Lost Ten Tribes Studies (18 May, 2015, 29 Iyar, 5775)
Contents:
1. Philip Gilchrist: Interesting Notes About the Maoris of New Zealand
2. New comment on Video Clip:Â "I've seen a lot of British who look Jewish".
3. Brit-Am Falsely Spoken About. The Importance of Knowing who Edom is.
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1. Philip Gilchrist: Interesting Notes About the Maoris of New Zealand
Hi Yair
have you have seen this:
http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-PybMaor-t1-body-d2.html
 My hypothesis is that King Solomon and Hiram sent ships with workers to Ophir (Port Molyneux, Otago New Zealand), it is likely that that some of the servants/ workers remained and bacame the Native people. The hypothesis of Biblical Pison River  being The Clutha River in Otago would locate the pre- flood world in the south Island of New Zealand.
--
Kind Regards Philip Gilchrist Ph 03 488 1869
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 The Maoris of the South Island. Chapter I  The Origin of the Maori
Extracts:
... it is generally agreed that the Maori is a Polynesian with a blend of Melanesian blood. The latter connects him with the dark-skinned peoples of New Guinea and the adjacent islands. The ancestry of the Maori, however, may be traced much further back than to the islands of the Pacific.
The tradition of the last migration from Tahiti and adjacent islands is illuminating. The tohungas have preserved these facts in detail from the last of the Hawaikis up to the arrival of their ancestors to New Zealand. 'Hawaiki' means 'the distant home' and refers to any place from which the Maori came in their ancient wanderings.
The Polynesian ancestry may be traced back to a distant Hawaiki, Â probably to the northern shores of the Persian Gulf and to the early inhabitants of Asia. Mr. Cowan, in Maoris of New Zealand, says that the Maori-Polynesian is a branch, though a distant one, of the Caucasian race and that this view is now generally accepted by scientific investigators. If this is correct, the Maori can therefore claim a connection with the ancient Chaldeans, the Phoenicians, the Babylonians, the Hebrews and the Arabs.
Mr. R. J. Casey states that the ancestors of the Polynesians, in the dim past, came from Ur in Chaldea, the land of the two rivers, the Euphrates and the Tigris.1 That there is some link of connection between the Maori and Hebrew and Semitic race is suggested by the Jewish features seen in some of the Maoris. Taiaroa of Otakou, for instance, had a striking Jewish cast of features. Many of the Maori customs resemble Jewish practices. The law of utu, satisfaction or payment for an injury, 'an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth' seems to compare with ancient Jewish traditions. Tapu, sacred, set apart or under restriction, is another resemblance.
Certain of the Maori customs remind one of the marriage customs described in the Old Testament. A comparison of the Jewish ceremonial law, as embodied in the Old Testament Scriptures, with the customs of the Maori people, presents many points of agreement.
The Rev. W. Wyatt Gill, B.A., who spent some years in the Polynesian Islands of the Pacific, in his book Life in the Southern Isles, has pointed out that the elder missionaries who worked in those islands were impressed with the similarity to the Hebrew in the conjugation of the verbs and in many of the primitive words such as mate, death; mara, bitter; rapaau, to heal; pae, side; ina, behold, etc. Most verbs have a causative active and causative passive form, resembling the Hebrew conjugation Hiphal, and its passive Hophal. Another remarkable resemblance: 'These islanders,' he says, 'like the Hebrews of old, place the seat of the affections and intellect in the bowels.' A parent giving vent to an excess of tenderness to a child will say, 'My bowels are all gone out towards you.' In writing to an absent son, the father will use the expressive phrase: 'My bowels are pained through grieving for you.' So too of the intellect. A native will praise after this fashion: 'Your bowels are full of light,' viz., 'You have a clear intellect' or the reverse, 'Your bowels are dark indeed.' Similar expressions are found in the Bible, Genesis 43:30 'And Joseph made haste; for his bowels did yearn upon his brother and he entered into his chamber and wept there.' 1 Kings 3:26: Â 'Then spake the woman whose living child was unto the king, for her bowels yearned upon her son, etc.' ...
... it does seem to indicate that the Hebrews and the Polynesians of the South Seas had a common origin.
.... the ancestors of the Maori migrated eastward from the shores of the Persian Gulf to Persia, Baluchistan and thence to India. The stages of their migration would cover many generations. Each country in which they were located would leave its impress on their manners, customs and traditions. There can be no doubt that the ancestors of the Maori sojourned for a period in the Malayan Archipelago, now peopled by Malays and a Mongoloid race which came later when the Maori ancestors had located themselves in the Pacific Islands. There is, however, no trace of the Mongoloid strain in the Maori. There can be no doubt that the Maori expedition in its pilgrimage passed through Fiji, Samoa, Tonga and Easter Island, and also voyaged as far as the Sandwich Islands.
