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Lost Jewish Tribe 'found In Zimbabwe/South Africa'- The Real Black Jews / Look At This Jewish Ritual! / If You Had Been Doubting Igbo Peoples Israel Origin- Watch This Video! (2) (3) (4)

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For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by manchy7531: 10:22am On Aug 09, 2014
The Ibo Benei Yisrael Jews of Nigeria

The Ibo Benei-Yisrael of Nigeria, sometimes addressed as "Igbo," are an Ibo ethnic group whom descended from the southern and westward migrations of both ancient Hebrew and later Israeli peoples from the Middle East into Africa. In more modern times the ancestral homeland of the Ibo Benei-Yisrael is in the Southeast and Western regions of Nigeria. The area where a majority of Ibo dwells straddles the River Niger, which divides the River and the Anambra States. Nigeria operates on a federal structure, of 36 states and the capital Abuja. The overall Igbo populations are normally found in the states of: Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu, Rivers State, Delta State, and Imo.

The oral traditions of the Igbo maintain that their presence has been in what is termed "Igboland" for over 1500 years. The same oral histories also state that their ancestors were migrants from ancient Israel, possibly beginning with the Semitic migrations from Northern Arabia into Eastern Africa around 500 BCE.

According to the Torah (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy) the Israeli patriarch Ya`aqov ben-Yitzhhaq (Jacob son of Isaac), had twelve sons whose descendents became the 12 tribes of Israel whom inherited the land of Canaan. There are several tribes of Israel, which according to The information in this document is copy written by the Ibo Benei-Yisrael Association ª February 16, 2003 various elders fathered the Igbo clan structure within the Ibo populace as it exists today. These Ibo ethnic groups are comprised of the following 3 lineage types:

• Benei Gath: Igbos said to have descended from tribe of Gath ben-Ya`aqov, who was the 8th son of the Israeli patriarch Ya`aqov (Jacob).[1] This lineage is traced though Gath's son Eri ben-Gath. [2]The clans said to come from this lineage comprise of the Aguleri, Umuleri, Oreri, Enugwu Ikwu, Ogbunike, Awkuzu, Nteje, and Igbariam.

•Benei Zevulun: Igbos said to have descended from the tribe of Zevulun ben-Ya`aqov, who was the 5th son of Ya`aqov (Jacob).[3]This lineage comprises of the Ubulu Okiti, Ubulu Ukwu, in Delta State,who settled in Ubulu Ihejiofor. According to tradition, it is said that a descendent of the tribe of Zevulun named Zevulunu, on the advice of an certain Levite, married a woman from Oji, whom descended from the tribe of Judah, and from this union was born Ozubulu ben-Zebulunu. It is said that Ozubulu then went on to have 4 sons of his own who settled into other parts of the region.These sons being: Amakwa, from whom a clan in Neni, Anambra State descended, and Egbema, from whom the Egbema Ugwuta clan in Imo State and the Ohaji Egbema clan in Rivers State descended.

•Benei Menashsheh: Igbos whom it is theorized may be descendents of the tribe of Meneshsheh ben-Yoseph, who was one of the grandsons of Ya`aqov (Jacob) through his 11th son Yoseph (Joseph). [4] According to the Torah Jacob claimed both Menashsheh and his brother Ephrayim as his own sons. [5] It theorized by some that this is the possible lineage of the Amichi, Ichi, Nnewi-Ichi clans.

It is also more than possible that certain Ibo Benei-Yisrael families may be descendents of Levitical (Levite Priests) migrants from Jerban, Tunisia whom were said to have left Judah and settled in North Africa before and after the destruction of the 1st and 2nd Temples in Jerusalem.[6] The most likely scenario is that the ancestors of the Ibo Benei-Yisrael were made up of familiar clans of Israelis and Judaens whom, for various reasons, left Israel before and during the Assyrian and Babylonian sieges.This would explain how their oral tradition contains the specific tribes these clans originated from.

