Impostors in a foreign land
By JAMAL
KANJ ,
Thursday,
February 21, 2013
The
Invention of the Jewish People was a book written by Shlomo Sand, an Israeli
professor of history at the University of Tel Aviv. The author
wasn't probing a belief system, but Zionist fabrications of a spurious common
lineage for people of the Jewish faith.
Sand argues
the implausibility of Jews having a common ethnic identity as Judaism was
originally, like Christianity and later Islam, a "proselytising
religion".
The notion
of Judaism as a "race", rather than a religion of various races, is
incompatible.
The results
of a recently published study by Israeli-American geneticist Dr Eran Israeli
Elhaik at John Hopkins University have scientifically and genetically validated
Sand's research.
The idea of
a "nation race" was progressively developed and reinforced over
centuries of segregated Jewish communities in Europe.
With the
rise of German nationalism in the 19th century, Jewish historian Heinrich
Graetz "retrospectively" crafted a discrete identity for the
ghettoised people - mapping their origin to an old kingdom and wandering
exiles.
The exile
tales transpired from a Christian myth of "divine punishment" imposed
on Jews for rejecting the new religion.
The parable
was likely to have originated from the Old Testament story of Jews wandering
the desert for disobeying God and worshipping the golden calf.
Christians
propagated the concept of exile to lure "disobeying" Jews to a new
religion, becoming their saviour from another eternal banishment.
Modern
political Zionism, which otherwise rejects the Christian Bible, adopted the
untested story of "Jewish exile" to establish mythical linkage
between European Jews and the Middle East.
But Jewish
history tells us that Romans did not expel the original Jews from Palestine
when they crushed the Simon bar Kokhba revolt in 136 AD, instead barring them
only from city of Jerusalem - and even then they were allowed to visit it
during Tisha B'Bv, the annual fast day on the ninth day of the month of Av in
the Hebrew calendar.
Followers of
the first monotheistic religion continued to have a presence in Palestine
hundreds of years after the waning of the Roman empire.
The last
recorded history of an autonomous Jewish entity was under the tutelage of the
Persian empire in 614 AD, before it was dismantled by Byzantine forces in 625
AD.
A little
over 10 years later Palestine was conquered by the Muslims and became part of
the new Arab and Muslim nation.
Under
Christianity and during the Roman empire, a large number of native Jews
converted to Christianity and - with the advent of Islam - most adopted the new
religion and assimilated under the new power.
In addition
to the descendants of the Canaanites, the original denizens before patriarch
Abraham's arrival from Mesopotamia, Sand concludes that today's Muslim and
Christian Palestinians are actually the true progenies of the original Jews.
So if there
was no exile, where did European Jews come from?
Sand
suggested that most of today's Jews did not originate from the Middle East.
He argues
that the Ashkenazi (European) Jewish ancestry can be traced back to the
Caucasus region.
In the 8th
century, the Khazar's subjects and subordinate tribes experienced the largest
religious conversion in the history of Judaism.
The recent
study by John Hopkins geneticist Dr Elhaik confirmed that the common genome
structure of the Ashkenazi (European) Jew gravitated towards an origin in old
Khazaria.
"The
majority of Jews do not have Middle Eastern genetic component," he told
Israeli newspaper Haaretz.
Founded on a
mŽlange of myths and manufactured historical tales, Israel has failed the
archaeological test of time and is now exposed by DNA science.
Today's
genetics prove unequivocally that in 1948, "the children of the original
Jews" were replaced by converts with no roots in the Middle East.
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