Association of the Servants of Akua: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 38:
Starting in 1950, the ASA begin the process to collect records of families and their movements in a effort to help track people separated during the [[Akuan Atrocities]] and related tragedies. Originally the focus was on the [[Norgsveltian Crown Realm]], due to the Atrocities however the role expanded out to incorporate more of the world. While original survivors of the atrocities for the most part perished from [[Kemonomimi Genetic Immunodeficiency Disorder|KGID]] or old age, that being noted Akuan elves and non-Kemonomimi species still had survivors. The process of collecting various records from shrine, census data from Norgsveltian government and so forth it help reunited children of the survivors with their extended family. Later in 1972, the project expanded outwards to collect family records and census data from across the world to build global registry of Akuanists in a effort to track historical movements of Akuanists and their families across the world. Big focus of the project was attempting to link the descendants of the slave trade to back their original homeland, which was often generations if not centuries back. The registry of Akuanists and their record is considered to be a closed matter as in, not openly shared. It for family members descended of the survivors of the [[Akuan Atrocities]] it required them to notify the ASA office and for those researching into their family history a small fee is required. Majority of the work of the Genealogy project is done through volunteers.
 
The registry and genealogy project has been digitalized along side the registry of the shrines. However, access to the digital archives are only given out to trusted research institutions, universities and ASA volunteers.
{| class="wikitable"
|+Registry of Shrines
Administrators, verified
1,395

edits