Project Status Report I
East European Microfilming in
BELARUS, BULGARIA, CROATIA,
HUNGARY, RUSSIA, SLOVAKIA
and the UKRAINE

© copyright 1994 and 1995 by John D. Movius; all rights reserved

Reported by John D. Movius


Author's Preface: This is the first of two reports based on an intereview in July 1994 with Thomas Edlund, one of the librarian catalogers at the Family History Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. This was published in the FEEFHS Newsletter Volume 2 Number 3 in the fall of 1994.

Part II of this Project Status Report, covering the balance of the Eastern European countires (including Germany, Poland, Bulgaria and Armenia) is now available.

Persons interested in obtaining the latest filming project status are reminded that the full text of Thomas Edlund's speech on this subject (given at the FEEFHS Cleveland Conference in August 1995) is printed in the FEEFHS Newsletter Volume 3 Number 3 (for more information, see FEEFHS Publications


At the first FEEFHS annual conference at Salt Lake City in May 1994, Family History Library (FHL) associate librarian and cataloger Thomas Edlund provided a well prepared summary outline and lecture on Slovenian and Croatian archival sources now available on microfilm thru the FHL in Salt Lake City and its 2000 Family History Centers worldwide. Tom is well placed to offer these insights, having cataloging and indexing responsibilities for a large number of East European extraction (filming) projects of the Genealogical Society of Utah at the FHL.

Hoping to learn more of specific interest to many of our various FEEFHS member societies, an interview with Tom was obtained at his FHL office on 22 July 1994. My interview notes reflect the following status of various projects:

SLOVAKIA -- Five major archives exist in Slovakia. Top priority is given to extraction of parish records. Camera crews working here have shipped over 700 reels of film since starting here in 1993. Presently Slovakian church books are being filmed by three camera crews -- one each at the archives of Ko ice, Presov and Levoca.

CROATIA -- Nine filming projects have been undertaken in Croatia, four of which are still active, as follows:

HUNGARY -- In the past, Hungarian parish records were filmed up to an 1895 cutoff, as defined by the Hungarian 90-year privacy law. While no church books after 1895 have been filmed, civil records are being filmed for the period of 1895-1903. Camera crews are active at P‚cs and Budapest on this project.

RUSSIA -- Ten camera crews are now at work here.
UKRAINE -- Four camera crews are here. One camera crew is in Cheringof and two are in the capital of Kiev. They are all concentrating on Russian Orthodox church records. One crew in Ukraine's Lviv (Polish: Lwow; German: Lemberg) is now filming Greek Catholic records. These are of major interest to the hundreds of thousands of this faith who emigrated to western Canada and their descendants.

Second priority at Lviv now is Russian Orthodox records. These are so extensive they may well take up to 15 years to complete the filming project, however it is not unusual to have filming projects of such a duration due to the size of certain archival collections. Jewish synagogue records exist at Lviv, and these will eventually be filmed too.

BELARUS -- Two camera crews are active here. One in Grodno is filming consistory records of the Russian Orthodox Church. Some of these start in the mid 1700's. A film crew in the capital, Minsk is filming Russian Orthodox consistory records and Lutheran consistory records. They also have some tax revision (= census) lists to film in Minsk.

BULGARIA -- One crew in Sofia is now filming post-1890 civil registration records.



Author's Postscript: November 6, 1995 Please remember the above article is based on an interview dated 1994. And while it is over one year old, it can easily take several years for a reel of film to be transported, developed, cataloged, indexed, posted in the central FHL computer and released on the Family History Library Catalog on CD-ROM and fiche.

Patience and watchful waiting are two important virtues of East European record searchers today. Much of the filming described above will still not be available for another year or more. Patience is needed in avoiding attempts to contact librarians or catalogers directly. Such well-intentioned efforts only cause further delay in the cataloging and release of important films desired by many of us in the future.

Some of these projects are of a long term nature. Other filming projects require the special language skills for Library Scientists skilled in all of the many foreign languages involved. It is a constant source of amazement to me that the accomplishments of the Genealogical Society of Utah in general and the negotiators, film crews and catalogers in particular are so great, considering the extraordinary difficulties they face. We all owe them a debt of gratitude.

copyright 1994 and 1995 by John D. Movius; all rights reserved

0 - 0 - 0



GoTo the Microfilm Status Cross Index

GoTo the FEEFHS Internet Journal Index

GoTo the Ethnic, Religious and National Index

GoTo the Location Index

GoTo the Master IndexPage

Return to the FEEFHS Weekly FrontPage Newletter

GoTo the Full Text [search engine] Index of this Web Site