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The Jews Are Not A Race!
By Dr.
Alfred M. Lilienthal
Dr. Alfred M. Lilienthal, historian,
journalist and lecturer, is a graduate of Cornell University and Columbia Law
School. During the Second World War, he served with the US Army in the Middle
East. He later served with the Department of State, and as a consultant to the
American delegation at the organising meeting of the United Nations in San
Francisco.
Since 1947, he has been at the forefront in the struggle for a balanced US
policy in the Middle East. He is the author of several acclaimed books on the
Middle East, including The Zionist Connection. He now lives in Washington, DC.
On December 18, 1993 Dr. Lilienthal celebrated both his 80th birthday and the
40th anniversary of his first book, What Price 'Israel'? Dr Lilienthal, who is a
courageous anti-Zionist Jew, was joined by more than 200 guests who travelled
from all over the United States to attend. The following excerpt is taken from
this first book, What Price 'Israel'?
16-02-2008
Today, to trace anyone’s descent to ancient Palestine would
be a genealogical impossibility; and to presume, axiomatically, such a descent
for Jews, alone among all human groups, is an assumption of purely fictional
significance. Most everybody in the Western world could stake out some claim of
Palestinian descent if genealogical records could be established for
two-thousand years. And there are, indeed, people who, though not by the widest
stretch of imagination Jewish, proudly make that very claim: some of the oldest
of the South’s aristocratic families play a game of comparing whose lineage goes
farther back into ‘Israel’. No one knows what happened to the Ten Lost Tribes of
‘Israel’, but to speculate on who might be who is a favored Anglo-Saxon pastime,
and Queen Victoria belonged to an ‘Israelite’ Society that traced the ancestry
of its membership back to those lost tribes.
Twelve tribes started in Canaan about thirty-five centuries ago; and not only
that ten of them disappeared - more than half of the members of the remaining
two tribes never returned from their “exile” in Babylon. How then, can anybody
claim to descend directly from that relatively small community which inhabited
the Holy Land at the time of Abraham’s Covenant with God?
The Jewish racial myth flows from the fact that the words Hebrew, ‘Israelite’,
Jew, Judaism, and the Jewish people have been used synonymously to suggest a
historic continuity. But this is a misuse. These words refer to different groups
of people with varying ways of life in different periods in history. Hebrew is a
term correctly applied to the period from the beginning of Biblical history to
the settling in Canaan. ‘Israelite’ refers correctly to the members of the
twelve tribes of ‘Israel’. The name Yehudi or Jew is used in the Old Testament
to designate members of the tribe of Judah, descendants of the fourth son of
Jacob, as well as to denote citizens of the Kingdom of Judah, particularly at
the time of Jeremiah and under the Persian occupation. Centuries later, the same
word came to be applied to anyone, no matter of what origin, whose religion was
Judaism.
The descriptive name Judaism was never heard by the Hebrews or ‘Israelites’; it
appears only with Christianity. Flavius Josephus was one of the first to use the
name in his recital of the war with the Romans to connote a totality of beliefs,
moral commandments, religious practices and ceremonial institutions of Galilee
which he believed superior to rival Hellenism. When the word Judaism was born,
there was no longer a Hebrew-’Israelite’ state. The people who embraced the
creed of Judaism were already mixed of many races and strains; and this
diversification was rapidly growing…
Perhaps the most significant mass conversion to the Judaic faith occurred in
Europe, in the 8th century A.D., and that story of the Khazars (Turko-Finnish
people) is quite pertinent to the establishment of the modern State of ‘Israel’.
This partly nomadic people, probably related to the Volga Bulgars, first
appeared in Trans-Caucasia in the second century. They settled in what is now
Southern Russia, between the Volga and the Don, and then spread to the shores of
the Black, Caspian and Azov seas. The Kingdom of Khazaria, ruled by a khagan or
khakan fell to Attila the Hun in 448, and to the Muslims in 737. In between, the
Khazars ruled over part of the Bulgarians, conquered the Crimea, and stretched
their kingdom over the Caucasus farther to the northwest to include Kiev, and
eastwards to Derbend. Annual tributes were levied on the Russian Slavonians of
Kiev. The city of Kiev was probably built by the Khazars. There were Jews in the
city and the surrounding area before the Russian Empire was founded by the
Varangians whom the Scandinavian warriors sometimes called the Russ or Ross
(circa 855-863).
The influence of the Khazars extended into what is now Hungary and Roumania.
Today, the villages of Kozarvar and Kozard in Transylvania bear testimony to the
penetration of the Khazars who, with the Magyars, then proceeded into
present-day Hungary. The size and power of the Kingdom of Khazaria is indicated
by the act that it sent an army of 40,000 soldiers (in 626-627) to help
Heraclius of the Byzantines to conquer the Persians. The Jewish Encyclopedia
proudly refers to Khazaria as having had a “well constituted and tolerant
government, a flourishing trade and a well disciplined army.”
