women who cannot have their children elsewhere – this will help them procure all the help they need for the babies and themselves,' Ecim said of Sunday's fundraiser. The Rev. Godwin Asuquo, pastor of St. Joseph Catholic Church of Aurora and also founder of ImaBridge Africa, said the event used to be held in McHenry and was moved here to Aurora last year, following his being assigned to the Aurora church, adding that he was 'wanting to create more awareness.' 'People in McHenry are familiar with this and we wanted to spread the word to another area,' Asuquo said a few days before the event. 'This is the ninth year we have held the fundraiser and the second time we have had it in Aurora. I was transferred from McHenry to Aurora so some of this was for convenience but also to expand awareness. People from McHenry still come here and we are bringing more people.' Cecelia Adams, director of public relations for ImaBridge Africa, said the goal of this year's event was to make it even more multicultural. 'We have foods from different places in Africa but also tamales and other groups. We moved to Aurora to expand ourselves both in ethnicity and also to get the word out for others to help those in need across the globe,' she said. The event focuses on authentic cuisine, Asuquo said. 'We have people of Nigerian or African descent that have flown in and are here with us already – close to 10 people that have arrived from Nigeria who are cooking the food from scratch,' he said before the event. 'We also have people from different ethnicities and we want to make this more of an international festival where we get to learn about different peoples' cultures.' Officials said the event would raise as much as $30,000 when it was held in McHenry and that ImaBridge Africa is also seeking grants. 'Our goal is to raise $30,000 this year. We didn't make that much last year but we think it was because we switched (locations),' Adams said. 'I've personally been to Nigeria about 12 times and it's the culture and the food that keeps me coming back.' Gail Wright of Aurora came with her husband Tom and grandson Gabe and said she used to teach in the area. 'We wanted to support ImaBridge Africa and also see Father Godwin who we know,' she said. 'I know there is African food and we're absolutely excited about that and trying it. I only know what Father Godwin told us about the food but we missed it last year.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store