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OT: To Study Islamic History...is to Study Black History
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by abdulkarem3: [QB] [QUOTE]but ancient Nile valley immigrants, who would forge a coalition with local Canaanites to form Israelites, brought the foundations of Jewish religion along with them to the region and it was inspired by Kemetic theological concepts amongst other legends & themes from Kemet[/QUOTE]i would have to disagree with the theological part. maybe in general custom and tradition but in theology ,no, due to this. "you should answer, ‘Your servants have tended livestock from our boyhood on, just as our fathers did.’ Then you will be allowed to settle in the region of Goshen, for all shepherds are detestable to the Egyptians."Genesis 46:34 in their own book they explain that they are no more but the descendants of amu(cattle,asiatics,jews,arabs,syrians,sheep herders.,etc)This was a general expression of these people despite the nations and tribes that existed within these ranks. These people did not waste their time in studying theology that is not even their own. It would have been totally against the way of a shepherd bedouin type lifestyle. It was known by consensus of settled states that these people were not the type to study. I think this is not thought out because of people's lack of experience with people who take on the same lifestyle(bedouin,shepherds,etc.) They are not interested in theology. Anyway, have anybody took a look at the different theologies that existed in the egyptian state. It is not a common knowledge thing. This is highly advanced and would require instruction in which only the elite foriegners could get that kind of instruction. other than that these people before they received their book and instructions could never had been influenced theologically by anybody except that of the technology of a broom and a splashing in mud. "let us look at another verse in the jews own book And they set on for him by himself, and for them by themselves, and for the Egyptians, which did eat with him, by themselves: because the Egyptians might not eat bread with the Hebrews; for that is an abomination unto the Egyptians"genesis 43:32 what does the tale of sinuhe say of them " And I went about my encampment rejoicing, and saying: How should such things be done to a servant whom his heart led astray to barbarous lands? " If i am not mistaken theological training was granted to priest caste and the king. everybody else were just learning other things [QUOTE]Alongside the inculcation of general rules of morality there was, of course, formal vocational training. Young men did not usually choose their own careers. Herodotus and Diodorus refer explicitly to hereditary callings in ancient Egypt. This was not in fact a system of rigid inheritance but an endeavor, as one Middle Kingdom stele puts it, to pass on a father's function to his children. Several other sources confirm that this happened with the consent of the king or his plenipotentiaries. Thus we find throughout Egyptian history a tendency for even the highest offices to remain in the same families.[/QUOTE][URL=http://www.touregypt.net/HistoricalEssays/lifeinEgypt7.htm]touregypt[/URL] what do the ethiopians have to say about such a matter "they add that the Egyptians have [b]received from them, as from authors and their ancestors[/b], the greater part of their laws. "They further write that it was among them that people were first [b]taught[/b] to honor the gods and offer sacrifices and arrange processions and festivals and perform other things by which people honor the divine. For this reason their piety is famous among all men, and the sacrifices among the Aithiopians [Ethiopians] are believed to be particularly pleasing to the divinity and the sealer of it all "Also the way the priestly colleges are [b]organized[/b] is said to be the same in both nations. For all who have to do with the cult of the gods, they maintain, are [ritually] pure: the priests are shaved in the same way, they have the same robes and the type of scepter shaped like a plough, which also the kings have, who use tall pointed felt hats ending in a knob, with the snakes that they call the asp (aspis) coiled round them." This is not the way of a people who are despised by the holders of such knowledge which it in it self can only be passed to an elite caste of people within their own society ,nor is it the way of shepherds that they claim such a vocation(devotion of time in the aquiring priestly knowledge) as discussed in their own book. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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