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Who Are These Yorubas? by OJODEL10(m): 8:06am On Aug 02, 2013 |
SOME SAID THEY DESCENDED FROM EGYPT, SOME SAID FROM MECCA WHILE RECENTLY SOME ARE SAYING FROM CANAAN (ISRAELITE) . BUT REALY WHICH ONE IS CORRECT |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by spenca: 8:12am On Aug 02, 2013 |
OJODEL10: SOME SAID THEY DESCENDED FROM EGYPT, SOME SAID FROM MECCA WHILE RECENTLY SOME ARE SAYING FROM CANAAN (ISRAELITE) . BUT REALY WHICH ONE IS CORRECTOduduwa is the father of Yoruba and he descended from Mecca and touchfood straight at ile ife 1 Like |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by Nwaoguta(m): 8:18am On Aug 02, 2013 |
they come 4rm chad. |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by PAPAAFRICA: 8:25am On Aug 02, 2013 |
Yorubas from egypt? damn cuz, you rollin off a xannie aint you? Try this: put vinagar and baking powder in your booty hole and let it explode like a valconoe from science class. You'll be rollin like some 24s woahdayyy. |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by lekejob(m): 8:52am On Aug 02, 2013 |
Why do you wan't to know/ask ? 1 Like |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by OJODEL10(m): 9:01pm On Aug 02, 2013 |
PLEASE IF YOU KNOW THE ANSWER TELL ME, IT IS FOR PERSONAL REASON |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by Rgp92: 10:07pm On Aug 02, 2013 |
Yorubas are descendant of Nok people. seach for it |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by Rgp92: 10:07pm On Aug 02, 2013 |
Yorubas are descendant of Nok people. search for it |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by Nobody: 10:20pm On Aug 09, 2013 |
Rgp92: Yorubas are descendant of Nok people. search for itYour research is six letter words. |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by OJODEL10(m): 3:02pm On Aug 28, 2013 |
neighbouring nationalities located in Nigeria have this oral tradition of an origin extraneous to West Africa. Hugh Clapperton in 1820s reported a work by Sultan Bello, the Caliph of the Sokoto Caliphate, where he asserted that the Yorubas were descended from Canaanite tribe from Palestine. Around the 1880s Samuel Johnson a Yoruba christian also wrote a book that made similar claims for Yoruba origins as Sultan Bello’s. In 1880, Johson naively sent this work to the Church Missionary Society in England for review and publication. The Church Missionary Society suppressed the manuscript upon realizing the explosive information it contained. The Society declared the book lost. It was not until 1923 that Johson’s brother was able to publish an edited copy of this work. Johnson’s thesis was that the Yorubas were descended from Lamurudu (Nimrod) the first King of Mesopotamia. Johnson died in 1901. 1955 S.O. Obiaku, a Nigerian historian and scholar claimed a Meroite origin (Sudan/ancient Ethiopia-Kush) for the Yorubas. Emmanuel Uguhulu another respected Nigerian scholar claimed a Hebrew origin for the Esan tribe. Esan is part of the greater Edo nation, which is related to the Yoruba nation of Nigeria. Efik traditions claim that the Efiks originated in Palestine, crossed the Sahara and arrived Nigeria via Sudan. The Efiks are located in the south-eastern corner of Nigeria. Iberian Jews of Yoruba Nationality The Bnai Ephraim (“Children of Ephraim”) from Nigeria, live among the Yoruba nationalities. Their oral history tells that the Bnai Ephraim people came from Morocco after the Jews were banished from the Iberian Pennisula sometime after 1492. They speak a dialect that is a mixture of Moroccan Arabic, Yoruba, and Aramaic. They are known by the Yoruba people as the “Emo Yo Quaim”, or “strange people”. Unlike other African Israelite communities in Nigeria, the Bnai Ephraim have the Torah, portions of which they keep in their sanctuaries. The name Lagos borne by the former capital of Nigeria is a Portugese/ Iberian name meaning the lake. Lagos is an Island carved up by lagoons, swamps and lakes. Its traditional Nigerian name is Eko. Thousands of black refugee Jews of Iberia re-settled in the environs of Lagos and Porto Novo (as well as in Cape Verde, Guinea Buissa, and in Sao Tome either as slaves or outlaws). Some groups eventually made it deeper inland and became assimilated into one nationality or the other. The Bnai Ephraim provides a living and irrefutable proof of this barely known history of mass Jewish re- settlement in West Africa, between 1492 and 1692, a 200 year non-stop return of Jews to Africa. This set of Moorish refugees are not to be confused with more ancient Hebrew and Canaanite tribes that had been living in Nigeria and other African