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Showing posts with label Jews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jews. Show all posts

Monday, December 30, 2024

Jewish Responses to My Research

 


Dr Alice C. Linsley

I have been asked about the response of Jews to my research. While I have never been concerned about the reaction of anyone to my work, I attempt to be sensitive to the religious traditions of my many readers.

Generally, I have found a positive reaction from the Jews who have reached out to me. A Jewish woman who teaches women in her synagogue wrote:

Alice Linsley - I have used some of your work as background material for a small women's group in my synagogue as a part of a teaching Sukkot celebration these past few years. The material has just been part of my brief oral presentations - not given out textually about the women personalities in Torah and Tanach.
Sukkot commemorates the forty-year period during which the children of Israel (Jacob's clan) were wandering in the desert, living in temporary shelters. I have written about the wanderings from mountain to mountain and theorized that these mountains were sacred to various Hebrew clans who were kin to the Israelites.

Follow the Mountains: A Different View of the Exodus

After leaving Egypt, the clan of Jacob (Israel) journeyed by stages, making contact with Hebrew kinsmen at each stage. The first people to help them were their cousins the Midianites (descendants of Abraham by Keturah) in the region of Horeb, the Midianite sacred mountain (Deut. 29:1). 

Another people to help them were the Edomites related to Seir the Horite Hebrew chief named in Genesis 36. The Edomite sacred mountain was Paran (Deut. 33:2). 

Crossing through Edomite territory (where Aaron was buried), the Hebrews moved northeast into Moab. They visited with Lot’s descendants and worshipped on Mount Nebo (Deut. 32:49), where Moses died.

At each of these sacred sites, the reunion of kin was celebrated by a covenant that included animal sacrifice and a night of feasting. These covenants resembled the covenant made between Jacob and Laban at Mizpah (Gen. 31:44-54).

The early Hebrew ruler-priests (4000-2000 BC) established themselves at high places where they built temples, palaces, garrisons, etc. These places were supported by permanent water sources. That is why the earliest known archaeological sites of the Ancient Near East are on high ground near major rivers such as the Tigris, the Euphrates, the Jordan, and the Nile.

Some of the high places served by Hebrew royal priests were dedicated to the sun, the symbol of the High God. (See BIBLICAL ANTHROPOLOGY: Hebrew Ruler-Priests at the Ancient Sun Cities.)


Response to my distinction between the historical realities revealed through kinship analysis and Midrash.

I also have had a positive response to my exposition of the common themes of Midrash, the rabbinic method of interpreting events that took place thousands of years before Judaism emerged. Midrash has influenced the shape of the Jewish ethnic narrative. Some people, including this writer, claim that the influence of the rabbis on Jewish identity has been greater than the influence of the Hebrew Scriptures. 

Knowledge of the social structure of the Hebrew ruler-priest caste explains why many things happened the way they did. However, the midrashim in the Old Testament often give a different explanation for events that took place before Judaism.

Midrash is characterized by some narrative devices such as famines that drive the Hebrew people into other lands. Famines in Caanan are a device to explain why Abraham went to Egypt and why Noami and her family went to Moab. The rabbis are anxious to disguise the fact that there were Hebrew living in Egypt and in Moab. The earliest known Hebrew clans lived in the Nile Valley, and the Moabites and Hebrew share a common ancestor in Terah, Abraham’s father.




However, the Book of Genesis makes it clear that the early Hebrew had dispersed into many regions long before the time of Abraham. Their dispersal was driven by features of their social structure such as endogamy and the sending away of non-ascendant sons.

Another device of Midrash is jealousy among brothers. Though the Genesis story does not explain why Cain killed Abel, midrash supplies the explanation that he was jealous. Likewise, Joseph’s treatment by his brothers is explained as an act motivated by jealousy.

Midrash employs the practice of slavery to explain why Joseph is in Egypt, why Daniel is in Babylon, and why Mordecai and Esther are in Persia. In the sixth century B.C., many Judean noblemen were taken to Babylon, and Babylon was conquered by the Persians who took captives to Susa. These events have been historically verified. Midrash embroiders historical events to convey a theological message.

Midrash tends to point to God or supernatural intervention as an explanation for why things happened. An example is Joseph’s declaration to his brothers: “Now therefore be not grieved, nor angry with yourselves, that ye sold me hither: for God did send me before you to preserve life. For these two years hath the famine been in the land: and yet there are five years, in the which there shall neither be earing nor harvest. And God sent me before you to preserve you a posterity in the earth, and to save your lives by a great deliverance.” (Genesis 45:5-7)

Another example is Mordecai’s declaration to Esther: “Think not with thyself that thou shalt escape in the king's house, more than all the Jews. For if thou altogether holdest thy peace at this time, then shall enlargement and deliverance arise to the Jews from another place; but thou and thy father's house shall be destroyed: and who knoweth whether thou art come to the kingdom for such a time as this?” (Esther 4:12-14)


Jewish Reactions versus Evangelical Reactions

Over the 40 years that I have been investigating the social structure of the biblical Hebrew I have found that Jewish readers are more appreciative of my work than Evangelical Christians who espouse the profoundly errant doctrine of inerrancy.

It is best to read the biblical texts critically, but since God is truthful and He has superintended the Scriptures, they tell us truth. We should read them as if they were law briefs: there is a majority opinion and a minority opinion. Or to express this differently: close listening reveals dominant voices and subservient voices. When these are singing to the glory of God, the music is rapturous.




Thursday, January 10, 2013

Endogamy and the Melungeons


Alice C. Linsley

The term "Melungeon" refers to an Appalachian ethnic group with distinct physical, cultural, historical and genetic characteristics. These characteristics served to set Melungeons apart from other peoples dwelling in southeastern North America from the 1500's onward.

Today most Melungeons live in Kentucky. They practiced cousin marriage over an extended period of time (in some cases 400 years). Their marriage pattern is consistent with that of Sephardic Jews, Moors and Arabians. This makes sense since they are descendants of Semitic peoples, mostly Sephardic Jews and Moors banished from Spain. Many came to the United States via France and England. Having intermarried with Native Americans and converted mainly to the Primitive Baptist religion (some with serpent veneration), the Melugeons represent an isolated and mostly forgotten people. When remembered it is usually to crack a joke about them as backward people due to in-breeding (endogamy).