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Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by manchy7531: 10:24am On Aug 09, 2014
Methods of Hebrew and Jewish Migrations into the Maghreb (West)

According to most accounts, the earliest Israeli settlements in Africa were in places such as Ethiopia, Egypt and Tunisia. It is believed that these settlements may have been in existence as early as the kingdoms of David and Solomon, as well as during the Assyrian invasion of northern Israel in 722 BCE and the Babylonian captivity of Judah in 586 BCE in the Punic-Carthaginian age. These communities were augmented by subsequent arrivals of Jews after the destruction of the 2nd Jerusalem Temple in 70CE, when 30,000 Jewish slaves were settled throughout Carthage by the Roman emperor Titus. [7]

Africa is thus identified with it even more closely (Tamid, 32b, and the parallel passage, where "African land," is evidently the same as Carthage). The Septuagint (Isa. xxiii. 1), and Jerome (on Ezek .xxvii.), who, though a Christian, was taught by Jews, and very often the Aramaic Targumon the Prophets, identify the Biblical Tarshishwith Carthage, which was the birthplace of a number of rabbis mentioned in the Talmud (compare above the identification with Tunis). Africa, in the broader sense, is clearly indicated where mention is made of the Ten Tribes having been driven into exile by the Assyrians and having journeyed into Africa ( Mek., Bo, 17; Tosef., Shab. vii. 25; Deut. R. v. 14; and especially Sanh. 4a).

Connected with this is the idea that the river Sambation is in Africa. The Arabs, who also know the legend of the Beni Musa ("Sons of Moses"wink, agree with the Jews in placing their land in Africa (compare
Bacher, " Ag. Tan." i. 298; Epstein, " Eldad ha-Dani," p. 15). The probable basis of this legend must be sought in the actual existence of the Beta Yisrael (Jews of Ethiopia) in Africa. Rabbi Akiba, who traveled in Africa, on one occasion made use of an African word (Rapoport, in "Bikkure ha-'Ittim," iv. 70, 1823).[8]

In terms of the Ibo Benei-Yisrael, there are three possible methods from which their Jewish ancestry arrived within West Africa, specifically Nigeria.

1) Through early Hebrew and later Israeli migrations west from the Arabian Peninsula, Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya, and the Sudan.

2) Through trade and travel of North African Jews within the West African Kingdoms of Mali, Songhai, and Kanem-Bornu.

3) Through Jews traveling with Kel Tamasheq (Tuareg) trade caravans from various parts of Northeast Africa into West Africa.

The exact arrival date of the first Israeli ancestors of the Ibo Benei-Yisrael, from the Middle East into West Africa, is somewhat of a mystery. It is believed that the first migration of Semitic peoples into the region was prior to 202 BCE with the appearance of iron working civilizations, the most notable of which was the Nok. According to "The Penguin Atlas of African History", Page 30, by Colin McEvedy:

" The technology [iron working] had presumably spread from Egypt via Nubia and the Sahel corridor: spread from North Africa seems less likely (for a lack of trans-Saharan communication at this time) and independent local invention improbable (the timing fits the transmission hypothesis too well)." [9]

According to Nahum Slouschz's book, Travels in North Africa , page 211, "Inscriptions indicate that certain tribes of Israel, Asher and Zevulun, lived in Carthage ever since the foundation of the city." [10] Slouschz further wrote:

"We have seen that in all probability there were in Carthage and its dependencies large numbers of Jews, whom followed the Phoenicians into Africa. In this local tradition is in agreement with certain historical indications, while the manners and customs of the Jews of Tunis still give
evidence of their ancient origin. There is not the slightest doubt that the Jew was persisted in these parts from the Roman epoch to our times.
" [11]


In later centuries ancient Israelis and Jews are believed to have settled in Western Africa during the height of the Songhai, Mali, Ghana and Kanem-Bornu empires. According to various accounts from explorers of the region, several of the rulers of the Songhai empire were of Jewish origin, until Askia Muhammad came to power and in 1492 decreed that all Jews either convert to Islam or leave the region.[12]

It is also more than possible that the Ibo Benei-Yisrael, as well as other West African Jews, may be descendents of a people described by the 9th Century Jewish traveler Eldad ben-Mahli (also known as Eldad the Danite) who related the location of several of the "Lost Tribes of Israel." He further detailed that his tribe, Dan, had migrated from their Palestinian home so as not to take part in the civil war at the time of Yeroboam's secession, and were residing in the land of Havilah beyond the Rivers of Ethiopia.Three other tribes, Naphtali, Gath and Asher, were with them; these had joined them in the times of Sennacherib. They had an entire body of Scriptures barring Ester and Lamentations. They knew nothing of the Mishna nor the Talmud; but they had a Talmud of their own in which all the laws were cited in the name of Yehoshua ben-Nun (Joshua son of Nun) as he had received them at the hands of Mosheh (Moses). Eldad exhibited a ritual dealing mostly with the rules pertaining to the killing of animals for food. [13]