countries for thousands of years. The Black Jew series on Rasta Livewire deals with the relatively more ancient Hebrews of Africa. The Bnai Ephraim did not settle with the Yorubas by accident or chance. They recalled that a body of their people had depart Canaan in the ancient times and had settled in the present day Yoruba areas of Nigeria, just like their own group – Bnai Ephraim – had settled in Iberia (Spain and Portugal). So, when it happened they had to leave Iberia in a hurry to protect their lives and freedom, those Moorish Iberian Jews sailed on their network of ships to Nigeria Africa, near Lagos amongst the Yorubas, their relation by blood, their greater nationality. Other series on this website will continue to explore the foot-tracks of the Hebrew Israelites of Africa whose stories barely get told. Now, they shall not only be heard, they shall also be seen. Awake ye ancient Moorish Hebrews of Africa, awake! You have nothing to lose but your ignorance and weakness. The earth is your inheritance and rightful legacy. The truth lies in your history, hidden until these times… Jide Uwechia September 1, 2009 Source Tudor Parfitt: “The Construction of Jewish Identities in Africa” in the book “Jews of Ethiopia” Edited by Tudor Parfitt and Emanuela Trevisan Semi. Routledge. Abderrahman ben- Abdall es-Sadi, “Tarikh es Soudan, Paris, 1900,” (trad. O. Houdas) Rick Gold , “The Jews of Timbuktu,” Washington Jewish Week, December 30, 1999, Joseph J. Williams S.J., “Hebrewism of West Africa: From Nile to the Niger with the Jews” Remy Ilona, “Igbos, Jews in Africa?,” (Volume 1), Mega Press Limited, Abuja, Nigeria, 2004, Northern Tribes of Nigeria, Volume 1, Oxford, page 66, by C.K. Meek 3 Likes |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by Nobody: 8:41pm On Aug 28, 2013 |
OJODEL10: neighbouring nationalities located in Nigeria have this oral tradition of an origin extraneous to West Africa. Hugh Clapperton in 1820s reported a work by Sultan Bello, the Caliph of the Sokoto Caliphate, where he asserted that the Yorubas were descended from Canaanite tribe from Palestine. Around the 1880s Samuel Johnson a Yoruba christian also wrote a book that made similar claims for Yoruba origins as Sultan Bello’s. In 1880, Johson naively sent this work to the Church Missionary Society in England for review and publication. The Church Missionary Society suppressed the manuscript upon realizing the explosive information it contained. The Society declared the book lost. It was not until 1923 that Johson’s brother was able to publish an edited copy of this work. Johnson’s thesis was that the Yorubas were descended from Lamurudu (Nimrod) the first King of Mesopotamia. Johnson died in 1901. 1955 S.O. Obiaku, a Nigerian historian and scholar claimed a Meroite origin (Sudan/ancient Ethiopia-Kush) for the Yorubas. Emmanuel Uguhulu another respected Nigerian scholar claimed a Hebrew origin for the Esan tribe. Esan is part of the greater Edo nation, which is related to the Yoruba nation of Nigeria. Efik traditions claim that the Efiks originated in Palestine, crossed the Sahara and arrived Nigeria via Sudan. The Efiks are located in the south-eastern corner of Nigeria. Iberian Jews of Yoruba Nationality The Bnai Ephraim (“Children of Ephraim”) from Nigeria, live among the Yoruba nationalities. Their oral history tells that the Bnai Ephraim people came from Morocco after the Jews were banished from the Iberian Pennisula sometime after 1492. They speak a dialect that is a mixture of Moroccan Arabic, Yoruba, and Aramaic. They are known by the Yoruba people as the “Emo Yo Quaim”, or “strange people”. Unlike other African Israelite communities in Nigeria, the Bnai Ephraim have the Torah, portions of which they keep in their sanctuaries. The name Lagos borne by the former capital of Nigeria is a Portugese/ Iberian name meaning the lake. Lagos is an Island carved up by lagoons, swamps and lakes. Its traditional Nigerian name is Eko. Thousands of black refugee Jews of Iberia re-settled in the environs of Lagos and Porto Novo (as well as in Cape Verde, Guinea Buissa, and in Sao Tome either as slaves or outlaws). Some groups eventually made it deeper inland and became assimilated into one nationality or the other. The Bnai Ephraim provides a living and irrefutable proof of this barely known history of mass Jewish re- settlement in West Africa, between 1492 and 1692, a 200 year non-stop return of Jews to Africa. This set of Moorish refugees are not to be confused with more ancient Hebrew and Canaanite tribes that had been living in Nigeria and other African countries for thousands of years. The Black Jew series on Rasta Livewire