In his book The Genetic History of the Jewish People Harry Ostrer notes that the Sephardic Jews who were the focus of harsh treatment in Spain during the Inquisition, were more prone to marry outside their bloodlines whereas the Ashkenazim are relatively homogeneous despite the fact that they are spread throughout Europe and immigrated to the Americas. He reports that DNA studies confirm that there is a distinctive Jewish "race" but fails to mention that the Kohen Modal Haplotype is also found among Arabs of Horite blood.

Harry Ostrer, director of the human genetics program at the New York University School of Medicine, led one of the studies that compared the genetic makeup of Jewish populations from around the world with African populations. Ostrer found that modern Jewish populations have African ancestry. This confirms the Genesis 10 information that indicates Abraham's ancestors were Nilotes and Proto-Saharans.


Here is a review of Harry Ostrer's Legacy: A Genetic History of the Jewish People.
(Oxford University Press, 288 Pages, $24.95)

In his new book, “Legacy: A Genetic History of the Jewish People,” Harry Ostrer, a medical geneticist and professor at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, claims that Jews are different, and the differences are not just skin deep. Jews exhibit, he writes, a distinctive genetic signature. Considering that the Nazis tried to exterminate Jews based on their supposed racial distinctiveness, such a conclusion might be a cause for concern. But Ostrer sees it as central to Jewish identity.

“Who is a Jew?” has been a poignant question for Jews throughout our history. It evokes a complex tapestry of Jewish identity made up of different strains of religious beliefs, cultural practices and blood ties to ancient Palestine and modern Israel. But the question, with its echoes of genetic determinism, also has a dark side.

Geneticists have long been aware that certain diseases, from breast cancer to Tay-Sachs, disproportionately affect Jews. Ostrer, who is also director of genetic and genomic testing at Montefiore Medical Center, goes further, maintaining that Jews are a homogeneous group with all the scientific trappings of what we used to call a “race.”

Read it all here.


Related reading:  Eastern Kentucky LanguageThe Bible and the Question of RaceHebrew, Israelite or Jew?; Sub-Saharan DNA of Modern Jews; DNA Studies Confirm Mixed Ancestry of Jews; Abraham: Descendant of Both Shem and Ham


Monday, January 7, 2013

Hebrew, Israelite or Jew?


Merneptah Stele
Alice C. Linsley


A reader of Just Genesis recently asked this question:

"Is there a clear-cut chronology when the inhabitants of Canaan/Palestine stopped being called Israelites, when they stopped being called Hebrews and started to be called Jews?"

Rabbi Stephen F. Wise, former Chief Rabbi of the United States, answers this question in part. He wrote: "The return from Babylon and the introduction of the Babylonian Talmud mark the end of Hebrewism and the beginning of Judaism.”

It is not possible to put exact dates on when each of the terms - Hebrew, Israelite and Jew - was introduced. However, anthropological studies reveal that the oldest of these terms is Hebrew. The Hebrew were widely dispersed before Abraham's time (c.2100 B.C.).

The word Hebrew is the English equivalent of the Akkadian Abru, meaning priest. (Akkadian is the oldest known Semitic language.) Other variants include 'Apiru, Ha-biru and Ha-piru. The word refers to priests who served at the temples of the ancient Sun cities. The Sun temple was called O-piru, meaning "house of the Sun."  The Habiru were already widely dispersed in the 14th-13th centuries B.C. Their dispersion was driven by a marriage and ascendancy pattern in which some sons were sent away to established their own territories.

The term "Israelite" appears on the Merneptah Stele, dated to c. 1219 B.C. This stele set up by Pharaoh Merneptah is the earliest extra-biblical record of a people called Israel. The stele was discovered by Flinders Petrie in 1896 at Thebes, and is now housed in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.

The "people of Israel" refers to the clan of Jacob (Yacob) and their story takes shape under Moses, the Horite Hebrew ruler. Moses and his family had the same marriage and ascendancy pattern as Abraham the Hebrew and other Horite Hebrew figures such as Lamech the Elder (Genesis 4) and Elkanah, the father of the prophet Samuel .

Abraham's people were Horite Hebrew, that is, devotees of God the Father and God the Son. The son was called HR in ancient Egyptian (Horus in Greek)), meaning "the Most High One". Horite and Sethite Hebrew priests were widely dispersed in the service of high kings, the "mighty men of old" mentioned in Genesis 6 and 10. They were separate ritual groups (moieties) who maintained shrines along the Nile River as early as 2000 years before Abraham.

The oldest site of Horite Hebrew worship is Nekhen (Hierakonpolis) on the Nile (4000-3000 B.C.). Votive instruments at Nekhen were ten times larger than the mace heads and bowls found elsewhere, suggesting that this was a very prestigious shrine.  

Horite Hebrew priests built east-facing fire altars in the shape of a falcon. In Vedic tradition these are called uttaravedi. The falcon was the totem of Horus. These altars were erected in Pakistan and India from before 2000 B.C. The Shulba Sutras state that "he who desires heaven is to construct a fire-altar in the form of a falcon." Such altars have been discovered athe Harappan shrine cities of Kalibangan and Lothal. The Dravidian word Har-appa means "Hor is father."




The ethnonym "Israelite" comes after the time of Abraham's grandson Jacob/Yacob, and probably dates to a time no earlier than Joseph and his association with the Horite shrine at Heliopolis (biblical On).

Yacob came to be identified as Yisra'el. The word Yisra'el appears to be etymologically related to the word yashur, meaning “will look to,” and El, a very old reference to God. The dating must be between 1850 and 1200 B.C, as suggested by the Phoenician or early Semitic Y which represents the ruler of a territory or the head of a clan.

The rulers controlled the water ways and wells within their territories. The Y symbolized the crook/hook of the ruler, the tent peg of the ruler's dwelling, and the boat hook. In his book Egypt and the Mountains of the Moon, Frederick Wicker refers to the Y as a boat hook, as used in East Africa and Egypt, and notes that it is a symbol of royalty. Clearly, this letter represents a cluster of related ideas including:

the ruler himself
the ruler's authority
the ruler's territory
the ruler's clan or tribe
the ruler's resources, such as his flocks and water sources
the strangers/travelers who came under the ruler's protection

Travelers and caravans moved from settlement to settlement, or from water source to water source. That is to say that they went from Y to Y. Ancient water laws were generous to those who wa-ndered. Wells were neutral ground, but were fought over, as in the story of Moses driving away the intruders at the well of the ruler-priest (Exodus 2:16-19) It was common for the river, oasis, or well to have a shrine at which a priest presided. Moses' father-in-law was "priest of Midian."

