Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions
This website seeks to promote an awareness, appreciation and knowledge of the heritage, history and genealogy of the Irish-Jewish Community. The information provided by this website has been obtained from publicly accessible resources and collated for purely bona fide genealogical research purposes by Stuart Rosenblatt, PC, FGSI, working over many years to provide a unique archival and heritage resource for the study of the history and genealogy of the Irish-Jewish Community and to assist those with Irish-Jewish ancestry in Ireland and overseas. Suggestions for any corrections, omissions, additions, amendments or clarifications are always welcome and sincerely appreciated. We hope that the information provided by this website will assist with your genealogical or historical research."
ANY Information PROVIDED IN WRITING OR VERBALLY WILL BE ADDED TO THE DATA BASE.
You are encouraged to make personal contact with archivist
Stuart Rosenblatt
+44 (0) 788 979 4757
Irish Jewish Genealogical Society
Data Privacy Notice
This privacy notice tells you what to expect us to do with your personal information.
1. Contact details
2. What information we collect, use, and why
3. Lawful bases and data protection rights
4. Where we get personal information from
5. How long we keep information
6. How to complain
1. Contact details
Telephone : +44 (0) 788 979 4757
UK : 0788 979 4757
Email : srosenblatt@irishjewishroots.com
2. What information we collect, use, and why
We collect or use the following personal information for research or archiving purposes:
Birth, marriage and death information from registration offices, cemetery tombstones, personal interviews, census records, newspaper insertions, magazines.
Names and contact details
Addresses
3. Lawful bases and data protection rights
Under Irish data protection law, we must have a “lawful basis” for collecting and using your personal information. There is a list of possible lawful bases in the Irish GDPR. You can find out more about lawful bases on the DPC’S’ website.
Which lawful basis we rely on may affect your data protection rights which are in brief set out below. You can find out more about your data protection rights and the exemptions which may apply on the DPC’S website:
Your right of access - You have the right to ask us for copies of your personal information. You can request other information such as details about where we get personal information from and who we share personal information with. There are some exemptions which means you may not receive all the information you ask for. You can read more about this right here.
Your right to rectification - You have the right to ask us to correct or delete personal information you think is inaccurate or incomplete. You can read more about this right here.
Your right to erasure - You have the right to ask us to delete your personal information. You can read more about this right here.
Your right to restriction of processing - You have the right to ask us to limit how we can use your personal information. You can read more about this right here.
Your right to object to processing - You have the right to object to the processing of your personal data. You can read more about this right here.
Your right to data portability - You have the right to ask that we transfer the personal information you gave us to another organisation, or to you. You can read more about this right here.
Your right to withdraw consent – When we use consent as our lawful basis you have the right to withdraw your consent at any time. You can read more about this right here.
If you make a request, we must respond to you without undue delay and in any event within one month.
To make a data protection rights request, please contact us using the contact details at the top of this privacy notice.
Our lawful bases for the collection and use of your data
Our lawful bases for collecting or using personal information for research or archiving purposes are:
- Legitimate interests – we’re collecting or using your information because it benefits you, our organisation or someone else, without causing an undue risk of harm to anyone. All of your data protection rights may apply, except the right to portability. Our legitimate interests are:
the coloration and collection of current and past family information enables you and future generations to know who they are. This is a National family tree of an ethnic Irish minority who are now scattered to the four corners of the world now trying to find their ROOTS.
4. Where we get personal information from
Directly from you
Family members
Birth, marriage and death information from registration offices, cemetery tombstones, personal interviews, census records, newspaper insertions, magazines library’s
5. How long we keep information
50 years
6. How to complain
If you have any concerns about our use of your personal data, you can make a complaint to us using the contact details at the top of this privacy notice.
If you remain unhappy with how we’ve used your data after raising a complaint with us, you can also complain to the ICO.
The ICO’s address:
Information Commissioner’s Office
21 Fitzwilliam Square
Dublin 2 D02 RD28
Ireland
info@dataprotection.ie.