deals with the relatively more ancient Hebrews of Africa. The Bnai Ephraim did not settle with the Yorubas by accident or chance. They recalled that a body of their people had depart Canaan in the ancient times and had settled in the present day Yoruba areas of Nigeria, just like their own group – Bnai Ephraim – had settled in Iberia (Spain and Portugal). So, when it happened they had to leave Iberia in a hurry to protect their lives and freedom, those Moorish Iberian Jews sailed on their network of ships to Nigeria Africa, near Lagos amongst the Yorubas, their relation by blood, their greater nationality. Other series on this website will continue to explore the foot-tracks of the Hebrew Israelites of Africa whose stories barely get told. Now, they shall not only be heard, they shall also be seen. Awake ye ancient Moorish Hebrews of Africa, awake! You have nothing to lose but your ignorance and weakness. The earth is your inheritance and rightful legacy. The truth lies in your history, hidden until these times… Jide Uwechia September 1, 2009 Source Tudor Parfitt: “The Construction of Jewish Identities in Africa” in the book “Jews of Ethiopia” Edited by Tudor Parfitt and Emanuela Trevisan Semi. Routledge. Abderrahman ben- Abdall es-Sadi, “Tarikh es Soudan, Paris, 1900,” (trad. O. Houdas) Rick Gold , “The Jews of Timbuktu,” Washington Jewish Week, December 30, 1999, Joseph J. Williams S.J., “Hebrewism of West Africa: From Nile to the Niger with the Jews” Remy Ilona, “Igbos, Jews in Africa?,” (Volume 1), Mega Press Limited, Abuja, Nigeria, 2004, Northern Tribes of Nigeria, Volume 1, Oxford, page 66, by C.K. Meek that's quite interesting. But you still need to add your own voice to make it more robust. Good job anyway. |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by OJODEL10(m): 4:12pm On Sep 02, 2013 |
Slave Coast A 1729 map, showing the Slave Coast The Slave Coast is the name of the coastal areas of present Togo, Benin (formerly Dahomey) and western Nigeria, a fertile region of coastal Western Africa along the Bight of Benin. In pre-colonial times it was one of the most densely populated parts of the African continent. It became one of the most important export centers for the Atlantic slave trade from the early 16th century to the 19th century. Other West African regions historically known by their prime colonial export are Gold Coast (modern-day Ghana), Ivory Coast (modern-day Côte d'Ivoire) , and Pepper Coast (or Grain Coast, in modern- day Liberia). History According to most research, the beginnings of the slave trade in this area are not well documented. It is difficult to track the development of trade in this area and its integration into the Atlantic slave trades before about 1670, when European sources begin to document this interaction. The slave trade became so extensive in the 18th and 19th centuries that an “Atlantic community” was formed.[1] The slave trade was facilitated on the European end by the Portuguese (mostly by Portuguese Empire's Brazilians), the Dutch, the French and the British. Slaves went to the New World, mostly to Brazil and the Caribbean. Ports that exported these slaves from Africa include Ouidah, Lagos, Aného (Little Popo), Grand-Popo, Agoué, Jakin, Porto-Novo, and Badagry. These ports traded in slaves that were supplied by African communities, tribes and kingdoms, including the Alladah and Ouidah, which were later taken over by the Dahomey kingdom. Researchers estimate that between 2 and 3 million slaves were exported out of this region and were traded for goods like alcohol and tobacco from the Americas and textiles from Europe. This complex exchange fostered political and cultural as well as commercial connections between these three regions. Religions, architectural styles, languages, knowledge, and other new goods were mingled at this time. Slaves as well as free men used the exchange routes to travel to new places which aided in hybridizing European and African cultures. Intermarriage has been documented in ports like Ouidah where Europeans were permanently stationed. Communication was quite extensive between all three areas of trade, to the point where even individual slaves could be tracked. [2] After slavery had been abolished by European countries, the slave trade continued for a time with independent traders (instead of government agents). Cultural integration had become so extensive that the defining characteristics of each culture were increasingly broadened. In the case of Brazilian culture—which had differentiated itself from Portuguese culture through its combination of African, Portuguese and New World traditions— Brazilian-style dress, cuisine and speaking Portuguese had become the main requirements for Brazilian identity, regardless of ethnicity, religion, or geographic |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by macof(m): 10:30pm On Sep 05, 2013 |
