Church provides online App to trace ancestors

Date:

Share post:

DIGOS CITY – The Christian sect aims to provide assistance for anyone interested to know where their nearest of kin and distance relatives originally came from by using an online app.

Lawyer Nikkolo Marco Aurelio Cortes, stake (diocese) president of The Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints in this city said Friday that the app is available online to those with Android phones and may also be accessed online on the web.

“This is our benevolent gesture of support to our government’s celebration of the National Family Week that kicked-off on September 23. In our mind, scores will enjoy the experience of a lifetime, especially so if they successfully trace the roots of their respective families up to several generations,” Cortes said.

Cortes expects to serve at least a thousand individuals here through the church’s two-day “Family Search Exhibit” located at the G-Mall here.

Job Fernandez, Digos City stake public affairs director, said the church brought their computer experts and volunteer workers here to help those who are interested to avail of the service, which is free of charge.

“One of our Church’s basic belief is the importance of families and its eternal nature, thus placing a high value on preserving and enhancing the relationship therein. And we believe that saving the Filipino family is not just a matter of religion or faith, but a social endeavor that must involve the church, community, and the state,” Fernandez said.

The Family Search Exhibit is also being done simultaneously in other places where the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints is present, church officials said.

Jane Perez, one of those who availed of the free genealogy service quipped that at first, she found it hard to trace the family tree since it requires the right information for the search engine to respond with the right information.

“It feels tedious when you cannot remember the birthdate, exact names of your nearest of kin, but in the long run I find it exciting to know where some of my relatives did emanate,” Perez said.

Bing Concha, a senior citizen said he already reached as far as the sixth generation of his family tree.

“I’m very, very happy to trace who are my great, great grandfather, and grandmother. If it’s not for this app I will never know who they are,” Concha said. -PNA

RIZAL MEMORIAL COLLEGEspot_img

Related articles

Soldier, teacher slain in Lanao del Sur ambush; hunt launched for gunmen

COTABATO CITY (June 30)  — What began as a routine journey home from a security mission ended in...

Heart disease still No. 1 killer of Filipinos in 2025, PSA reports

MANILA (June 30)  — Nearly one out of every five deaths recorded in the Philippines this year was...

More than P98M in aid reaches quake-hit families across Davao Region

DAVAO CITY (June 30)  — Nearly a month after a powerful earthquake shook parts of Mindanao, thousands of...

BARMM mock polls pass key test ahead of historic Sept. 14 parliamentary elections

COTABATO CITY (June 30)  — The Bangsamoro's preparations for its first-ever regular parliamentary elections cleared a major milestone...