The great chiefs of the early Hebrew were designated by the initial Y, a solar symbol indicating divine overshadowing or divine appointment. This is evident in the Hebrew forms. Consider the following:

Yared (meaning to descend)
Yishmael - Ishmael (Abraham's son by Hagar)
Yitzak - Issac (Abraham's son by Sarah)
Yaqtan - Joktan (Abraham's firstborn son by Keturah)
Yishbak - Yishbak (another son by Keturah; the name means sent-away)
Yacob - Jacob (who is later called Israel)
Yisra'el - Israel
Yeshua - Joshua/Jesus

With the renaming of Jacob, the scope of the biblical narrative is narrowed to his descendants. The other Hebrew clans are not mentioned. There is no mention of the offspring of Abraham's daughters who would have married their Hebrew half-brothers and patrilineal cousins, thus extending the narrative beyond Jacob's twelve clans.

The term Jew refers to the people who were taken as captives from Judah to Babylon. This is the beginning of Judaism. Rabbis admit that Judaism is not the faith of Abraham the Hebrew. Rabbi Stephen F. Wise, former Chief Rabbi of the United States, wrote: "The return from Babylon and the introduction of the Babylonian Talmud mark the end of Hebrewism and the beginning of Judaism.”

The term is applied only to people from Judah/Judea after 580-530 B.C, long after the time of Abraham and Jacob who lived during the time of the Middle Kingdom of Egypt (2160-1788 B.C.)


Related reading: The Hebrew Were a Caste, Horite and Sethite MoundsThe Substance of Abraham's Faith; The Ra-Horus-Hathor NarrativeThe Genesis "Begats" Speak of Archaic Rulers; Astronomy of the Vedic AltarsSent-Away Sons


Saturday, August 25, 2012

Circumcision Debated


Circumcision was practiced before the time of Abraham among the Nilo-Kushitic peoples. Both males and females were circumcised and the practice continues today in that same part of the world.

Circumcision is not unique to Jews. It is practiced among many of Abraham's Arab and Egyptian descendants as well. However, some European nations have taken action against it, considering it bodily mutilation, even "torture" of the infant. Dutch doctors no longer perform circumcisions. Circumcision wars are being waged in Australia. Last year San Francisco proposed a ban on circumcision.

Circumcision draws attention to the global conflict between ancient regard for the supernatural (metaphysical) and the modern materialist worldview.

The following is a report from BioEdge.

A row over circumcision in Germany has escalated after a formal complaint was lodged against a rabbi in the city of Hof. According to a doctor from the city of Giessen, "Religious freedom cannot be used as an excuse for carrying out violence against an under-age child". The dispute was ignited by a June 26 ruling by a Cologne court that circumcision of a child constituted "illegal bodily harm," even with parental consent.

Ever since the German government has been searching for a compromise which will satisfy the Jewish community and international critics, while honouring the court decision. The President of the Conference of European Rabbis, Pinchas Goldschmidt, has described the decision as "one of the gravest attacks on Jewish life in the post-Holocaust world".

Germany's national Ethics Council (Ethikrat) has recommended authorising circumcision if safeguards are in place. "There must be a green light for circumcision but under the conditions of a full explanation to the parents, the agreement of both parents, the treatment of pain and the professional execution of the circumcision," chairwoman Christiane Woopen said.

But the recommendation was made after a robust debate. A legal scholar, Reinhard Merkel, said that it was "bizarre" that religious communities could be allowed to define when and how a human body could be injured. If a child's right to bodily integrity had to be weighed against religious requirements, this was a "legal policy crisis". However, he squared the circle by invoking an "indebtedness" to Jews which called for a "special law". Constitutional law expert Wolfram Höfling, on the other hand, argued that parental rights were paramount. If they believed that the ritual was in the best interests of the child then this should be respected, especially since millions of circumcisions have occurred without complications.

The row has spread to Scandinavia as well. In neighbouring Denmark an article in the Politiken newspaper described circumcision as a ritual involving the torture of a baby. The Danish Parliament is gearing up for a debate on the issue. Since report by the Children's Ombudsman in 2003 described circumcision as a violation of children's rights, a ban has a lot of support. Finn Schwarz, president of the Jewish Congregation of Copenhagen, says that if circumcision is banned, Jews will have no choice but to pack their bags and leave.

For many Jews, this is a transcendental issue, despite the small but real possibility of harming a child. The deputy prime minister of Israel, Eli Yishai, wrote a letter to German Premier Angela Merkel in which he said: "Circumcision is one of the most important commandments for the Jewish people, and the first given to one of the fathers of our nation, Abraham, as a sign of his eternal treaty [with God]. Even in times of slavery and exile, Jews made sure to fulfill this commandment, and did so happily." German Jews should not have to choose between Judaism and their citizenship.




Sunday, February 27, 2011

Political Zionism Does Not Align With the Bible


Alice C. Linsley


The yellow shows lands in which Palestinians lived before 1917 (left)
 and their limited land holdings in 2012 (right)

All peoples have a yearning for a homeland because it defines their ethnic identity. Scots who came to North America named the places where they settled after their native land: Nova Scotia. Midlothia, Inverness, Kirkland, etc. It is natural for dispersed peoples to yearn for the homeland, be it a real or an imagined. This is especially true when the homeland has been perceived to have been lost. The earliest sentiments of yearning can be traced to the Babylonian exile when the people of Judah yearned for restoration. Yearning for a homeland is reinforced by experiences of separation and loss, be they real or imagined.

The modern state of Israel was settled mainly by Ashkenazi Jews whose ancestors settled in France, the Rhine Valley and Poland. They are descendants of non-Jewish mothers and therefore not ethnically Jews. In fact, studies reveal that Ashkenazi Jews are genetically closer to the old Welsh than to most Arab populations.

Genetic studies have revealed that many who self-identify as Jewish are descendants of non-Jewish mothers who presumably converted to Judaism. Jon Entine. "Ashkenazi Jewish Women Descended Mostly from Italian Converts, New Study Asserts." Genetic Literacy Project (October 8, 2013). Excerpts:
"[...] Professor Martin Richards, who heads the University of Huddersfield's Archaeogenetics Research Group (and who participated in the 2002 study), and colleagues sequenced 74 mitochondrial genomes and analyzed more than 3,500 mitochondrial genomes - far more data than the 2006 survey, which reviewed only a short length of the mitochondrial DNA, containing just 1,000 or so of its 16,600 DNA units, in all their subjects. [...] According to Nicholas Wade of the New York Times, Doron Behar, one of the key authors of the 2006 analysis, said he disagreed with the conclusions, but has provided no detailed critique as yet. Wade also talked to David Goldstein, who said he believed the estimate that 80 percent of Ashkenazi Jewry originated in Europe was too high considering the unpredictability of mitochondrial DNA data. [...]"

