tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1787272385367494897.post5137122469029659734..comments2023-10-26T16:38:37.859-07:00Comments on Jewish Bubba: Miracles in Israel: The Gathering of the Lost 10 Tribes I. From AfricaNadene Goldfoothttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01654020384945801380noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1787272385367494897.post-1494259513959349532016-11-03T18:05:24.667-07:002016-11-03T18:05:24.667-07:00Who survived the flood? Noah and his sons,
Shem, ...Who survived the flood? Noah and his sons,<br />Shem, Ham and Japheth. <br /><br />We are from Shem.<br />I suppose the rest of today's world are from the other 2 who aren't also from Shem. <br />.<br />Shem carried the J1 cohen gene. BUT perhaps the other 2 did not. They didn't get it passed to them. They got a mutated form of it which has morphed into other haplogroups. Jews' line differs in a few places from the Arab line so that it's possible to tell the differences today probably with some amount of work on the details.<br /><br />Just like the mt dna (female line) was not ALWAYS as it is today. It was a few other things before way in the past and slowly developed into the W of today. Take the K haplogroupof mt. Long ago it was LI/Lo, then became L2, then L3, then N then R, and finally became what we call K. <br /><br />Shem caused the nations of Elam, Asshur, Aarpachshad and Aram. Arpachshad was in turn father of Eber and ancestor of Abraham. The J1, in its original form was passed down through these men to Abraham and from him to his male descendants. <br /><br />Way way back to Noah, who probably carried a diverse group of genes, and imparted the J1 gene to Shem whereas pehaps not to the other 2 sons. It seems way back in history, that's the way it was; more of a mixture of genes. Then as time has gone by, and by intermarrying with family, certain genes become permanently imbedded, in a sense; more common, and so we have it passed in the Y haplogroup from father to son. I read that the Chimpanzee and another quite close to humans have very diverse genes. That's why I think it's possible that our ancient ancestors may have, also. <br /><br />We find that the Cohen gene can be traced back to Aaron, Moses' brother who had all the children. Moses didn't.<br />Arabs also bear this almost the same gene, so it shows that Abraham was the originator. <br /><br />Most people of today only take the Bible as a book of fiction. Believers believe it, but they are few in number. Science shows that the Bible is true, for it is following the history of our people in our DNA. Thus, J1 and J2 are found to be Cohens. It's like a miracle. My 4th cousin is a good example. He's always been a Cohen in the synagogue and is a Cohen by DNA. <br /><br />The study of the history of Y haplogroups (male line) is the key to understanding all this that we discussed. <br /><br />The book, Deep Ancestry-inside the Genographic project by Spencer Wells, author of the Journey of Man, page 214, tells of the development of J1. The first to start this, the patriarch was born around 15,000 years ago in the Fertile Crescent that includes Israel, etc. Today the M304 marker appears at its highest frequencies in the Middle East, North Africa and Ethiopia. In Europe, it is seen only in the Mediterranean region. It's subgroup J12 are found at a combined frequency of around 30% among Jewish individuals. <br /><br />J1 emerged during the Neolithic Revolution in the Middle East. They remained in the Middle East but some moved north into western Europe where it is found but at low frequencies. It went from M168 then to M89 and then M304. <br /><br />J1 and the subgroup J2 are found at a combined freequency of around 30 % among Jewish men. <br />J2 has the M172 marker that arose from the M89 lineage. It's found in North Africa, Middle East and southern Europe. Southern Europe is also where many Jews wound up being taken to Rome as slaves from Israel by the conquering Romans. <br />Nadene Goldfoothttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01654020384945801380noreply@blogger.com