bsod
New member
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2022
- Messages
- 89
There are no contemporary sources from Egypt mentioning any of the events of Exodus-Deuteronomy, nor are there any archeological finds to validate the events.
There is also the Khazar theory which purports that Ashkenazi Jews (which compromises of the vast majority of Jews today) descend of Khazars, a multi-ethnic conglomerate of Turkic speaking people. The genetic evidence seems to point to this. I don't see any reason for Jews to have fabricated this theory, as they feel very attacked by it, Israeli scholars constantly attempt to debunk it.
There is also no evidence of Jewish people ever speaking the Hebrew language, they only spoke the local languages of whatever countries they resided in. The use of Hebrew was limited purely as a learned liturgical language. The first native Hebrew speakers only came about around 1900 when Jews began colonizing Palestine. I personally believe that the Hebrew language was artificially constructed in the middle ages for Kabbalah as a secret occult language.
So were Jews ever in the middle east? I think not.
There is also the Khazar theory which purports that Ashkenazi Jews (which compromises of the vast majority of Jews today) descend of Khazars, a multi-ethnic conglomerate of Turkic speaking people. The genetic evidence seems to point to this. I don't see any reason for Jews to have fabricated this theory, as they feel very attacked by it, Israeli scholars constantly attempt to debunk it.
There is also no evidence of Jewish people ever speaking the Hebrew language, they only spoke the local languages of whatever countries they resided in. The use of Hebrew was limited purely as a learned liturgical language. The first native Hebrew speakers only came about around 1900 when Jews began colonizing Palestine. I personally believe that the Hebrew language was artificially constructed in the middle ages for Kabbalah as a secret occult language.
So were Jews ever in the middle east? I think not.