The principal justification of political Zionism is that God gave the Jews the land of Israel and therefore it should be returned to the Jews. Zionists attempt to validate the Jewish claim to the land by insisting that Jews have always been in Israel. This is expressed in Melvin Koller's book. He writes:
The Jews did not come to Israel from anywhere else at any time. They have been there from time immemorial. They became a coherent people there, discovered God there, built a kingdom there, created the Torah there, and composed much of the Talmud there. Attempts to evict them partly succeeded, but their presence there has always been significant. Wherever they were in exile they longed to go back there, and in every generation some did. Their presence there is permanent, and future attempts to evict them will incur a huge cost.

However, this justification does not find support in Scripture, history or science.  Zionism as a political and religious ideology represents the gradual building up of a belief that has little to do with the Bible or anthropological evidence. This is set forth very convincingly by Shlomo Sand in his book The Invention of the Jewish People.


Sand explains, "it was only the appearance of prenationalist Jewish historiography in the latter half of the nineteenth century that gave the Bible a leading role in the drama of the rise of the modern Jewish nation. The book was transferred from the shelf of theological tracts to the history section... Above all, the Bible became an ethnic marker, indicating a common origin for people of very different backgrounds..." (page 127).

Most important to the study of Biblical Anthropology is the Zionist insinuation that God gave the present land of Israel to Abraham. The data of Scripture makes it clear that Abraham's territory did not correspond to the present land of Israel. Abraham ruled in ancient Edom which includes parts of Israel and Jordan.

Abraham's territory extended between his two wives. Sarah resided in Hebron and Keturah resided in Beersheba. Both Hebron and Beersheba were in ancient Edom. Edom was ruled by the Horite Hebrew and many of those rulers are listed in Genesis 36. Abraham was a Horite Hebrew ruler, not a Jew. Further, the substance of Abraham's faith does not correspond to the substance of Judaism.

The Horite Hebrew were a caste of ruler-priests who were devotees of Ra, Horus and his mother Hathor. Hathor was the patroness of Horite metal workers. Her shrine was found at the metal working site of Timnah. The Horite metal workers of Edom used the same techniques as the Horite metal workers who lived in the Timnah Valley in the Wilderness of Paran. Esau the Elder's son Eliphaz married Seir's daughter who was named Timnah.

The Horite rulers of Edom are listed in Genesis 36. Edom was ruled by the Horite clans of Seir and Esau the Elder who married Adah. Esau the Elder was a contemporary of Seir the Horite.

Esau the Younger married Oholibamah. It is possible that Esau the Younger was Jacob's half-brother, rather than his twin. Their father was Isaac, but they would have had different mothers, as Horite Hebrew rulers had two wives.





Abraham's territory was entirely in the region of Edom. It extended between on a north-south axis between Hebron and Beersheba and on an east-west axis between Engedi and Gerar. This region was called Idumea by the Greeks which means "land of red people." Esau, Abraham's grandson, and David are described as having a distinctive red skin tone. It is a characteristic of the R1b rulers who were aggressive kingdom builders. Their point of origin is the Nile Valley during the African Wet Period.

An early population living in Wales and Cornwall were the Damoni, which means “red people.” The word Dam-oni is derived from two words found in the Bible: dam, a reference to red and blood, and oni/On, a reference to the great shrine city of Heliopolis, biblical On (Genesis 41:45). Joseph married the daughter of a priest of On. The Dam-oni may have come from Carnac (Karnac) in Brittany because the stone monoliths in Damnonia are like those in Carnac, though smaller. On the Nile, the ancient shrine at Karnak was built with huge stones by skillful craftsmen, the likely ancestors of these early inhabitants of Cornwall.


Hebron and Beersheba (where Keturah lived)
mark the northern and southern boundaries of ancient Idumea.
Abraham's territory extended between the settlements of his two wives
and was entirely in the region of Edom/Idumea.


Horite priests were attached to the rulers of many territories in the ancient world. Some are associated in ancient Egyptian records with the Shasu on Nubia and Edom. Lists of place names in Nubian temples of Soleb and Amara West record six toponyms located in “the land of Shasu.” A monument of Ramesses II claims that he “has plundered the Shasu-land, captured the mountain of Seir”in Edom; a 19th Dynasty letter mentions “the Shasu-tribes of Edom” and Ramesses III declares that he has “destroyed the Seirites among the tribes of the Shasu.” Clearly, the Egyptians regarded the Shasu as a prominent part of the Edomite population which is described in Genesis 36.

The claim that God gave Abraham the land of Israel is not supported by the biblical evidence. This ideological claim is rooted less in the Bible than in what the rabbis have written and in the political realities facing Palestinians and Israelis today.

Y-chromosome studies have shown that 2/3 of Palestinians and 2/3 of Jews share 3 male ancestors who lived about 8000 years ago. These are the descendants of Abraham's Proto-Saharan ancestors, some of whom who are listed in the Genesis King Lists. Anthropologists have learned a great deal about the kingdom-building activities of these archaic rulers.


Myth and Reality

Zionism is well entrenched in American academia. Shaye Cohen at Harvard admits that the conception of Abraham as the first Jew does not represent historical reality, yet he seeks to perpetuate this "myth" instead of admit that Abraham was a Horite ruler. Cohen admits that his portrayal of Abraham as the father of the Jews lacks historical support. He says, "Historically speaking, of course, this doesn't make much sense. It's hard to talk about Jews living around the year 1800 B.C.E. or anytime near that." Cohen admits that this view of Abraham as the first Jew is of a "mythic kind". He states, "So in a mythic kind of way we can say that Abraham recognizes God and that Abraham launches the process—biological and social and cultural—that will culminate in the people of Israel, who in turn will become Jews and the purveyors of Judaism." In this statement, Cohen gets one thing right: Abraham recognized God.  So did his Proto-Saharan, cattle-herding ancestors. Some of Abraham's descendants by his nine sons can be identified as Jews, others as Arabs, and many others are of a mixed genetic heritage. Is Cohen attempting to sell the myth of Jewish purity?

