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OT: To Study Islamic History...is to Study Black History
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by alTakruri: [QB] These are the words of 10 men. An entire people of 600,000 men between the ages of 20 to 50 are said to have left Egypt only a few generations after the 12 brothers and their families (a total of 70 people) entered Egypt. Besides that geographic origin has nothing to do with theology. But surely the Hebrew literature posits that city dweller turned cattle tending Abraham was very much a theologian converting many people in Haran to his belief in a non-corporeal represented deity. This Abraham's grandson Ya`aqob a well noted herdsman "dwelled in tents." That's a metaphor alluding to study. Legend has it the tents were the "academy of Shem and `Eber" where Ya`aqob learned theology. Much later Moshe, raised in palaces as a pharaoh's grandson, attained all the "wisdom of Egypt." The headmen of the Hebrews who became the Children of Israel were theologians. They and the `Ereb Rab (mixed multitude) who left Egypt incorporated both Mesopotamian and Egyptian spirituality into their own characteristic theology. For concrete examples peruse the three books I listed elsewhere. [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. [/qb][/QUOTE] [/QB][/QUOTE]
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