Lost-Found Tribes of Israelites in the Americas: Male Circumcision, Hebrew terms, the Holy Name and Biblical Stories among Native American Tribes
An Arutz Sheva Israeli National News headline read, on May 31st, 2012, that “Researchers Find Native Americans with Ashkenazi Jewish Mutation.” Noting that this mutation turns up in numerous tribes in North, Central and South America, the researchers were confounded because they believed that these Native Americans “do not seem to have any traditions that would link them to Jews.” This article will demonstrate that they were wrong, and based their conclusions on a cursory assessment of modern Native American practices, rather than our earliest anthropological records.

It will therefore document numerous Hebraicisms in the earliest written observation by Europeans, of Native American religion and practices, demonstrating contact and significant influence of ancient Israelite tradition. Through documenting early observations of the Native Americans – male circumcision, the use of Hebrew terms, and the supreme Hebrew Holy Name for God, as well as the use of Biblical stories before Native conversions to Christianity had become widespread – this study will demonstrate the probability of contact and assimilation with Israelite tribesmen from the Assyrian Israelite Diaspora (720 BCE) during the Woodland period (roughly 1000 BCE to 1000 CE ) of North American pre-Columbian cultures of North America, to the point that the pre-existing cultures and that of the influx of Diaspora Israelites became intermingled to the point of synthesis.

This text will further consider this evidence in assessing the connection between early Melungeon Crypto-Jewish Sefardim and the Native tribes they intermarried with.
1111874930
Lost-Found Tribes of Israelites in the Americas: Male Circumcision, Hebrew terms, the Holy Name and Biblical Stories among Native American Tribes
An Arutz Sheva Israeli National News headline read, on May 31st, 2012, that “Researchers Find Native Americans with Ashkenazi Jewish Mutation.” Noting that this mutation turns up in numerous tribes in North, Central and South America, the researchers were confounded because they believed that these Native Americans “do not seem to have any traditions that would link them to Jews.” This article will demonstrate that they were wrong, and based their conclusions on a cursory assessment of modern Native American practices, rather than our earliest anthropological records.

It will therefore document numerous Hebraicisms in the earliest written observation by Europeans, of Native American religion and practices, demonstrating contact and significant influence of ancient Israelite tradition. Through documenting early observations of the Native Americans – male circumcision, the use of Hebrew terms, and the supreme Hebrew Holy Name for God, as well as the use of Biblical stories before Native conversions to Christianity had become widespread – this study will demonstrate the probability of contact and assimilation with Israelite tribesmen from the Assyrian Israelite Diaspora (720 BCE) during the Woodland period (roughly 1000 BCE to 1000 CE ) of North American pre-Columbian cultures of North America, to the point that the pre-existing cultures and that of the influx of Diaspora Israelites became intermingled to the point of synthesis.

This text will further consider this evidence in assessing the connection between early Melungeon Crypto-Jewish Sefardim and the Native tribes they intermarried with.
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Lost-Found Tribes of Israelites in the Americas: Male Circumcision, Hebrew terms, the Holy Name and Biblical Stories among Native American Tribes

Lost-Found Tribes of Israelites in the Americas: Male Circumcision, Hebrew terms, the Holy Name and Biblical Stories among Native American Tribes

by Mikhah Ben David
Lost-Found Tribes of Israelites in the Americas: Male Circumcision, Hebrew terms, the Holy Name and Biblical Stories among Native American Tribes

Lost-Found Tribes of Israelites in the Americas: Male Circumcision, Hebrew terms, the Holy Name and Biblical Stories among Native American Tribes

by Mikhah Ben David

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Overview

An Arutz Sheva Israeli National News headline read, on May 31st, 2012, that “Researchers Find Native Americans with Ashkenazi Jewish Mutation.” Noting that this mutation turns up in numerous tribes in North, Central and South America, the researchers were confounded because they believed that these Native Americans “do not seem to have any traditions that would link them to Jews.” This article will demonstrate that they were wrong, and based their conclusions on a cursory assessment of modern Native American practices, rather than our earliest anthropological records.

It will therefore document numerous Hebraicisms in the earliest written observation by Europeans, of Native American religion and practices, demonstrating contact and significant influence of ancient Israelite tradition. Through documenting early observations of the Native Americans – male circumcision, the use of Hebrew terms, and the supreme Hebrew Holy Name for God, as well as the use of Biblical stories before Native conversions to Christianity had become widespread – this study will demonstrate the probability of contact and assimilation with Israelite tribesmen from the Assyrian Israelite Diaspora (720 BCE) during the Woodland period (roughly 1000 BCE to 1000 CE ) of North American pre-Columbian cultures of North America, to the point that the pre-existing cultures and that of the influx of Diaspora Israelites became intermingled to the point of synthesis.

This text will further consider this evidence in assessing the connection between early Melungeon Crypto-Jewish Sefardim and the Native tribes they intermarried with.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940014647410
Publisher: New Dawn Publications
Publication date: 06/28/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 26 KB
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