Originally Yoruba didn't come from anywhere. God created the first humans in ile-ife. Migration started from ile-ife. Most people won't believe ifa they prefer to believe the texts of the Torah, however I have some proof. Genesis 4:14-17 clearly interprets that Adam and Eve were not the only people on earth at any point. I don't have time to write it here but pls check yourself if u have a Bible. Cain wanted to die in the hands of another person as punishment after his banishment, how could that be when he and his parents(Adam and Eve) were suppose to be the only humans on earth. Cain settled in a land east of Eden married and had a son(Enoch), Enoch married and had more generations springing up. How come Cain saw a wife outside Eden? How did the wife come to earth when she was not Adam and Eve's daughter?. Yoruba religion and traditionally stories is the only one I know that provides a story of an existing land where mankind was created Some people have attacked the story of Oduduwa coming from heaven and being a son of God saying it's ridiculously impossible but I say it's possible. Genesis 6:4. there were giants on earth in those days; and also after that, when the sons of God came unto the daughters of men, and bare for them children, the same became mighty men which were renown. What the sultan of sokoto wrote in his book is bullshit, his people are Arab inclined but Yoruba is unique owning the first lands with red sand, Adam means red sand, the item Obatala used to mold men was red sand, red sand is everywhere in ile-ife, red sand is used to make all Yoruba sculptures. Present Yoruba has had people from different parts of the world come and live peacefully over the centuries and even become yorubas. In lagos and Ibadan just to mention a few, many migrants have stopped there and nationalised. My family history states that we originated from Nupe and were accepted in peacefully knowing that yorubaland, ile-ife mostly is the true home of all. 5 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by Nobody: 6:21pm On Sep 06, 2013 |
macof: Originally Yoruba didn't come from anywhere. God created the first humans in ile-ife. Migration started from ile-ife. Most people won't believe ifa they prefer to believe the texts of the Torah, however I have some proof. Genesis 4:14-17 clearly interprets that Adam and Eve were not the only people on earth at any point. I don't have time to write it here but pls check yourself if u have a Bible. Cain was not around when this part of the scripture was written, Genesis was not written on the day God made man, so it is an ex-post facto write-up. You do not believe the torah, but you want your story to be believed when it also seems to be spinning from the same source. what shall we believe? macof: Eden at the said time has become a landmark, it was no longer the dwelling-place of the first family. Adam and Eve bore sons and daughters, there was no established morality of people not marrying their sibling at this time, so Cain who lived for hundreds of Years married one of his sisters. This people lived long enough to procreate, bros. macof: God commanded them to be fruitful and multiply and to replenish the earth. This was God's first commandment to Adam and Eve which extended to their children. macof: it may not be the only one there is, but it may be the only one you know, you can find out more upon research. mixing traditional believe with Christianity is called synchretism. macof: what happened to those son of God who did that at the end, when God destroyed the wicked generation? So the Yorubas hid somewhere until after the flood, they must have outsmart God somewhere. JUDE 6 "And the angels who did not keep their positions of authority but abandoned their proper dwelling—these he has kept in darkness, bound with everlasting chains for judgment on the great Day." macof: Sultan Bello wrote thesis, just like the way Yoruba tradition made it to press. he may not be correct, just as the same tradition you are now waxing strong upon, you do not have to say because it is oral tradition, it should state what it likes and it would be taken as fact, then i will believe immediately in your variation of genesis story as doctrinal too. Meanwhile your position and polemics are glaringly faulty. macof: that is it, we are pushing the idea that ife is the creation point. we want to use Yoruba tradition as nemesis to the torah, what if Ifa emanated from Torah? Ifa did not put such idea across, it is what we love to see or hear, but that will not translate it to fact. it is a myth and may be less than 200 years.Ifa does not lie, but we can create our own stories and force it to do everything for us. 4 Likes |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by OJODEL10(m): 4:27am On Sep 09, 2013 |
