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=> Re: An Appeal to the Secretary General of the Arab League

Re: An Appeal to the Secretary General of the Arab League
Posted by Maggie (Guest) - Tuesday, October 3 2006, 23:31:16 (CEST)
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Akhona Ashur,

Like I said, the Arabs were part of the Assyrian empire from the beginning. They lived there, from the beginning. They are part of the ancient Assyrian annals, and Assyrian kings called them ARABU, sometimes ARABI. That means they were there already, they didn't come from the outside and invade our country, as they were part of our country, already, dear brother.

The ancient Assyrians DID NOT invent this name for them. It was their name to begin with. They spoke our Akkadian language, they had the same culture, the same food, the same religious beliefs. Even today, the Arabic language is almost like ours, and the root word of each Arabic word can be traced to the Akkadian, which proves ALL semetic languages come from the Akkadian, even the Aramaic dialect, which was spoken by the pastoral Assyrians which we called AHLAMU, (the highlanders) living in the highlands of the Syro-Assyrian border.

Later on, these Ahlamu became known as the Arameans because they referred to themselves as the children of Aram, living in aram-nahrain. Nevertheless, the word "Arameans" is no more than a distinguishing patrilineal link, in the same way as the Arabs came from EBER. Now, The sons of Shem were: Elam, Ashur, Arpachshad, Lud and Aram.

I can't give you all a history lesson in a few minutes, but suffice it to say that we were all ONE people, with the same language, just different dialects. In time, the Aramean highlander dialect became the lingua franca of the MIddle East, (language of the times) and later on, when the Arabs became increasingly large in numbers, their language became the lingua franca in the Middle East.

Tell me what is the difference between the Arabic language and the Assyrian language of today, or even the Aramaic dialect?

Arabic-Salam
Assyrian Shlama

Arabic-Nafs
Assyrian-Nafsha

Arabic-Kamel
Assyrian-Kmeela

Arabic-Abaru
Assyrian-Awaru

Arabic-Ishkur
Assyrian-Shkeera

Arabic-Kitab
Assyrian-Ktava

Arabic-Katib
Assyrian-Katawa

On and on, and on.


The listed children of Ham, Shem, and Japheth correspond to various historic nations and peoples.

Elam, son of Shem. The Elamites called themselves the Haltamti and had an empire in what is now Khuzistan (capital Susa).

Asshur, son of Shem. The Assyrians traced themselves to the god-ancestor Ashhur and the city he founded by that name on the Tigris.

Aram, son of Shem. The Arameans were known in earliest times as Aram-Naharaim, or Hurrians, and were centered on the Balikh river in northwestern Mesopotamia (modern Syria). His descendants settled in the city of Haran.

Arpachshad, son of Shem. He or his immediate descendants are credited in Jewish tradition with founding the city of Ur of the Chaldees on the south bank of the Euphrates, as well as being the ancestor of the Hebrews and the Arabs.

Cush, son of Ham. The Empire of Kush to the south of Egypt is known from at least 1970 BC, but this name and has also been associated by some with the Kassites who inhabited the Zagros area of Mesopotamia, the Sumerian city of Kish, as well as the Hindu Kush.

Mizraim, son of Ham. Mizraim is a name for Upper and Lower Egypt and literally translates as Ta-Wy in Ancient Egyptian ("The Two Lands").

Phut, son of Ham. Ancient authorities are fairly universal in identifying Phut with the Libyans (Lebu and Pitu), the earliest neighbors of Egypt to the west. (Although more recent theories have tried to connect Phut with Phoenicia, or the currently unidentified Land of Punt.)

Canaan, son of Ham. This is known to be the name of a nation and people who settled the Eastern shore of the Mediterranean in what is now called Israel.
The following names are associated with entities whose earliest attestation is recorded somewhat later in history.

Lud, son of Shem. Most ancient authorities assign this name to the Lydians of Eastern Anatolia (Luddu in Assyrian insciptions from ca. 700 BC). This name may also be connected with the earlier Luwians who lived in approximately the same area.

Gomer, son of Japheth. Usually identified with the migratory Gimirru (Cimmerians) of Assyrian inscriptions, attested from about 720 BC).

Madai, son of Japheth. The Medes of Northwest Iran first appear in Assyrian inscriptions as Amadai in about 844 BC.

Javan, son of Japheth. This name is said to be connected with that of the Aegean state of Ionia, first appearing in records ca. 700 BC.

Tubal, son of Japheth. He is connected with the Tabali, an Anatolian tribe, and both the Iberians of the Caucasus and those of the Iberian peninsula (modern Spain and Portugal), as well as Illyrians and Italics. In the book of Jubilees he was bequeathed the three 'tounges' of Europe.

Meshech, son of Japheth. He is regarded as the eponym of the Mushki Phrygian tribe of Anatolia who, like the Tabali, contributed to the collapse of the Hittites ca. 1200 BC. The Mushki are considered one of the ancestors of the Georgians, but also became connected with the Sea Peoples who roved the Mediterranean Sea.

Tiras, son of Japheth. This name is usually connected with that of Thracians, an ancient nation first appearing in written records around 700 BC. It has also been associated with some of the Sea Peoples such as Tursha and Tyrsenoi, with the river Tiras, and sometimes with the Anatolian region of Troas, dating to the later 13th century BC.

So tell me Ashur, were we not all ONE people at one time? Only religion has seperated us, and caused unending hatred amongst the people of the world.

I will be discussing these sequences in up-coming shows. Stay tuned.
Maggie Yonan



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