When asked in this NOVA interview whether Abraham was the founder of monotheism, Dr.Cohen states, "Ancient Jewish storytellers thought the answer was yes, and following them Christian storytellers thought the same. However, reading historically, we realize monotheism is a very difficult and elusive concept to define. Again, it's far too simple to say that Abraham discovers monotheism."

Melvin Konner teaches in the anthropology, human biology, and Jewish studies programs at Emory. In his book Unsettled: An Anthropology of the Jews (Penguin 2004), he claims:

The great Jewish gifts to the world - monotheism, the Ten Commandments, resistance against tyranny - were born in weakness in a group of tribes, then a kingdom, buffeted between great empires; nurtured in a series of bitter exiles; and annealed in genocide. This produced allegiance to a single all-powerful God who could protect them, a code of laws that maintained decency in the face of perversions of power, and a searing sense of injustice.

It simply is not true that the Jews gave us monotheism. Monotheism existed in ancient Kush long before the Jews were identifiable as a distinct people. Archaeological and anthropological evidence indicates that the Horite priests as early as 3000 B.C. believed in a single supreme creator.

The Ten Commandments is indeed a gift from Judaism to the world, though it has antecedents in the oldest known moral code, the Law of Tehut.


Abraham ruled in Edom

Abraham's territory was in the region of Edom. Abraham was kin to the Horite rulers of Edom who are named in Genesis 36. This was the territory that Isaac received as Abraham's proper heir and in Abraham's time the Horites controlled a larger area than that identified as Edom 800 BC.


Edom about 800 BC.
 
The Bible and anthropological evidence indicate that Abraham's Horite ancestors originated in the Nile Valley. Nimrod, the son of Kush (Gen. 10), established his kingdom into the Tigris-Euphrates Valley. Nahor the Elder, his son Terah, and Abraham were descendants of Nimrod. They were ethnically Kushites and they belonged to the Horite caste of ruler-priests. The Horites controlled Edom, Southern Judah, and a large part of Arabia. Among them are people who would be identified today as Arabs. Josephus reported that the descendants of Abraham by Keturah were called "Horites" and, quoting an ancient historian, speaks of them as "conquerors of Egypt and founders of the Assyrian Empire."

The Jews claim to be descendants of Abraham through Isaac and Jacob, yet from the beginning the Habiru (Hebrew) lines intermarried, so that Jews, many Arabs, some Egyptians and Edomites share a common gene pool. Analysis of the Genesis king lists reveals that the lines of Cain and Seth intermarried, the lines of Ham and Shem intermarried and the lines of Nahor and Abraham intermarried. There was also intermarriage between these lines and the Horite rulers named in Genesis 36.

Abraham's ancestors came from the Nile Valley. Genesis 10 tells us that Nimrod was a Kushite kingdom builder. He was a sent-away son whose territory extended from Haran and Ur. According to Genesis 12, Abraham's father ruled this territory, and after his death, it was ruled by his son Nahor, Abraham's older brother. Then Abraham became a sent-away son to whom God promised a territory of his own. When it comes to yearning for a homeland, Jews might as well yearn for a homeland along the Nile. Linguistic, genetic, and anthropological evidence indicates that is their point of origin

DNA studies confirm the migration of the Nilotic Kushites out of Africa before Abraham's time. The Kushite rulers spread across a vast area of the ancient Afro-Asiatic Dominion, but the identification of a people called "Jews" came much later, after the Babylonia captivity. In Babylon the people of Judah experienced great suffering, far greater than that endured by their ancestors in Egypt. Zionism emerges out of their experience of exile and suffering. It is an expression of a people's determination to possess and control a land that they believe they lost.

Unfortunately, political Zionism it is bolstered by Bible passages that were never intended to exclude the descendants of Abraham through all of his nine sons. These are sons to whom Abraham gave gifts. They ruled over territories as kings and viziers and all married and ascended according to the pattern of their Nilo-Saharan ancestors.

The ethnic landscape of Palestine, Judah and Edom is complex historically. Peoples mixed more than is granted by the Jewish myth of racial purity. Anthropologically, some Jews and some Arabs have Horite blood. The true Horites did not mix with people outside their caste. The Horite ruler-priest lines intermarried.

Genetics tells the story rather well. J1 and T1 have a wide dispersion: Anatolia, Yemen, north-east Africa, Saudi Arabia, Madagascar, the Fertile Crescent, and the Caucasus. These are the many places to which the archaic rulers dispersed, taking with them their royal priests. ZS227 is a subclade of J1. ZS227 includes the Kohen haplotype found among both Jews and Arabs. The Kohen modal haplotype (CMH) is the signature haplotype of the paternally inherited Jewish priesthood (Thomas et al. 1998). J1-ZS227 is one of the most common subclades among Ashkenazi people. So there is no doubt about the dominant priest lineage of the Ashkenazi, but their maternal lineage is not "Jewish" and therefore, by the accepted standard, they are not Jewish. However, they are descendants of the Horites.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Challenge to Shaye Cohen's Portrayal of Abraham


Professor Shaye Cohen of Harvard admits that the conception of Abraham as the first Jew does not represent historical reality, yet he seeks to perpetuate this "myth" instead of admit that the Horim were Horites.


Alice C. Linsley


Shaye Cohen is the Littauer Professor of Hebrew Literature and Philosophy in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations of Harvard. He is the author of The Beginnings of Jewishness.  In this essay, I will challenge Dr. Cohen's portrayal of Abraham as the archetypical Jew and perpetuates a common myth about Abraham.

When asked in this NOVA interview if Abraham was the first Jew, Dr. Cohen responded, "The biblical narrative gets going with Abraham in Genesis chapter 12. Abraham in turn Isaac, in turn Jacob, in turn Joseph and the twelve tribes, this brings us directly to the people of Israel and the covenant at Sinai. So Abraham is thought of as the first Jew, the archetype."

Region of Eden
Actually the biblical narrative begins with Genesis 1 where we are told that God creates by His generative Word, which John's Prologue identifies as the pre-incarnate second Person of the Trinity.  It moves very quickly to the first biblical promise in Genesis 3:15, the Edenic Promise received by Abraham's ancestors who were rulers in the well-watered region of Eden. This promise is the origin of the Messanic expectation among Abraham's people, who were not Jews, but Horites.