OLODUMARE remain something i have been wonderin about and tryin to get it mean from the word; OLO means OWNER, ODU means MYSTERY, MARE could then mean HERE IT IS, OLODUMARE means OWNER OF MYSTERIES IS HERE (DEUT 29 V 29) OR OLO means OWNER, DU means STRUGGLE WITH, OR TO DENIED SOME ONE OF SOMETHING, BLACK. OMO means CHILD. ARE (wanderer?) what does it mean.ARE is also mention in statement like ONI RIN ARE someone who walk about. also in a suffix OSUMARE(RAINBOW). thus, OLODUMARE means OWNER OF STRUGGLE, WANDERER CHILDREN. could the yoruba in antiquity be people that wandered about before they finally settled, could ARE be the proper name of GOD? instead of YHAWEH. OR could OLO means EL(GOD) rather than OWNER? so it can be interpreted as OLO (EL = GOD) ODU = MYSTERIES MARE= HERE IT IS... 3 Likes |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by Nobody: 11:27am On Sep 09, 2013 |
OJODEL10: OLODUMARE remain something i have been wondering about and trying to get it mean from the word; OLO means OWNER, ODU means MYSTERY, MARE could then mean HERE IT IS, OLODUMARE means OWNER OF MYSTERIES IS HERE (DEUT 29 V 29) OR OLO means OWNER, DU means STRUGGLE WITH, OR TO DENIED SOME ONE OF SOMETHING, BLACK. OMO means CHILD. ARE (wanderer?) what does it mean.ARE is also mention in statement like ONI RIN ARE someone who walk about. also in a suffix OSUMARE(RAINBOW). thus, OLODUMARE means OWNER OF STRUGGLE, WANDERER CHILDREN. could the yoruba in antiquity be people that wandered about before they finally settled, could ARE be the proper name of GOD? instead of YHAWEH. OR could OLO means EL(GOD) rather than OWNER? so it can be interpreted as OLO (EL = GOD) ODU = MYSTERIES MARE= HERE IT IS... That's a great insight anyway, but if you want to interpret such word, you have to free yourself from all you know before from other relative religions and concentrate on Yoruba resource. it is when you do not have a tangible meaning that you conclude from external source. Olodu: one who struggles for something, mare: continuing. Olodumare is "one who struggles to sustain continuity." 'Are' is as you have rightly pointed out is 'wanderer.' we don't have to covet what others have as long as we can share, what is the point in taking away what others cherished just like we do all because we are just realizing something? it is always good to approach issue from the normal logical perspective rather than spoiling for slander to overtake. its nice to clear our minds and approach our quest from simple but effective perspective. alright, its just a piece of idea. Olodumare is olodumare, Yahweh is Yahweh. 3 Likes |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by OJODEL10(m): 10:02pm On Sep 11, 2013 |
THANKS BROTHER FOR THE CORRECTION, PLEASE IF THERE ARE ANY ARTICLES THAT I CAN READ ABOUT THE ORIGIN OF THE YORUBA I WILL like U TO FORWARD IT TO MY MAIL ojodele4sucess@gmail.com |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by OJODEL10(m): 9:18pm On May 24, 2015 |
Your research is six letter words.six laters, what are the laters? |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by OJODEL10(m): 9:18pm On May 24, 2015 |
Your research is six letter words.six laters, what are the laters? |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by want2knowben: 1:26pm On Aug 24, 2018 |
Some research has revealed the Torah as a Yoruba document : https://houseofmygod..com/2017/10/ancient-palleo-hebrew-and-modern-yoruba.html?zx=3fe7f019c47d941d 1 Like |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by OlaoChi: 8:23pm On Aug 24, 2018 |
want2knowben: And yet the Torah is foreign to yorubas You guys are clowns 2 Likes |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by Nobody: 12:44am On Aug 25, 2018 |
spenca: Are there cultures Yoruba share with people in Mecca? 1 Like |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by OlaoChi: 10:47pm On Aug 26, 2018 |
PrecisionFx: There are none. These people are just Clowns 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by want2knowben: 11:43am On Oct 03, 2018 |