Historically, Jews have migrated from region to region in Africa based upon three factors: 1) Persecution, 2) Trade, and 3) Freedom to practice Torah. Jewish communities in locations such as Egypt,Ethiopia, Tunisia, and Morocco served as the core population centers of the Jewish periphery in Africa.During times of Islamic persecution, and also during times of relative calm, Jews traveled all over Northern and Western Africa for the purpose of establishing trade connections. According to Biblical and Talmudic sources this trade route, with West Africa, may have existed from as early as the reign of King David and the use of the term Tarshish in the Tanakh, Hebrew Bible, could also describe the Ivory Coast of West Africa.

This route may have been established in part because of the need in ancient Israel to produce the tekheletdye used for the tztzith (fringes)of Jewish garments. This dye, made from a gland of the Hillazon fish, was at one time very prominent in the Mediterranean and according to some accounts on the shores of West Africa. [14] In 2nd Kings chapter 10 verse 22 there is also a description of a three year voyage undertaken during the reign of King Solomon that was said to have returned from a portion of Tarshish with gold, ivory, apes, and peacocks.

Arab chroniclers of West Africa such as the 13th century historian Ibn Khaldun, the famous 12th century geographer Al-Idrisi, and the 16th century historian and traveler Leon Africanus wrote accounts of peoples whom they termed as "Jewish Negroes" in the Western Sudan. Looking at maps from the period we find similar use of the terms Tarshish, Ethiopia, and Kush, which were often used in ancient times to describe all peoples whom at the time some chroniclers were calling "Negro/Negroid" in the various regions of Africa. Early maps made by these explorers often depicted the "Sudan" and "Ethiopia" as lands from as far-east as modern day Ethiopia to as far west as modern day Nigeria and Cameroon. This similar to the way the "Africa" is used to describe the continent.

The decline of the Jewish communities of the Africa-Maghreb (West Africa) most likely began with the influx of Muslim invaders into North Africa starting in 640 CE and later into West Africa in the 1300's and 1400's CE. Various accounts record that Jews were instrumental in fighting with and often times leading the coalitions of peoples who unified to fight off the Islamic invasions. The most notable of which was the Jewish Berber Queen Kahina Dahiyah Bint Thabitah ibn Tifan, known as El Kahina. Believed to have been a descendent of the Israeli priestly class, El Kahina was able to lead North-African Jews, Berbers, Christians, and Greeks alike against the Arab invasions until her defeat at the hands of the Arab commander Hassan Ibn Numan. [15] During these times many of the Jews in Northern and Western Africa were forced to covert to Islam, exiled, sold into slavery, or massacred. Incursions of Christian missionaries may have also played a role in the decline of the distinct Jewish written element in the region.

As with other Jewish communities in Moslem controlled lands, the Jews of West Africa also suffered at the hands of various nobles in the Islamic ruling parties, which took power in the 1300 to 1400's. Such is the case of Al- Maghili whom tolled the death knell of Sahara and savanna Jewry when, in 1492 after destroying the Jewish enclaves in the Tuat, Mali he convinced potentates throughout the Western Sudan and the founder of Songhai to banish Jews from the empire's cities. No doubt that some sought refuge south and south east toward the forest. The records of such are some three hundred years later than the destruction of the independent Jewish enclaves of Qamnurya or Naghira, in the area of modern day Senegal, in the 11th and 12th century.

Due to these and other pressures the Ibo Benei-Yisrael along with other West African Jewish communities lost whatever written documents such as Torah, and other written traditions that may have existed. Yet, these communities, including the Ibo Benei-Yisrael, to this day were able to maintain at the least a knowledge of their Israeli origin and in some cases continue to practice their traditions in secret.Records of these communities however do exist within the Timbuktu, Mali Islamic library, which has documents of the presence of several Jewish families in West Africa dating from before the Muslim arrival in the 1300's CE.