Jews who had been banished from Constantinople by the Byzantine ruler, Leo III,
found a home amongst these heretofore pagan Khazars and, in competition with
Mohammedan and Christian missionaries, won them over to the Judaic faith. Bulan,
the ruler of Khazaria, became converted to Judaism around 740 A.D. His nobles
and, somewhat later, his people followed suit. Some details of these events are
contained in letters exchanged between Khagan Joseph of Khazaria and R. Hasdai
Ibn Shaprut of Cordova, doctor and quasi foreign minister to Sultan Abd al-Rahman,
the Caliph of Spain. This correspondence (around 936-950) was first published in
1577 to prove that the Jews still had a country of their own - namely, the
Kingdom of Khazaria. Judah Halevi knew of the letters even in 1140. Their
authenticity has since been established beyond doubt.
According to these Hasdai-Joseph letters, Khagan Bulan decided one day:
“Paganism is useless. It is shameful for us to be pagans. Let us adopt one of
the heavenly religions, Christianity, Judaism or Islam.” And Bulan summoned
three priests representing the three religions and had them dispute their creeds
before him. But, no priest could convince the others, or the sovereign, that his
religion was the best. So the ruler spoke to each of them separately. He asked
the Christian priest: “If you were not a Christian or had to give up
Christianity, which would you prefer - Islam or Judaism?” The priest said: “If I
were to give up Christianity, I would become a Jew.” Bulan then asked the
follower of Islam the same question, and the Moslem also chose Judaism. This is
how Bulan came to choose Judaism for himself and the people of Khazaria in the
seventh century A.D., and thereafter the Khazars (sometimes spelled Chazars and
Khozars) lived according to Judaic laws.
Under the rule of Obadiah, Judaism gained further strength in Khazaria.
Synagogues and schools were built to give instruction in the Bible and the
Talmud. As Professor Graetz notes in his History of the Jews, “A successor of
Bulan who bore the Hebrew name of Obadiah was the first to make serious efforts
to further the Jewish religion. He invited Jewish sages to settle in his
dominions, rewarded them royally… and introduced a divine service modeled on the
ancient communities. After Obadiah came a long series of Jewish Chagans (Khagans),
for according to a fundamental law of the state only Jewish rulers were
permitted to ascend the throne.” Khazar traders brought not only silks and
carpets of Persia and the Near East but also their Judaic faith to the banks of
the Vistula and the Volga. But the Kingdom of Khazaria was invaded by the
Russians, and Itil, its great capital, fell to Sweatoslav of Kiev in 969. The
Byzantines had become afraid and envious of the Khazars and, in a joint
expedition with the Russians, conquered the Crimean portion of Khazaria in 1016.
(Crimea was known as “Chazaria” until the 13th century). The Khazarian Jews were
scattered throughout what is now Russia and Eastern Europe. Some were taken
North where they joined the established Jewish community of Kiev.
Others returned to the Caucasus. Many Khazars remarried in the Crimea and in
Hungary. The Cagh Chafut, or “mountain Jews,” in the Caucasus and the Hebraile
Jews of Georgia are their descendants. These “Ashkenazim Jews” (as Jews of
Eastern Europe are called), whose numbers were swelled by Jews who fled from
Germany at the time of the Crusades and during the Black Death, have little or
no trace of Semitic blood.
That the Khazars are the lineal ancestors of Eastern European Jewry is a
historical fact. Jewish historians and religious text books acknowledge the
fact, though the propagandists of Jewish nationalism belittle it as pro-Arab
propaganda. Somewhat ironically, Volume IV of the Jewish Encyclopedia - because
this publication spells Khazars with a “C” instead of a “K” - is titled “Chazars
to Dreyfus”: and it was the Dreyfus trial, as interpreted by Theodor Herzl, that
made the modern Jewish Khazars of Russia forget their descent from converts to
Judaism and accept anti-Semitism as proof of their Palestinian origin.
For all that anthropologists know, Hitler’s ancestry might go back to one of the
ten Lost Tribes of ‘Israel’; while Weizmann may be a descendant of the Khazars,
the converts to Judaism who were in no anthropological respect related to
Palestine. The home to which Weizmann, Silver and so many other Ashkenazim
Zionists have yearned to return has most likely never been theirs. “Here’s a
paradox, a paradox, a most ingenious paradox”: in anthropological fact, many
Christians may have much more Hebrew-’Israelite’ blood in their veins than most
of their Jewish neighbors.
Race can play funny tricks on people who make that concept the basis for their
likes and dislikes. Race-obsessed people can find themselves hating people who,
in fact, may be their own racial kith and kin.
Submitted by a Mujahid
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