Bristol Herald Courier, June 23, 2002, page 6A
Editorial
The
world really was their home
By Stephen Phelps
Actually, family trees are more like puzzles. They may
grow on their own, but to see them in all
their glory you have to put them together yourself.
And that's hard enough when you have all the pieces in
front of you. So you can imagine what it's
like for the Melungeons of Southwest Virginia
and Northeast Tennessee. Not only are a lot of the
pieces missing, but there's no telling what
the puzzle will look like when it's finished, if ever.
BUT FOR MANY of us with Melungeon ancestry, sorting
through the pieces is proving to be well
worth the effort. Last week at Fourth Union, a yearly
Melungeon gathering being held in Kingsport this year,
the latest piece was unveiled - results from DNA tests of Melungeons from Southwest
Virginia and East Tennessee.
Alone, those results won't solve the puzzle. But they
hint at a clearer understanding of who the
Melungeons are and where they came from. And
viewed from the proper angle, they even might offer a
world of insight about our future. IN FACT,
THE Melungeons have been one of the Mountain Empire's
great puzzles for years, even centuries. With dark,
distinctive looks and mysterious origins, the Melungeons
of yesterday tended to live their lives apart, on the
outside. And all too often, it was easier for them that
way. It's hard to think
of many minority groups that don't suffer in some way,
from stereotyping to outright persecution. For the
Melungeons, the latter reached its peak in
the person of W.A. Plecker, Virginia's commissioner of
vital statistics in the first half of the
20th century - an apostle of eugenics and
racial purity who crusaded for decades to track down and
single out Virginians of mixed race. With
white, black, Native American and other antecedents,
Melungeons were among those who paid with their land,
their civil rights and more.
PLECKER TRIED to enlist school boards and county clerks
in his effort; many, to their credit,
refused. Yet during Plecker's reign of terror and long
before, many Melungeons sought to conceal their origins
- destroying papers, changing names, and
often fleeing the region altogether. That has a lot to
do with why our family trees often stop abruptly and
tend to be more of a puzzle than most. And it's why a
lot of folks out there have Melungeon ancestors and
don't know it, or are just now finding out. It was just
four years ago, in fact, that I learned I may actually
be of Melungeon descent on both sides of my family.
I have no stories to tell about my Melungeon ancestors,
not the way I can tell you about my forebears
who sailed from Dublin to America in the late 1600s
in a boat they built themselves. The DNA results
unveiled this week for Fourth Union may not
tell that kind of story, but the genetic evidence helps
to highlight a fascinating, even inspiring,
picture that's become gradually clearer in
recent years.
FOR YEARS, RESEARCHERS and others assumed that the
Melungeons were simply "tri-racial"
- white, black and Native American. More recently, it's
begun to appear there's a lot more to it.
In his book , "The Melungeons: The Resurrection of a
Proud People," Brent Kennedy suggests there were other
factors in the genetic mix: Shipwrecked Turkish sailors
may have migrated inland to Central Appalachia in the
1500s and intermarried with those already here. Kennedy
and others have suggested that Spanish and Portuguese
settlers may also have wound up in the area. The DNA
results, involving hair samples from 100 women in
Southwest Virginia and Northeast Tennessee, indeed
showed genetic patterns characteristic of whites, blacks
and Native Americans, according to Kevin Jones, a
biology professor at The University of Virginia's
College at Wise.. BUT THEY SHOWED something else as
well: genetic strains often found in Turkey and northern
India.
What's more, they suggest that those strains were passed
through the female line; in other words, those early
pioneers were both men and women.
Obviously, last week's results are just a beginning.
There will be other Melungeon genetic
studies, probably many more. One truth, however, seems
self-evident:
This world really is the Melungeons' home, and not just
the Mountain Empire, either.
IF IT HADN'T been for people from all over the world -
Europe, the Mediterranean, the Middle East, Africa, Asia
- converging in one place at a certain time in history,
the Melungeons would not exist as a people. And if you
believe in destiny, you have to conclude that those
varied peoples converged here for a reason.
It should go without saying that the Melungeon
experience could teach us all a lot about race relations
and as I've often said, if you don't think
that's still an issue in 21st century America, you
probably need to pay closer attention. But
then, it's not just America.
What's struck me most, in fact, has been the growing
bond between the Mountain Empire and Turkey.
THE TOWN OF WISE has a sister-city relationship with one
Turkish city; UVa-Wise has established
exchange programs with Turkish universities; a
surprising number of Southwest Virginians and Northeast
Tennesseeans have traveled to Turkey, some repeatedly. A
number have even spoken of feeling immediately at home
there, and it's no small wonder; according to Kennedy,
parts of Asia Minor bear a striking resemblance to the
Powell Valley.
And when a massive earthquake struck Turkey three years
ago, the people of this region - Melungeon and
non-Melungeon alike - pitched in to help, donating money
and organizing relief shipments. One youngster even used
her birthday party to raise aid for quake victims.
In the past, the Mountain Empire has often tended to
look inward; in a world where everything from
fast food to terrorism has become global in scope,
that's no longer an option. The Melungeon experience
could inspire us all to look outward, and it
might even help us piece together a puzzle or two.
Stephen Phelps is opinion page editor of the Bristol
Herald Courier.
|