The Horites were a caste of ruler-priests whose origin was the Nile region of Sudan. They were devotees of Horus, who was called "son of Ra" as Horus' mother Hathor-Meri was said to be impregnated by the overshadowing of the Sun.

Horus is the celestial archetype whereby some of Abraham's Jewish descendants came to recognize Jesus as Messiah. Horus' death was mourned and his resurrection celebrated in a five-day festival observed by the Kushites and Egyptians. The first three days were marked by solemnity (as Plutarch noted in Isis and Osiris, 69). The last two days were a time of feasting and rejoicing. Horus is said to have died on the 17th of Athyr. His death was commemorated by the planting of wheat. On the third day, the 19th of Athyr, there was a celebration of Horus’ rising to life. Speaking of his passion, Jesus refers to this when he described his death and resurrection as a grain of wheat falling into the earth and rising to life again (John 12:24).

The double crown of the Israelite high priest was essentially the double crown of Horus worn by the rulers of the Nile Valley. The mitznefet was the white turban of the Upper Nile and the tzitz was the circlet worn around the turban, like the red circlet of the Lower Nile. Narmer (Menes) was the first recorded to wear the double crown. He was the founder of the First Dynasty around 3100 B.C.  Abraham was closely related to the rulers of Egypt. The Babylonian Talmud indicates that his maternal grandfather was a priest of Karnak in Egypt.

Abraham's mother is not mentioned in the Bible, but when we explore her identity we find that she was a high-ranking woman whose father, Karnevo, was associated with the Horus temple at Karnak. In the Karnak birth chapel we find a rendering of the miraculous birth of pharaoh Amenhotep III as the embodiment of Horus. This has led some to believe that Christianity is a conspiracy based on the Horus myth.  However, Amenhotep III died and did not rise from the grave.

While Genesis does indeed trace a direct line from Abraham to Isaac and to Jacob, it also traces the Horite lines of Esau and the Joktanite lines descending from Abraham and his patrilineal cousin-wife Keturah. It is evident also from analysis of the kinship pattern of Abraham's people that Isaac had two wives, one being his half-sister. So the direct line of which Cohen speaks always breaks into two lines with two first-born sons, a pattern which Jews choose to overlook. Given that these ruler-priests intermarried, the Israelites were a mixed people, like their Arab (Ar-ab) brethren. The lines of Kain and Seth intermarried, as did the lines of Ham and Shem, and the lines of Abraham and Nahor.

It is impossible to speak of only one direct line from Abraham to the Israelites because Abraham had nine sons and their descendants intermarried. The genealogical data strongly suggests that Abraham's first-born son was Joktan, the forefather of the Joktanite tribes of Arabia. By Cohen's reasoning, Abraham could as easily be described the first Arab, since most Arabs are descended from him through Joktan.

Abraham's descendants by Ishmael are Egyptians, since Ishmael's mother and wife were Egyptians.

It isn't possible to generalize the kinship pattern of Abraham's people to all Afro-Asiatics or to all the peoples among whom the Horites lived. The Horite ruler-priest marriage and ascendency pattern is distinctive and apparently unique to this caste. We are able to trace Abraham's descendents through the cousin-bride's naming prerogative. These are the ancestors of Joseph and Mary, both of priestly lines. This unique pattern of intermarriage appears to end with Jesus, who was recognized by many Jews of his day as the promised Son who came to save sinners and to restore Paradise. This has been verified by DNA studies which indicate that the unique pattern of intermarriage and ascendency stopped about 2000 years ago.


Cohen Admits to Myth-Building

Cohen admits that his portrayal of Abraham as the father of the Jews lacks historical support. He says, "Historically speaking, of course, this doesn't make much sense. It's hard to talk about Jews living around the year 1800 B.C.E. or anytime near that." This is true. We can speak of Jews only after about 580 B.C.E., when they returned to Judah from Babylonian captivity. However, we can trace expectation of the fulfillment of the Edenic Promise back to about 4000 B.C. which indicates that Christianity is an organic rather than a synthetic religion.  In other words, the Jews didn't invent Messianic expectation and Jesus didn't found Christianity. He fulfilled it.

Cohen's understanding of Abraham as the founder of Judaism is a post-exilic myth and doesn't align with the evidence.  He says, "We don't have any of the institutions, beliefs, social structures in place that will later characterize Jews and Jewishness." This is verifiably false. The hereditary priesthood, blood sacrifice, circumcision, sacred law and the office of the moreh/prophet existed in Abraham's time and before. Abraham consulted a prophet (moreh) at Mamre (Genesis 12: 6-8), between Bethel on the west and Ai on the east. The oak was associated with masculine anatomy and masculine virtues. Likewise, Deborah judged from her palm tree between Bethel to the north and Ramah to the south. Note the association of the female with north-south and the male with east-west, signaling a sacred mystery. The nut of the date palm (tamar) was associated with feminine anatomy and feminine virtues.

Cohen admits that this view of Abraham as the first Jew is of a "mythic kind".  He states, "So in a mythic kind of way we can say that Abraham recognizes God and that Abraham launches the process—biological and social and cultural—that will culminate in the people of Israel, who in turn will become Jews and the purveyors of Judaism." In this statement, Cohen gets one thing right:  Abraham recognized God. The rest is nonsense!  Some of Abraham's descendants by his nine sons became Jews, others became Arabs, and many others are of a mixed racial and religious heritage. Cohen is attempting to sell the myth of Jewish purity.

Cohen notes that "the rabbis of old imagined that Abraham observed the whole Torah, that Abraham observed all the commandments: He observed the Sabbath, he observed the festivals, he observed the laws of culture and food. He observed everything, not just circumcision, which is attributed to him explicitly in Genesis, but everything else as well. Because how can you imagine our forefather Abraham, the founder of Judaism, not observing the Jewish rules, not observing the Jewish laws? This is a wonderful anachronism, a charming conceit. But historically speaking, how could it be?"

The Levitical laws have precedent in older purity laws of the Nile Valley that pertained mainly to ruler-priests and their families for whom purity was especially important. Jews do come from these people which is why Jews call their ancestors and parents "horim." Abraham would have observed these laws. He would have been circumcised, ritually washed, sacrified lambs, shaved his head and performed atonement for blood guilt. On this last point, Genesis tells us that Abraham met with the ruler-priest Melchizedek after the battle of the kings. Doubtless this meeting involved priestly intercession for the relief of blood guilt.

