Suzanne Malek is a librarian at Truckee Meadows Community College, where she runs the Open Genealogy Lab. Lab is held at the TMCC library, 7000 Dandini Blvd., on Fridays from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. and is open to the public and free.

How did this get started?

Well, Iโ€™m new to this area. I only moved here about a year ago. I used to work at Antelope Valley College in Southern California. I worked there for 15 years. I had gotten into genealogy not long after I started there. The head librarian showed me some records, and Iโ€™d had a friend who Iโ€™d worked with at another school who showed me some records. โ€ฆ It really inspired me. I started thinking, โ€œHey, look, you know, I wonder if my ancestors go back to the Civil War?โ€ โ€ฆ They would bring in all of these wonderful Civil War artifacts, these old marriage certificates from the 1800s. โ€ฆ I started thinking, โ€œGosh, well, why canโ€™t I do it?โ€ โ€ฆ I found classes online. I found classes locally through the genealogical society. I even found that there was a convention every year in Southern California called Genealogy Jamboree. โ€ฆ The interest became so intense I started telling everybody I worked with about it. โ€ฆ Before I knew it, almost every librarian I worked with was starting to do their genealogy, and we were all going to the conventions together. Then they started saying, โ€œYouโ€™re so interested in this, why donโ€™t we start buying books for it?โ€ โ€ฆ So they gave me a book budget, and I started buying books, and, sure enough, they started flying off the shelves. And it was right about that time that my husband decided he had a better career here than in California. โ€ฆ So we got up here, and after a few months I got the job here, and I started telling everybody, โ€œGosh, you know, Iโ€™m really into genealogy.โ€ Some people were interested. It wasnโ€™t a huge amount of people in the department that were interested, but they could very plainly see that I had a real passion for it. โ€ฆ I said, โ€œLook at Fridays. Thereโ€™s nobody on campus, hardly at all on Fridays. This room sits empty, so why not use it?โ€ โ€ฆ So I presented it to my dean, and he said yes, and we started it.

How has the reception been?

Itโ€™s been really good. We have some regulars that come almost every week. Some people just come once in a while. We get betweenโ€”I would say, on a good day, weโ€™ll get 12. On a bad day we might get four.

Students might enjoy small classes.

But itโ€™s open to the public as well. Itโ€™s not just open to students. โ€ฆ We tell everybody we meet, โ€œTell your friends.โ€ โ€ฆ I tell everybody who comes every Friday, โ€œGo home and tell your neighbors.โ€ You know, we want more people. We want to spread the word. Because itโ€™s in a library, I want them to leave with knowing [more than how to do their tree.] โ€ฆ I send out an email every Friday morning. I spam everybody whoโ€™s on my list, โ€ฆ and I say, โ€œThis is what I want to go over today.โ€

Any great discoveries?

It happens every week, and we do show-and-tell as well, with our artifacts. โ€ฆ Itโ€™s a really sharing thing, where we all leave with an appreciation for something that we didnโ€™t come in with. โ€ฆ We spend about the first 20 minutes of class learning a new concept, and then for the rest of class, we just spend working on each othersโ€™ trees.

Is it a class for newbies, too?

Absolutely. And the class is really appreciative of new people, newbiesโ€”because when they came in, most of them were newbies, too.

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