Are They "Jews" or Are They Really Khazars?
(By Warrant of Revelations. 2:9)
The Campaign for Radical Truth in History
New York Times Reveals that European-Descended Jews are Counterfeits and
have no Blood line to Abraham
The fact that
most of those who call themselves Jews are not Jews (Rev. 2:9) and have no
claim to the lands of Palestine because they have no genetic relation to
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob can no longer be suppressed.
The October 29, 1996 N.Y.
Times, in an article entitled, "Scholars Debate Origins of Yiddish and
the Migrations of Jews," states:
"Arching over these
questions is the central mystery of just where the Jews of Eastern Europe came
from. Many historians believe that there were not nearly enough Jews in Western
Europe to account for the huge population that later flourished in
"By reconstructing the
Yiddish mother tongue, linguists hope to plot the migration of the Jews and
their language with a precision never possible before.
"It has even been
suggested, on the basis of linguistic evidence, that the Jews of Eastern Europe
were not predominantly part of the diaspora from the
"...One linguist has
recently argued that Yiddish began as a Slavic language that was 'relexified,'
with most of its vocabulary replaced with German words.
"...Even more
troublesome are demographic studies indicating that during the Middle Ages
there were no more than 25,000 to 35,000 Jews in Western Europe. These figures
are hard to reconcile with other studies showing that by the 17th century there
were hundreds of thousands of Jews in
"...Some scholars
believe the roots of Yiddish, and even the Ashkenazic people themselves, lie
much farther east. In his 1976 book, The Thirteenth Tribe, Arthur
Koestler made the startling suggestion, never taken seriously by linguists,
that the Eastern European Jews were not really Semitic -- that they were largely
descended from the Turkish Khazars, who converted en masse to Judaism in
medieval times.
"More recently,
Koestler's controversial thesis has been revived and expanded in a 1993 book, The
Ashkenazic 'Jews': A Slavo-Turkic People in Search of a Jewish Identity
(Slavica Publishers), by Dr. Paul Wexler, a
"Wexler uses a
reconstruction of Yiddish to argue that it began as a Slavic language whose
vocabulary was largely replaced with German words. Going even further, he
contends that the Ashkenazic Jews are predominantly converted Slavs and
Turks who merged with a tiny population of Palestinian Jews from the
Diaspora."
(Emphasis supplied).