They were expert sailors and possessed considerable astronomical knowledge which was of value to them in their various migrations.
Mr. Percy Smith in his book Hawaiki deals with the sojourn of the proto-Maoris in India where they were governed by a chief or king named Tu-te-Rangi-Marama. This, he page 13 holds, was about the year 450 B.C., prior to their migration to the East Indies.
In various ways India left its impress upon the ancestors of the Maori. In Western Polynesia the people resemble the Hindu in a greater degree than do the Maoris of New Zealand. .. Mr. A. K. Newman, in his book Who are the Maoris? points out that many Maori names and words can be traced to India. The Maori legends of the origin of Maui are the same in India. Newman also points out that the protruding tongue in Maori art is characteristic of many Indian images of gods; that the Maori fortified pas, and their mode of fighting are Indian; that their canoes and canoe sails are Indian; that their tattooing is Indian. He is also of the opinion that some of the Maori customs and habits had their origin in India, and that the foods they cultivated, Â the kumara and the taro, were cultivated in India and planted with the same religious rites.
Cowan in The Maori: Yesterday and Today, page 27, calls attention to the theory (and indeed more than a theory) that those ancient intrepid navigators in their wanderings coasted down the eastern shores of the African Continent at least as far as the Zambesi, and that they visited and partly colonized Madagascar, which would account for the resemblances between the Maori-Polynesian language and Malagasy.
The Rev. J. F. H. Wohlers in his autobiography also calls attention to the similarities that obtain between the Maori and the Malagasy and gives examples  :'Judging by this relation of language the Malagasy in Madagascar, the Maori in New Zealand, as well as the whole Polynesian population of the South Seas, must have had a common origin, and have emigrated from the same country, etc.'
The visit of Toi marks a new era in the settlement of New Zealand ... the year A.D. 1150 is generally accepted as the approximate date. Toi lived at Hawaiki, probably Tahiti, and came from a race of navigators.
[Brit-Am Note:
The Chatham Islands in the Pacific Ocean ARE about 680 kilometres (423 mi) southeast of mainland New Zealand. They were inhabited by the Morioris who culturally and ethnically were of a more oriignal Polynesian type.
They were also more primitive. They were invaded by the Maoris in 1831-36. The men were mostly killed and the women taken captive. Those Moriori males who were not killed died due to diseases the maori had brought with them and for which the Morioiri had not developed immunity.]
...Mr. Haddon was definitely of the opinion that the Morioris were Polynesians of a very early migration.
Some investigators claim that the Morioris of the Chatham Islands had no knowledge of New Zealand, and that their language, customs and material culture were widely different from the Maori; that their mythology reveals a close kinship to the fundamental Polynesian pattern, but that their historical traditions do not indicate that the Morioris had any knowledge of New Zealand. ...
Sir Peter Buck, in his The Coming of the Maori has a different opinion. He states that the Morioris, traditionally, are believed to be a branch of the first migrants or settlers in New Zealand who later found their way to the Chathams before the arrival of the Great Fleet in New Zealand, A.D. 1350, and who thus 'through isolation have retained more of the physical characters of the early settlers than the Maoris who were the result of intermixture with later arrivals. ... the language of the Morioris is basically Polynesian, but is still very different from the Maori language which has apparently suffered little alteration throughout the thousand years or so that they have been in occupation of New Zealand.'
....the last pure-blooded Moriori died in 1931. ... Mr. Aldred said of them: 'They are a harmless, inoffensive people. They have no fixed dwelling place, clothing or house. They put up a sort of wind-break, behind which they eat and sleep. Their food is herbs and fish, and their sole attraction to any one place is firewood and water.'  They had some notion of a supreme being whom they regarded with fear and dread, and they also believed in a future state.
The Maori people today trace back their descent to the various canoes of the Great Migration.
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2. New comment on Video Clip:Â "I've seen a lot of British who look Jewish".
re
The Celts Called Themselves Hebrews!
Stephen Marcus
I've seen a lot of British who look Jewish.
They are also the most successful people aside from the Jews.
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3. Brit-Am Falsely Spoken About. The Importance of Knowing who Edom is.
See:
Esav Exposed
INTRODUCTION TO 'TWO-HOUSE' Â ('EPHRAIMITE') THEOLOGY
http://esavexposed.blogspot.co.il/p/introduction-to-two-house-ephraimite.html
by Devorah
article claims that Brit-Am is party to a christian missionizing agenda.
This is not true.
The authoress is known to us. She is not backed by anyone nor responsible to them.
She is in a position to know the truth but has chosen not to do so.
The bottom line however is that the Lost Ten Tribes are where they are.
This reality needs to be dealt with.
Amongst and alongside the .LTTs are also elements from Edom.
We are clarifying this issue.
Paradoxically this knowledge should ultimately enable Judah to cope with and accept descendants of the LTTs in Western Nations.
We are working on it.
We have results.
We need your help.