The most shocking secrets uncovered by DNA ancestry tests
Genetic test kits have been raising in popularity for years, with plenty of companies making an appearance and a profit, such as 23andMe, MyHeritage and Ancestry among others.
Luis Armando Albino was 6 years old when he was abducted from a park in Oakland where he had been playing with his older brother in 1951. Now, more than 70 years later, he was found living on the East Coast, according to the LA Times.
Photo: Aaron Burden/Unsplash
In 2020, his niece did a DNA ancestry test “just for fun” and, with the help of the FBI, ended up finding her long-lost uncle. According to The Guardian, the boy was abducted by a woman who sold him to a couple in the East Coast that raised him as their child.
“All three of my kids had 23andMe DNA tests taken at the end of 2023. They are all in their 30s now. The tests showed that they are all only half-siblings, and each one has a different biological father (spoiler alert: not me),” a user named Mark H. wrote on a Quora forum.
He went on to explain that his ex and mother of those children died ten years ago, so the mystery of the biological fathers “went to the grave with her”, leaving all the family “shocked and betrayed.”
Photo: Sandy Millar/Unsplash
Beth M. Wrote on Quora that her brother died in an accident in the 80’s. At the time he died he had a girlfriend who after the death, moved away and lost contact with the family. As it turned out, she was three months pregnant by then, but they never knew.
Years later, Beth’s family did a DNA test with Ancestry and found her brother’s daughter and her family. “When we met in person, I almost fainted. She was a female replica of my late brother, and she had two kids of her own, the youngest of whom looked just like my brother’s twin,” she wrote.
Kathleen C. told the story of her 70 year-old single friend who found out he was a father, grandfather and great-grandfather overnight, after his daughter and his brother took DNA mail-in tests.
According to Kathleen, her friend had impregnated his high school girlfriend who never told him about the pregnancy and gave the baby up for adoption. Fifty years later, that grown up baby did a DNA test and had a match with her uncle, leading her to her father soon after, who is now “delighted to have new family in his life.”
As reported by The Washington Post, Alice Collins Plebuch, who identified as Irish American, was shocked to find a mix of European Jewish, Middle Eastern, and Eastern European genes when she did a DNA ancestry test.
After further family-wide DNA testing, she learned that her father was not the biological son of her grandparents. After even more digging, Plebuch finally got to the bottom of the story: Her father had been sent home with the wrong family.
At the age of 74, Walter McFarlane decided to take an AncestryDNA test to learn more about his biological family. He had been raised by his grandmother, but the details of his biological family were hazy.
According to a CNN report, McFarlane learned that his long-time friend who grew up down the street was actually his half-brother, Alan Robinson, who had been adopted.
Two white British women were shocked to learn that their ancestry revealed a Native American bloodline, especially considering their ancestors hadn’t even been to America, according to a BBC report.
Historians then explained that although unusual, some Native Americans were brought to the United Kingdom centuries ago, possibly as slaves, translators, or tribal representatives, who then stayed in Britain and married into local communities, according to the report.
According to a People magazine report, a family adopted a 10 year-old girl from China who had been diagnosed with a brain disorder.
They later learned that a family in their church group had also adopted a girl from China who had the same brain disorder. The families decided to test the girls’ DNA, only to learn that they had a 99.9 percent match of being sisters.
According to a Reader’s Digest report, a woman from Virginia, who identified as African-American, given she had Black parents (or so she thought), used a company called Kin Finder, LLC to learn more about her background.
The test showed she was 70% white. Turns out the man she thought was her father, was actually her stepdad. Her biological father was white and he didn’t marry her mother because interracial marriage was illegal in Virginia at that time.
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