Abraham's faith came not as special revelation, but as a tradition received from his forefathers. The distinctive traits of this tradition align remarkable well with the key features of catholic faith and practice:

  • All-male ruler-priests
  • Blood sacrifice at altars
  • Expectation of the appearing of God
  • "As in heaven, so on earth" - interpreted by prophets according to the celestial pattern
  • Belief in an eternal and undivided Kingdom
When the NOVA interviewer asked if Abraham discovered monotheism, Cohen replied that "The texts in Genesis simply have Abraham talking to God and God talking to Abraham, that's it. Later Jews could not imagine such events without explaining more fully how it was that Abraham came to recognize God and why it was that God chose Abraham."

This is true and the speculations of the rabbis now carries more weight among Jews than the canonical texts. It is from the Talmudic writings that Cohen draws this story: "

"And one of the most famous of these stories recounts how Abraham, the philosopher, sits and contemplates the natural order and realizes that there must be a first cause, that everything has a purpose. And behind the world that we can perceive, there must be some force that we cannot perceive but whose existence we can infer. That's how Abraham came to believe in God. And he went home to his father, Terah, who in the story is an idol maker, and Abraham then smashed all of his father's idols. And numerous Jewish children are convinced to this day that the story is found in the book of Genesis and are always shocked and amazed to discover that it isn't."

Their dismay is understandable. They thought that the rabbis were teaching them from the Hebrew Bible when in fact they were giving instruction from the Talmud. The Talmud itself encourages readers to place it above the authority of the Old Testament. We read this explicit instruction: “My son, be more careful in the observance of the words of the Scribes than in the words of the Torah." (Talmud Erubin 21b)

The NOVA interviewer raised this question: "So is Abraham the founder of monotheism?" Here is Cohen's response: "Ancient Jewish storytellers thought the answer was yes, and following them Christian storytellers thought the same. However, reading historically, we realize monotheism is a very difficult and elusive concept to define. Again, it's far too simple to say that Abraham discovers monotheism."

Indeed "too simple" and entirely misleading.  The truth is that the Horites were henotheists. They believed in a single supreme deity who was the creator and king of the universe. This deity was served by lesser assisting powers (spirits, angels, baals) who are in no way equal to their creator.

The NOVA interviewer ends by asking this:  "Does the Abraham account in Genesis have a central message, a central purpose?"

According to Cohen, "It teaches sacred values, sacred ideas—how to relate to God, to have faith in God. It's also simply a story about our founders. We humans are always curious to know about where we come from. All cultures have stories about their founders or great figures of the past. So here, too, we have stories about our great founder figure, Abraham, who sets the process going that makes us who we are, we meaning the people of Israel, the covenantal people."

Abraham stands as the archetypical Horite ruler-priest who lived in expectation of the birth of a son who would pass through death to life, from weakness to triumph. His faith is the central message.  St. Paul says, "For the promise to Abraham and his offspring that He would be heir of the world did not come through the law but through the righteousness of faith." (Rom. 4:13)

Abraham's faith is exemplified in the binding of Isaac.  As they ascended Mount Moriah, Isaac asked Abraham "where is the lamb" for the sacrifice. Abraham replied that God would provide the lamb, but God instead provided a ram. The ram signaled to Abraham that his offering had been accepted, because the lamb had become the ram. Abraham appears to have believed Isaac to be the Seed of the Woman (Gen. 3:15), but Isaac was spared because God would supply his own Lamb, Jesus Christ, who passed from weakness (kenosis) to fullness of power (resurrection). He is the Ruler-Designate to whom the Father will deliver the eternal kingdom. He is the fulfillment of the Eden Promise.

Abraham likely believed that Isaac was the foretold promised son since many of the circumstances surrounding Isaac align with the ancient Horus myth. Consider the following correspondences:

Isaac was born miraculously (Gen. 21:5) as was Horus, who was said to have been born of a virgin. Issac was not born of a virgin, but Jesus was.

God named Isaac as the son by whom Abraham's Seed would be called (Gen. 21:12). His brother Ishmael was banished. Horus was exalted after being abused by his brother who was banished.

Isaac was sacrificed by the father (by faith) and restored to life (Gen. 22:2-9), since to Abraham he was already given up (holocaust). Horus was restored to life on the third day. This is why many ancient Egyptian funerary amulets were made in the shape of the Eye of Horus.

Isaac received the kingdom from his father (Gen. 25:25) just as Horus/Osirus received a kingdom from his father Ra. Jesus receives the kingdom from the Father. In the Horite myth, Horus/Osiris and Ra are frequently interchangeable - "I and my Father are one", as Jesus explained (John 10:30). They are also all-seeing, even when their eyes are dimmed by blood.

Isaac had two wives who lived in separate settlements with separate flocks. Together these constituted his kingdom. There were practical reasons for this practice. In the event of attack, Isaac's line was more likely to survive if divided into two camps. This fear motivated Jacob to divide his people into two groups when returning to Canaan (Gen. 32). Likewise, Horus is said to have two land holdings as evidenced by one of his titles Har-pa-Neb-Taui, which means "Horus of the two lands."

The association of sheep with the Son of God is found in the Old and New Testaments. Horite priests kept herds from which they took the best to offer as sacrifices. Jesus comes from a long line of shepherds of the priestly lines, on Joseph's side and Mary's side. Keeping sheep was not their only occupation, however. Some were metal workers, others were carpenters, but all were skilled in various enterprises. The rulers of Egypt kept flocks and acknowledged that Jacob's people were especially skilled shepherds. This is why Pharaoh asked Joseph to put the best of shepherd of Jacob's clan in charge of the royal flocks (Gen. 47:6).

Jesus, the Good Shepherd, speaks of having other sheep in another fold (John 10:16). Often the two folds are cast as dispensations: one consisting of those who lived in expectation of the Son of God (Abraham's people) and the other being the witnesses of His resurrection (the Church). Together these comprise the Kingdom of God.

The ruler-priests among Abraham's people were shepherds. The signs of their authority were the shepherd's crook and the flail. These emblems of Pharonic authority have been found in pre-dynastic wall paintings. Hierakonpolis is the site of the most ancient temple and city in Egypt (circa 4000 B.C.). Priests placed invocations to Horus at the fort-summit as the first rays of the sun came over the eastern horizon. Of particular interest is the tomb painting of two men carrying crooks with objects that look like flails, the signs of the rulers of ancient Egypt.

