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Permalink Reply by Alice C. Linsley on October 16, 2011 at 3:28pm Hello! I missed our conversations and I am glad that you have written again.
You would be interested in the conversations I'm having about the Yoruba and ancient biblical tribes. You will find some of that, with links here:
http://biblicalanthropology.blogspot.com/2011/10/jebusites-extant-b...
http://yemitom.wordpress.com/2011/09/23/127/
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2011/09/origins-of-circumcision.... (read the comments here from a Nigerian.)
I send you my kind regards,
Alice C. Linsley
Permalink Reply by Alice C. Linsley on October 16, 2011 at 3:33pm Digare,
You will find the linguistic evidence connecting Yoruba and ancient Kush/Egypt here:
http://www.raceandhistory.com/cgi-bin/forum/webbbs_config.pl/nofram...
An ancient African name for God as Father is "Ausa" and is sometimes spelled "Asa." The Asante tribe bears this name. Asa-nte means "the people of Asa." The Egyptian Asa-ar means the Serpent of Asa/Osirus/or Father God.
Permalink Reply by Alice C. Linsley on October 16, 2011 at 9:04pm Digare,
The connections to Kush/Egypt are further confirmed here:
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2009/07/ruler-priests-early-miss...
Tha Hapiru were sarki. They spread their religious beliefs and practices westward into Nigeria and Benin and eastward into the Tigris-Euphrates Valley and as far as Orisha, India. Read more about their ancient Dominion here:
http://jandyongenesis.blogspot.com/2009/03/afro-asiatic-dominion.html
Best wishes to you and to your family.
Permalink Reply by joseph rogers on October 17, 2011 at 4:40am Thought provoking research and discussion that would make an educational tv documentary.In a world that enjoys
touting the differences between and within groups of humanity,African-Asian religious & language studies
are intellectually needed in a world like this.
Permalink Reply by Alice C. Linsley on October 18, 2011 at 12:25pm 
Permalink Reply by A. Ashkuff on October 20, 2011 at 12:33am Felt kinda like a reference manual, which is a little lengthy for my taste, but I really liked this.
Particularly compelling was, "The Hebrew ‘rison adam’ = ancestral man is ‘adamu orisa’ = ancestral"
Very useful to me, as someone who does a lot of ethnographic work with Abrahamic theologians.
Anyway, please excuse my profound ignorance here, but how does "Afro-Asiatic" conceptually differ from the more common phrase "Near East?" Just wondering.
--- Ashkuff | http://www.ashkuff.com | Venturing out of “armchair” scholarship and into action, one anthropologist tackles business, occultism, and violence! He gets spooked and roughed up a lot.
Permalink Reply by Alice C. Linsley on October 20, 2011 at 12:53am Not all peoples living in the Near East speak languages in the Afro-Asiatic language group, nor do they fit the Afro-Asiatic haplotypes.
Thanks for commenting. What work are you doing with Abrahamic theologians? It sounds interesting.
A. Ashkuff said:
Felt kinda like a reference manual, which is a little lengthy for my taste, but I really liked this.
Particularly compelling was, "The Hebrew ‘rison adam’ = ancestral man is ‘adamu orisa’ = ancestral"
Very useful to me, as someone who does a lot of ethnographic work with Abrahamic theologians.
Anyway, please excuse my profound ignorance here, but how does "Afro-Asiatic" conceptually differ from the more common phrase "Near East?" Just wondering.
--- Ashkuff | http://www.ashkuff.com | Venturing out of “armchair” scholarship and into action, one anthropologist tackles business, occultism, and violence! He gets spooked and roughed up a lot.

Permalink Reply by A. Ashkuff on October 20, 2011 at 1:46am So, for you, it's not a particularly geographic phrase?
That... makes a lot of sense, actually.
Don't know why it didn't occur to me on my own.
Anyway, to answer your question, during my last semester at UF, I spent a lot of time mediating public forums between Jewish, Christian, and Islamic scholars. Also, a lot of the Open Air Evangelicals I've studied fancy themselves theological scholars.
--- Ashkuff | http://www.ashkuff.com | Venturing out of “armchair” scholarship and into action, one anthropologist tackles business, occultism, and violence! He gets spooked and roughed up a lot.
Alice C. Linsley said:
Not all peoples living in the Near East speak languages in the Afro-Asiatic language group, nor do they fit the Afro-Asiatic haplotypes.
Thanks for commenting. What work are you doing with Abrahamic theologians? It sounds interesting.
A. Ashkuff said:Felt kinda like a reference manual, which is a little lengthy for my taste, but I really liked this.
Particularly compelling was, "The Hebrew ‘rison adam’ = ancestral man is ‘adamu orisa’ = ancestral"
Very useful to me, as someone who does a lot of ethnographic work with Abrahamic theologians.
Anyway, please excuse my profound ignorance here, but how does "Afro-Asiatic" conceptually differ from the more common phrase "Near East?" Just wondering.
--- Ashkuff | http://www.ashkuff.com | Venturing out of “armchair” scholarship and into action, one anthropologist tackles business, occultism, and violence! He gets spooked and roughed up a lot.
Permalink Reply by Alice C. Linsley on October 20, 2011 at 2:01am 
Permalink Reply by A. Ashkuff on October 20, 2011 at 2:12am Whether they like it nor not, it makes great conversation material. One OAE I worked with tried to support his views with archaeological and ethnographic evidence... with mixed results.
--- Ashkuff | http://www.ashkuff.com | Venturing out of “armchair” scholarship and into action, one anthropologist tackles business, occultism, and violence! He gets spooked and roughed up a lot.
Alice C. Linsley said:
Evangelicals generally dislike my research because it doesn't support their particular ideological narrative, which is strongly influenced by Dispensationalism.
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