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Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by manchy7531: 10:25am On Aug 09, 2014
The Ibo Benei-Yisrael within Nigerian History

Modern day Nigeria is a federation of states segregated by 3 major ethnic groups: the Ibo (Igbo),the Hausa/Fulani, and the Yoruba. The Ibo dominate the eastern and some southern regions, the west by the Yoruba and the north by the Hausa/Fulani. These three major groups were brought together via European efforts to divide Africa among themselves. Mounting ethnic tensions between these groups caused the Biafrans - the Igbos and other minority ethnic groups - in the southern-eastern region to fight for their independence from the federation only 6years after Nigeria gained it independence from British rule in 1960. [16]

The Ibo Benei-Yisrael as with other Jews have had to fight persecution as was seen during the unfortunate Nigeria - Biafra war (1966 to 1970), when abandoned by all, the Ibos alone faced Britain,Russia and the rest of greater Nigeria for more than 2 years. The Ibos forged armored cars from sedans,refined petrol using the crudest home made implements, made rockets, all these while under a blockade
enforced by Nigeria, Britain, Russia, and certain Arab States, which sent military personal to the region.

The current Ibo population is estimated to be between 50 - 60 million worldwide. A brief rendition of the character and behavior of the Ibo Benei-Yisrael and Igbo in general is that of, "a habitual wanderer, a trader, but his heart is always in Igboland." A true and popular saying in Nigeria is, “If you visit anyplace and fail to see an Ibo there, leave the place with haste as it is uninhabitable.”

Religious Practices and the Return to the Israeli Way

There are two theories in regard to the Jewish heritage of the Igbos. One theory states that as early Ivrim (Hebrews)migrated into Nigeria, the moniker by which they were called by outsiders was corrupted from Ivri to Ibo or Igbo. The second theory is that Igbo society may have been already established before Jewish migrations into the region. This theory goes on to state that as Jews made their way into West Africa that they intermingled with certain Igbo ethnic groups and thus only certain Ibo families have Jewish descent while others may have converted or were influenced by the Jewish presence in the society.

Most Igbos profess a belief system about which a partial description of can be found in the writings of Olaudah Equiano titled, "Interesting Narratives of Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa the African,1789." This belief system is believed to be that of an early form of the Israeli faith before and during the early stages of when the people of Israel settled in Canaan. This system, as described by Olaudah Equiano, has for some Ibo been fused with Christianity due to the push of missionaries into West Africa. Yet, there is a minority that still cling on to the older purer version, which is believed to be the core of the Ibo Benei-Yisrael Jewish heritage.

When missionaries first made their way into West Africa the Ozubulu clan of the Ibo Benei-Yisrael resisted the Christian religion and most never converted. In recent years, a number of Ozubulu descendents are modernizing the very ancient form of the Israeli faith that their ancestors once practiced.In the Ozubulu region, they built a synagogue, even though for a lack of better terms they called it a "Traditional Church." This move took place with no outside influence, and is now causing a ripple effect within the local Ibo Benei-Yisrael communities.


Even to this day Ibo Benei-Yisrael practices are still in line with the commands given in the Torah. Even with the loss of the written record, the Ibo Benei-Yisrael people have maintained the customs and traditions of ancient Israel in an oral form. A few of these customs still in practice are: circumcision of sons on the eighth day of life, separation of women during the menstrual cycle, not cross
breading animals or plants, the prohibition of un-kosher animals for consumption, the celebration of Yom Kippur and Sukkoth, immersion for uncleanness, and Passover just to name a few. Similar to the Samaritans in Israel, and some Moroccan Jews certain Ibo Benei-Yisrael elders, believed to be descended from ancient Levites due to their Levitical practices, are distinguished within the community by donning red head coverings which only they can wear.


Though, for many Ibo Benei-Yisrael these practices have existed in their society for more than 1,000 years it was not until recently that some were able to make the more distinct connection to exactly why they were to be performed. This of course was another result of the loss of the written Torah from within the Ibo Benei-Yisrael community. According to G.T. Basdenin his book, ‘Among the Igbos of Nigeria",p. 31 noted:

“The Igbo country lies within the recognized Negro belt, and the people bear the main characteristics of that stock… There are certain customs which rather point to Levitic influence at a more or less remote period. This is suggested in the underlying ideas concerning sacrifice and in the practice of circumcision. The language also bears several interesting parallels with Hebrew idioms.” [17]

Recent archaeological discoveries in Igboukwu, a town about 30 kilometres from Onitsha by a team of researchers led by Professor Thurstan Shaw (1970) of the University of Ibadan, seem to suggest a lot more facts about the relationship between the Igbos and the Jews of old than was hitherto imagined. Like the mentioned teams of archaeologists, a fact-finding team of Israelis from King Solomon Sephardic
Federation made yet another significant discovery on the origin of the Ibos in 1997. On this Alaezi (1998) comments.

