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December 30, 1994 - Image 65

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-12-30

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

0

It was the same type of mu-
tated beta-thalassemia gene Mr.
Diamond carries.
In early 1994, Dr. Ariella Op-
penheim of the department of
hematology at Hadassah Uni-
versity Hospital in Israel and Dr.
Charles Scriver, director of the
division of medical genetics at
McGill University/Montreal Chil-
dren's Hospital Research Insti-
tute, conferred and established
that Mr. Diamond and Ms. Paran
are relatives. The two had never
met each other.
These findings triggered a re-
search project led by McGill and
Hebrew universities. Mr. Dia-
mond joined with professional re-
searchers in a more extensive
study of the trait. He continued
his genealogical endeavors to dis-
cover his Western Hemisphere
genetic cousin, Ms. Meltser.
Mrs. Meltser's mother was Ms.
Paran's great-aunt (the sister of
Ms. Paran's grandmother). That
makes Mrs. Meltser and Ms.
Paran second cousins.
Mr. Diamond contacted Mrs.
Meltser and told her about the
family's mutated beta-tha-
lassemia gene. He explained why
she may carry the gene and the
importance of getting a blood test.
"I was really shocked," says
Mrs. Meltser, reflecting on the
phone call she received last June
from a stranger named Stanley
Diamond.
The former Russian language
and literature teacher currently
works as a facialist at Smile's Sa-
lon in Birmingham. Although Mr.
Diamond's phone call stirred Ms.
Meltser enough to obtain a blood
test, she also reacted with delight
to learn more about her far-reach-
ing family tree.
"It was very, very exciting," she
says. "What is really amazing is
that Mr. Diamond and I are fam-
ily in some way. He sent me my
family tree. I learned much more
about my relatives than I even
knew before."
Mrs. Meltser's blood test,
which she describes as "short and
not hard at all," came back neg-
ative for the beta-thalassemia
gene. This indicates that her two
sons needn't worry about carry-
ing the trait, either. But Ms.
Meltser has two cousins from
Russia whom she has urged to
get blood tests.
Meanwhile, Mr. Diamond has
carried what he calls his "voyage
of discovery" onto the Internet.
His messages on the JEWISH-
GEN echo, a worldwide network
for Jewish genealogists, are read
internationally. El

For more information on
Stanley Diamond's research,
call or fax him at:
(514) 484-0100 (phone);
(514) 4847306 (fax). His
e mail address is: Stanley.
Diamon
167.z1
*10
7
ww4ige,

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