PrecisionFx: Yoruba share culture with the Ancient Israelites: 1. 8th day baby-naming 2. Male circumcision 3. Proof of virginity on wedding day 4. Levirate marriage (restoring a widow into marriage by a relative of the deceased) aka 'su li opo', meant to produce offspring for the childless deceased and/or sustenance of the widow, as seen in the case of Ruth and Boaz but corrupted by greedy people for taking over the deceased's 'non-ancestral' property and wealth. 5. New Yam festival is a mirror of the Biblical First fruits feast. Not supposed to eat of the new yam until the festival has been conducted, as with the First fruits'feast where the priest offers the grain etc offering to God first. See Yoruba proverb 'Aj'egbodo ti n wa enu kun ra'; 6. Omi Ayelala is a 'version' of the 'bitter water' administered by the Biblical priests in cases of suspected adultery. to mention but a few. 1. Not being able to get rid of the 'h' sound, e.g saying 'hindomie' instead of 'indomie', is an Hebraic 'marker'. See Modern Hebrew words. 2. Not being able to say 'sh', e.g saying 'cusin siar' instead 'cushion chair' is another Hebraic 'marker' in the form of a 'speech defect'. This is a characteristic of the Ephraimites who were slaughtered in Ancient Israel when they could not pass the 'Shibboleth' pronunciation test. These markers are widespread amongst people who speak various Yoruba dialects from OYO, OSUN, EKITI, ONDO and some parts of KWARA and possibly Kogi. Some people have been able to override the 'markers'. It is very possible that we have 'arabs' among us in yoruba land, given that Islamic persecution led to many black arabs/edomites leaving their homelands. They would settle easily with the Yoruba given similarities in language and 'non-islamic' culture, since the Edomites lived close and in cases side by side with Israelites in ancient times. Many Jews had arabic names before Islam came to be at all. Many Yoruba Muslims today are actually descendants of Israel who converted to Islam voluntarily or under force. The Islamic hatred for the 'people of promise' is evident in the treatment of black slaves in the Arab Slave trade, and in today's treatment of black domestic workers in the hands of 'modern arabs'. Many tribes surrounding the Yoruba people of Nigeria, Togo and Benin in these countries and in Ghana are also descendants of other Israelite tribes. It was the colonial masters who set up artificial boundaries between the ISRAELITE nation in West Africa. Research by Prince O Jejelola has revealed the Yoruba language to be the Ancient Hebrew tongue, with his Paleo-Hebrew translation work of the Torah yielding information missing from current Bible translations. His work has also looked at many Biblical names, and they are yielding Yoruba words when the correct vowels are inserted. 1 Like |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by want2knowben: 12:16pm On Oct 03, 2018 |
OlaoChi: Go get some knowledge. 2 Likes 1 Share |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by jara: 2:47pm On Oct 03, 2018 |
Each African ethnic group longe for affiliation outside Africa in the new world while rejecting their close consins they have more in common with in the old world, the origin of mankind. Clowns stuck with colo-mentality. 1 Like |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by macof(m): 4:33pm On Oct 03, 2018 |
want2knowben:lmao. If you believe you are Hebrew you will find what you will use to hold on to that belief, similarly if you believe you are Chinese, you will find what to hold on to All those things you listed are not peculiar to yoruba and Hebrews 1. most old cultures of the world circumcise and expect virginity on wedding day 2. The core principle of the new Yam Festival is to mark the beginning of a new agricultural year, different from the principle of the Hebrew first fruit 3. Yoruba can say "Sh".. There are names like Shola, words like Ìṣe (Act) Ìṣẹ́(work) 4. Hebrew culture isn't specific on how many days it takes to name a child, and the culture certainly doesn't require an elaborate celebration unlike the Yoruba culture Prince O. Jejeloba? Never heard of him... Is he a linguist? And what institution did he publish under? 1 Like |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by OShepherd: 12:34am On Nov 17, 2018 |
want2knowben:What a research! |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by OlaoChi: 8:35am On Nov 17, 2018 |
OShepherd:A research of madness All these people are just pyschos 1 Like |
Re: Who Are These Yorubas? by want2knowben: 9:41pm On Nov 28, 2018 |
macof: One tribe in Ancient Israel was recorded as not being able to say 'sh'. I did not say that all Yoruba cannot say 'sh'. Read my post again. God doesn't need linguists to reveal hidden matters! He is quite happy with 'babes', stutterers and those looked down on. That's his MO! |
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