[b]According to various accounts there is a very significant concentration of the descendents of Eri,
the fifth son of Gad (see Genesis 46:16) live in Aguleri, Anambra State. Recently a very important discovery of clear evidence of Jewish ancestral origin of the Maghrebi Igbos was made in the domain of the traditional ruler of Aguleri at the instance of an Israeli team on a fact-finding mission in December 1997.What is believed to be one of the “memorial onyx stones" for the sons of Israel as HaShem commanded Moses (see Exodus 39:7) was discovered and identified as such by the team leader from the King Solomon Sephardic Federation. On the stone discovered in Aguleri engraved in a form of ancient Hebrew is the name ‘Gad’ in reminding one of the writing in Exodus 39:14. “There were twelve stones, one for each of the names of the sons of Israel, each engraved like a seal with the name of the twelve tribes.” There are also accounts of DNA testing which found the Kohen DNA marker within members of both Igbo and Yoruba peoples.[/b]

Currently there are thriving Maghrebi Igbo communities in places like Tel Aviv-Israel, south-eastern Nigeria, the United States and other places in the world. With the current resurgence of Jewish practice amongst Igbo men and women desiring to return to the international Israeli and Jewish community, the Maghrebi Igbo society is still a growing one with Hebrew and Torah study once again becoming more of the norm. There are currently more than 26 Igbo and non-Igbo Synagogues within Nigeria performing normal Shabbat (Sabbath) services and that number is growing. Further research is also being performed in and outside of Nigeria to give a more clear and concise account of the Jewish
origins of the Ibo Benei-Yisrael. It is the hope of this community of Jews that one-day they will be officially recognized under the Jewish Law of Return in Israel and abroad.

Written by Remy Ilona
The Ibo Benei-Yisrael Association of Nigeria
P.O. Box 11505
Garki-Abuja, Nigeria
011-234-8044103026
rcilona2000@yahoo.com
Edited by Ahab Eliyah
The Ibo Benei-Yisrael Association of New York
514 E. 88th 3BNew York, New York 10128

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Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by collynzov5: 10:28am On Aug 09, 2014
Absolute nonsense.

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Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by Nobody: 10:29am On Aug 09, 2014
collynzov5: Absolute nonsense.

You don't believe you are a Jew? grin

1 Like

Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by manchy7531: 10:30am On Aug 09, 2014
please as you are reading this, read with your bible..... God to genesis 46: 16, Exodus 39:7,14......

I almost cried yesterday when i saw ERI in the bible being one of the sons of Gad, who happens to be one of the twelve sons of jacob who became the twelve tribes of isreal.....

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Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by manchy7531: 10:33am On Aug 09, 2014
collynzov5: Absolute nonsense.

you have not even read it finish your are already condemning.....please just take you time to read it and open your bible to all the verses stated in the write up
Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by danot1030: 10:33am On Aug 09, 2014
Igbo a tribe wit identity problem, a sign of inferiority complex. Claims to be lagosians, claims south south also claiming to be jews, wot a confused people.

6 Likes

Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by manchy7531: 10:35am On Aug 09, 2014
According to various accounts there is a very significant concentration of the descendents of Eri,
the fifth son of Gad (see Genesis 46:16) live in Aguleri, Anambra State. Recently a very important discovery of clear evidence of Jewish ancestral origin of the Maghrebi Igbos was made in the domain of the traditional ruler of Aguleri at the instance of an Israeli team on a fact-finding mission in December 1997.What is believed to be one of the “memorial onyx stones" for the sons of Israel as HaShem commanded Moses (see Exodus 39:7) was discovered and identified as such by the team leader from the King Solomon Sephardic Federation. On the stone discovered in Aguleri engraved in a form of ancient Hebrew is the name ‘Gad’ in reminding one of the writing in Exodus 39:14. “There were twelve stones, one for each of the names of the sons of Israel, each engraved like a seal with the name of the twelve tribes.” There are also accounts of DNA testing which found the Kohen DNA marker within members of both Igbo and Yoruba peoples.

Genesis 46:16 The sons of Gad:

Zephon,[a] Haggi, Shuni, Ezbon, Eri, Arodi and Areli.

