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Date: Wed, 17 Dec 1997 06:37:17 -0600
Message-Id: <199712171237.GAA06503@radish.interlink-bbs.com>
From: fav2@rocketmail.com
Subject: U.S. Policy from Failure to Failure
The Story of the non-Semitic Jews
By Tawfic Abdul-Fattah, Free Arab Voice, 16 December
1997
Once upon a time in ancient Khazaria the entire kingdom converted to
Judaism by decree from the king.
Arthur Koestler, a Jew born in 1905 in Budapest, writes that
the Khazars who flourished from the 7th to the 11th century were in
those bygone days a major political power.
Their empire extended from the Black Sea to the Caspian and from
the Caucasus to the Volga. They were located "between two major
world powers: the Eastern Roman Empire in Byzantium and the
triumphant followers of Muhammad".
Since the world was then polarized between these two superpowers,
representing Christianity (western style) and Islam, the Khazar empire
representing a third force could only maintain its political and
ideological independence by accepting neither Christianity nor Islam
"for either choice would have automatically subordinated it to the
authority of the Roman Emperor or the Caliph of Baghdad."
Not wishing to be dominated by either of the two, the Khazar king
"embraced the Jewish faith" in AD 740 and ordered his subjects to
do the same. Judaism thus became the official state religion of the
Khazars.
Obviously the king's motives in adopting Judaism were purely political.
"The bulk of modern Jewry is not of Palestinian, but of Caucasian
origin", Koestler writes. "Their ancestors came not from the Jordan
but from the Volga, not from Canaan but from the Caucasus." And he
stresses: "The mainstream of Jewish migrations did not flow from the
Mediterranean across France and Germany to the east and then back
again. The stream moved in a consistently western direction, from the
Caucasus, from the Ukraine into Poland and thence into Central
Europe".
While Jews of different origin also contributed to the existing Jewish
world community, "the main bulk originated from the Khazar country" in
the Ex-Soviet Union.
Based on his research which was summed in his book "The Thirteenth
Tribe", Koestler refutes the notion of a Jewish "race" stating that
most Jews of the contemporary world did not come from Palestine and
are not even of Semitic origin. In fact, his research shows that most
Jews originated in what today is the Ex-USSR. And that a group of
people there became Jews through conversion, on the orders of their
king.
People under Khazar dominion included the Bulgars, Burtas, Ghuzz,
Magyars (Hungarians), the Gothic and Greek colonies of the Crimea,
and the Slavonic tribes in the northwestern woodland.
According to the Jewish Encyclopedia, in the 16th century Jews
numbered about one million. Koestler quotes scholars documenting that
at the time "the majority of those who professed the Judaic faith were
Khazars."
As Koestler points out, Jews of our times fall into two main
divisions: Sephardim and Ashkena-zim.
The Sephardim, the descendants of the Jews who had lived in Spain
until their expulsion, with the Muslims, at the end of the 15th
century, and who later settled in the countries bordering on the
Mediterranean, spoke a Spanish-Hebrew dialect, Ladino. In the 1960s,
the Sephardim numbered about 500,000.
The Ashkenazim at the same period were about 11 million. Thus, "in
common parlance, Jew is practically synonymous with Ashkenazi Jew".
However, Koestler adds, the term Ashkenazim is misleading because it
is generally applied to Germany, thus contributing to the legend that
modern Jewry originated on the Rhine. There is, however, no other term
to refer to the non-Sephardic majority of contemporary Jewry, which
came after conversion to Judaism from the Khazar country.
After the destruction of their empire (in the 12th or 13th century),
the Jewish Khazars migrated into those regions of Eastern Europe,
mainly Russia and Poland, where at the dawn of the modern age the
greatest concentrations of Jews were found. It is "well documented",
Koestler writes, that the numerically and socially dominant element
in the Jewish population of Hungary during the Middle Ages was of
Khazar origin.
An Israeli scholar, A. N. Poliak, a Tel Aviv University professor of
medieval Jewish history quoted by Koestler, states that the
descendants of Khazar Jews, "those who stayed where they were (in
Khazaria), those who emigrated to the United States and to other
countries, and those who went to Israel--constitute now the
large majority of world Jewry."
Since Israel's support among millions of American Christians is
founded on a concept that God had bequeathed territory to a biblical
"tribe" of Oriental Middle Eastern Jews, it becomes ironic to learn
from Koestler's research, that most Jews today are neither hereditary
natives from the "holy land" nor any other eastern tribe.
Koestler, who originally published the Thirteenth Tribe in 1976, noted
that the story of the Khazar empire "begins to look like the most
cruel hoax history has ever perpetrated." The Palestinians, imprisoned
and brutalized by this Zionist "hoax" and showered by ink based
resolutions, the likes of UN 194, would be the first to agree.
In sight of these findings, one might naively infer that the only
thing standing between the Palestinians and their rightful land
is nothing but a Rabbi waiting to bless them with his faith,
hence making them worthy of their homes.
Shall we then say, Mazeltov, or shall we concur that the Palestinian,
under the eyes of his father, is being once more. . . . Crucified !
P.S. The book "The Thirteenth Tribe has been difficult to find. It
disappeared from many library shelves. A check at the Library of
Congress reveals that the most prestigious library in the U.S had one
reading copy. That one copy, however, is "missing from the shelf" :)
Arthur Koestler (1905–83) is an Hungarian-born British author.
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