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Historia Zydow.

IP: 168.103.126.* 08.04.02, 16:45
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    • Gość: Andrzej Re: Historia Zydow. IP: 62.89.126.* 08.04.02, 16:46
      Coś krótka ta historia, ale nie dziwota - od 1948r.


      • Gość: Daniel Re: Historia Zydow. IP: 168.103.126.* 08.04.02, 16:51
        Wiedzosc zydow europejskich nie jest pochodzenia zydowskiego - sa to potomkowie
        Khazars - gruzinow, ktorych krol nakazal przejscie na Judaizm.
        Czytajcie angielski text. moze ktos przetlumaczy.

        Are Russian Jews Descended from the Khazars?
        A Reassessment Based upon the Latest Historical, Archaeological, Linguistic,
        and Genetic Evidence
        by Kevin Alan Brook


        --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        This page is Copyright (C) 2000-2001 by Kevin Brook, all rights reserved.
        Unauthorized reproduction of this page is prohibited.
        --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        The "traditional" view is that Eastern European Jews descend almost entirely
        from French and German Jews. This essay presents the pros and cons of the
        controversial "Khazar theory" of Eastern European Jewish origins and will
        attempt to provide a likely middle-ground solution to the question. Unlike
        other treatments of the question, this essay uses recent discoveries, is meant
        to be objective, and is fully sourced so that you can be guaranteed of the
        authenticity of the information. In summary, I argue in this essay that Eastern
        European Jews descend both from Khazarian Jews AND from Israelite Jews.

        PART 1. Evidence in favor of the Khazar theory
        Judaism is now known to have been more widespread among the Khazar inhabitants
        of the Khazar kingdom than was previously thought. The findings described below
        add strength to the argument that there were many Jews residing in eastern
        Europe prior to the immigration of German, Austrian, Bohemian, Spanish, and
        Portugese Jews into Poland and Hungary.


        Hebrew characters were allegedly found engraved on utensils from a Khazarian
        site in the Don river valley of Russia:

        "The Hermitage Museum of Saint Petersburg, Russia finishes reconstructing
        fragments of utensils found in Khazarian sites, where the word 'Israel' in
        Hebrew characters is mentioned several times." - Alicia Dujovne Ortiz, "El
        fantasma de los jázaros." La Nación (Buenos Aires, Argentina, August 14, 1999).


        "No one, on the other hand, could distinguish a specific culture, a fortiori a
        Jewish culture, until the very recent reconstitution by the Hermitage Museum,
        in Saint Petersburg (Russia), of fragments of utensils, put at the day in 1901,
        revealed four times the word 'Israel' in Hebraic letters." - Nicolas
        Weill, "L'histoire retrouvée des Khazars." Le Monde des Livres (July 9, 1999):
        12.

        "Russian archeologists reexamining finds excavated from Khazar sites in the
        area of the Don River in southern Russia recently discovered an ancient vessel
        inscribed with the word "Israel" in Hebrew lettering. The broken fragments of
        the vessel, originally unearthed in the 60s, were only recently put together.
        The result is the firmest verification yet of historical sources that point to
        the mass conversion to Judaism of the Khazar empire in 740 C.E." - Ehud
        Ya'ari, "Archaeological Finds Add Weight to Claim that Khazars Converted to
        Judaism." The Jerusalem Report (June 21, 1999), page 8.

        A so-called "Jewish Khazar" ring was buried in a grave in medieval Hungary:

        "A silver ring found in a cemetery in Ellend, near Pécs in southwestern Hungary
        and not far from the villages of Nagykozár and Kiskozár, is believed to be of
        Khazar-Kabar origin. The ring, which dates from the second half of the eleventh
        century, was found next to a woman's skeleton, and has thirteen Hebrew letters
        engraved on it as ornamentation." - Kevin Alan Brook, The Jews of Khazaria
        (Jason Aronson, 1999), pages 208-209, following the argument of Alexander
        Scheiber and Attila Kiss which was also adopted by Raphael Patai and Eli
        Valley. However, it does not spell out real Hebrew words, and is mixed with
        many non-Hebrew letters and symbols. Scheiber, Kiss, and others argued that the
        woman was from one of the two nearby Khazar villages.