2 Likes

Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by manchy7531: 10:38am On Aug 09, 2014
Exodus 39:7

And he put them on the shoulders of the ephod, that they should be stones for a memorial to the children of Israel; as the Lord commanded Moses.

2 Likes

Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by manchy7531: 10:39am On Aug 09, 2014
Exodus 39:14

There were twelve stones, one for each of the names of the sons of Israel, each engraved like a seal with the name of one of the twelve tribes.

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Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by padeolu: 10:39am On Aug 09, 2014
Una don start again abi?
Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by Nobody: 10:39am On Aug 09, 2014
Could you guys stop this s***

1 Like

Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by Gozzzy(m): 10:42am On Aug 09, 2014
Una get time.
Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by emmatok(m): 10:46am On Aug 09, 2014
@OP

DO YOU EVEN KNOW THE MEANING OF THE WORD "JEW"
Do you know the history of the JEWs.

1 Like

Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by PAGAN9JA(m): 11:19am On Aug 09, 2014
all I can say is. .



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Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by Ab025(m): 11:54am On Aug 09, 2014
some of this Igbo people have problems o...

no be only jew....!

1 Like

Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by manchy7531: 11:54am On Aug 09, 2014

1 Like

Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by Nobody: 12:02pm On Aug 09, 2014
Same old crap.

3 Likes

Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by manchy7531: 12:28pm On Aug 09, 2014
Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by megacity: 1:15pm On Aug 09, 2014
The implication of this marvelous discovery is that all Igbos will go to heaven when they finish here on earth since the Bible is clear that all Jews Will be saved
Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by tonychristopher: 1:16pm On Aug 09, 2014
this is amichi boy talking

I think the word igbo is a corruption of Hebrew

there are so much similarities between igbos and Hebrews

but that doesn't make me an Israeli though
Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by tonychristopher: 1:21pm On Aug 09, 2014
danot1030: Igbo a tribe wit identity problem, a sign of inferiority complex. Claims to be lagosians, claims south south also claiming to be jews, wot a confused people.
confused you are

igbos are not Israeli but they have genetic and cultural relationship with them doesn't make them Jews

Afrikaans have cultural and genetic relationship with dutch but they ain't dutch

must you show your deftness in the lack of your ability to comprehend simple logic

3 Likes

Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by uzoexcel(m): 2:07pm On Aug 09, 2014
interestn analysis
Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by Nobody: 3:08pm On Aug 09, 2014
Hmm what can i say. this is really an eye opener.........


This should be on the front page.

We need to know more about our history.....I once read an article that talked about how the British made sure they hid our history.....i will look for it, once i get it, i will post it
Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by Nobody: 3:11pm On Aug 09, 2014
This is the picture of an Igbo lady's car I was driving behind sometime last week....she proudly announced herself

Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by collynzov5: 3:15pm On Aug 09, 2014
ilugunboy: This is the picture of an Igbo lady's car I was driving behind sometime last week....she proudly announced herself
You concluded she was Igbo because you saw that sticker or you actually knew her to be Igbo?

2 Likes

Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by macof(m): 3:16pm On Aug 09, 2014
megacity: The implication of this marvelous discovery is that all Igbos will go to heaven when they finish here on earth since the Bible is clear that all Jews Will be saved

Any sensible person who reads this thread particularly this post of yours can see the reason behind this Israel/Hebrew claim

1. u are a Christian, been so all ur life and all Bible bullshiit means alot to u
2. U admire the Jews to a point of worship...you can't help but wish to be like them..but hey! Why nt claim to be them?
3. You don't know your Igbo history, culture and traditions, you are a complete nuisance in matters concerning the Igbo people

In short words you are a Hebrew slave

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Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by macof(m): 3:22pm On Aug 09, 2014
I blame christianity for all this evil in the minds of young Igbo men that should possess more intelligence than this

@ AlfaSeltzer you nid to see what evil Jesus has done again grin grin

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Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by Nobody: 3:29pm On Aug 09, 2014
collynzov5: You concluded she was Igbo because you saw that sticker or you actually knew her to be Igbo?

She is....100%
Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by collynzov5: 3:32pm On Aug 09, 2014
ilugunboy:

She is....100%
How did you know that?
Re: For Those Still Doubting Igbo jewish link read Carefully by Nobody: 3:36pm On Aug 09, 2014
collynzov5:
How did you know that?

Stop asking foolish question.... who else in Nigeria openly profess being Jew.

Take it or leave but stop asking me uneccessary questions.

1 Like

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