In God's economy, which always gets the order of things right, the shepherds of Bethlehem, a Horite settlement (Hor/Hur) according to I Chronicles 4:4, were the first to receive the news of the birth of the Son of God.

Jesus is spoken of as the Lamb of God. In the story of the binding of Isaac, a ram is sacrificed in place of Isaac. The ram-headed deity, based on the earliest species - Ovis longipes palaeoagytiaca - was known throughout ancient Egypt, especially at Elephantine. So the ram in the story speaks of God's self-sacrifice and would have been confirmation for Abraham that his offering (though not realized) was accepted.

It appears that Abraham believed that Isaac would be raised to life after the sacrifice. The ram  was an ancient Horite symbol of God's rising (from east to west).  Abraham received confirmation that his son was indeed an acceptable offering to God, though Isaac was not the "Son of God" who would fulfill the promise made to Abraham's ancestors in Eden (Gen. 3:15).

Dr. Cohen speaks a good deal of "myth" yet he misses the fact that the core myth of Abraham's Horite people is essentially the core myth of Christianity.  Christianity emerges naturally out of the faith of Abraham's Horite people. This is why Jesus and His Apostles called the religious leaders in Jerusalem hypocrites. They claimed a special status as sons of Abraham but they rejected the faith of Abraham.

Fyodor Dostoevsky was right in declaring: “The most pressing question on the problem of faith is whether a man as a civilized being can believe in the divinity of the Son of God, Jesus Christ, for therein rests the whole of our faith.”


Related reading:  Messianic Jews and the Antecedents of Judaism; Jacob Leaves Beersheba; Mary's Ruler-Priest Lineage; Samuel's Horite Family; Moses' Horite Family; The Horite Ancestry of Jesus ChristThe Afro-Asiatic DominionWhat Language Did Abraham Speak?; Abraham's Faith Central to Genesis; Busting Myths About Abraham

 

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Was Abraham the First Jew?


The answer to that question is NO. Abraham was not a Jew and he did not speak Hebrew. He was a Hebrew or Habiru/'Apiru. The Habiru were an ancient caste of ruler-priests who served at the Sun temples of the archaic world long before the time of Abraham.

It is time that the narrative of Abraham as the first Jew go away.  It is entirely false.

Abraham is a pivotal figure of biblical history. He is the ancestor of many peoples and he is a descendant of Nilo-Saharan peoples who dispersed across the ancient world. His ancestors were known by various names: Habiru (Hebrew); Horim (Horite); Shasu of Yahweh, Anu or Hanu (Ainu), and the Tera-neter (priest of God). Tera-neter refers to a ruler-priest of the Anu, a pre-dynastic people of the Upper Nile. Abraham’s father has the title Tera, which means priest. The Ainu spread abroad, taking their religious beliefs and practices with them. They migrated to Northern Japan and into Eastern Canada. In the Japanese language "tera" means priest.

Dr. Shaye Cohen

Here is a NOVA interview with Dr. Shaye Cohen in which he presents the Jewish myth of Abraham.

Q: Was Abraham the first Jew?

Shaye Cohen: The biblical narrative gets going with Abraham in Genesis chapter 12. Abraham in turn Isaac, in turn Jacob, in turn Joseph and the twelve tribes, this brings us directly to the people of Israel and the covenant at Sinai. So Abraham is thought of as the first Jew, the archetype.

Historically speaking, of course, this doesn't make much sense. It's hard to talk about Jews living around the year 1800 B.C.E. or anytime near that. We don't have any of the institutions, beliefs, social structures in place that will later characterize Jews and Jewishness. So in a mythic kind of way we can say that Abraham recognizes God and that Abraham launches the process—biological and social and cultural—that will culminate in the people of Israel, who in turn will become Jews and the purveyors of Judaism. But to call Abraham Jewish simplifies things very dramatically.


Q: In terms of things that characterize being Jewish today, where does Abraham stand?

Cohen: In modern terms, the Jewishness of Abraham fundamentally consists of belief. He communicates with God, and God communicates with him. Now, the rabbis of old imagined that Abraham observed the whole Torah, that Abraham observed all the commandments: He observed the Sabbath, he observed the festivals, he observed the laws of culture and food. He observed everything, not just circumcision, which is attributed to him explicitly in Genesis, but everything else as well. Because how can you imagine our forefather Abraham, the founder of Judaism, not observing the Jewish rules, not observing the Jewish laws? This is a wonderful anachronism, a charming conceit. But historically speaking, how could it be?


Q: Does Abraham discover monotheism?

Cohen: Is Abraham the founder of monotheism? The texts in Genesis simply have Abraham talking to God and God talking to Abraham, that's it. Later Jews could not imagine such events without explaining more fully how it was that Abraham came to recognize God and why it was that God chose Abraham. And one of the most famous of these stories recounts how Abraham, the philosopher, sits and contemplates the natural order and realizes that there must be a first cause, that everything has a purpose. And behind the world that we can perceive, there must be some force that we cannot perceive but whose existence we can infer. That's how Abraham came to believe in God. And he went home to his father, Terah, who in the story is an idol maker, and Abraham then smashed all of his father's idols. And numerous Jewish children are convinced to this day that the story is found in the book of Genesis and are always shocked and amazed to discover that it isn't.

So is Abraham the founder of monotheism? Ancient Jewish storytellers thought the answer was yes, and following them Christian storytellers thought the same. However, reading historically, we realize monotheism is a very difficult and elusive concept to define. Again, it's far too simple to say that Abraham discovers monotheism.

Q: Does the Abraham account in Genesis have a central message, a central purpose?

Cohen: It teaches sacred values, sacred ideas—how to relate to God, to have faith in God. It's also simply a story about our founders. We humans are always curious to know about where we come from. All cultures have stories about their founders or great figures of the past. So here, too, we have stories about our great founder figure, Abraham, who sets the process going that makes us who we are, we meaning the people of Israel, the covenantal people.

From here.


Abraham and his ancestors were ethnically Kushite and belonged to the royal priest caste known as Horites. The Horites are also known in ancient texts as Habiru (Hebrew) and the Shashu of YHWY. The were rulers of the ancient world with a distinctive marriage and ascendancy pattern.


Related reading: Archaic Rulers, Ascendancy and the Foreshadowing of ChristWho Was Abraham?Jacob Leaves Beersheba; Busting Myths About Abraham; Challenge to Shaye Cohen's Portrayal of Abraham; Abraham and Job: Horite Rulers; Moses' Horite Family; Was Abraham Jewish?