        Jewish symbols were placed on bricks at another burial site in medieval
        Hungary, which is now located in northern Serbia:

        "In 1972, 263 graves were discovered near the village of Chelarevo, in the
        Vojvodina district of present-day Serbia... More important, Jewish motifs have
        been found on at least seventy of the brick fragments excavated from the
        graves. The Jewish symbols on the fragments include menorahs, shofars, etrogs,
        candle-snuffers, and ash-collectors. One of the brick fragments, which was
        placed over the grave of Yehudah, has a Hebrew inscription that
        reads, 'Yehudah, oh!' The skulls in the Chelarevo graves had Mongolian
        features..." - Kevin Alan Brook, The Jews of Khazaria (Jason Aronson, 1999),
        page 251.

        "One can conjecture that this burial ground belonged to the Kabar tribes which
        joined the Hungarians at the time when they discovered their fatherland. Some
        of the Kabars, arriving from Khazaria, apparently kept their Judaic religion." -
        István Erdélyi, "Kabari (Kavari) v Karpatskom Basseyne." Sovietskaya
        Arkheologiya 4 (1983): 179.

        "The early-medieval graveyard and settlement at CHelarevo, near Novi Sad,
        offers the most numerous and most unusual finds with Jewish symbols. Along with
        several hundreds of graves of typically Avaric characteristics (judging by the
        pottery, jewellery and horsemen's gear), excavations begun in 1972 produced
        several hundreds of graves of the same shape but lacking any additional burial
        objects.... each grave was marked by a fragment of a Roman brick (never a whole
        brick, although these were plentiful in the near-by older Roman sites) into
        which a menorah was cut, and most frequently two other Jewish symbols on its
        left and right sides: the shofar and an etrog, a lulav on some bricks, and even
        a small Jewish six-pointed star. Some 450 brick fragments have so far been
        found. The position and size of the incised motifs were adapted to the size and
        shape of each of the fragments, which means that the motifs were not there on
        the original whole bricks. Some of the fragments had a Hebrew inscription
        added - a name or a few words which, with the exception of JERUSALEM and
        ISRAEL, are difficult to decipher because of the damage. Some of the Hebrew
        characters are carved with great precision.... Several hypotheses have been
        proposed on the possible origin of a Jewish or Judaised population who marked
        the graves of their dead in this unusual way and had literate people among
        them. The influence of the Crimea Khazars has been mentioned in this context;
        their ruler, nobility and part of the population were Judaised in the 8 c., and
        many Jews who had emigrated from Asia Minor and Byzantium, lived among them." -
        Ante Soric et al (editors), Jews in Yugoslavia: Muzejski prostor, Zagreb,
        Jezuitski trg 4. (Zagreb: MGC, 1989), page 28.

        "In excavations at a large graveyard apparently dating to the end of the eighth
        and beginning of the ninth centuries, when the region was under the domination
        of the Avar tribe, archeologists have unearthed hundreds of brick fragments
        inscribed with menorahs and other Jewish symbols, including at least one small
        six-pointed Star of David. Some brick fragments also were inscribed with Hebrew
        letters. Research has shown that the people buried at Celarevo were of the
        Mongol race, apparently a tribe that had newly migrated into the area from the
        east. Beyond that, the origin of this Jewish settlement remains a mystery: One
        hypothesis has suggested that they may have been influenced by the Crimean
        Khazars, a tribe whose leaders converted to Judaism in the eighth century." -
        Ruth Ellen Gruber, Jewish Heritage Travel, 3rd edition (Jason Aronson, 1999),
        page 248.

        In addition to the Hungarian site above, the Star of David was found at two
        sites in the Khazar kingdom, even though it is unclear whether the symbol was
        used there for Jewish purposes:

        "Engravings of

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