Friday, May 8, 2026

Levi's Discovery of DNA Connection

 Nadene Goldfoot                                  

     Dinah, sister of Levi who punished he who did her harm and all his men besides.  

Anatole A Klyosov, a genetic researcher, has discovered that 

the data show that a common ancestor of Cohanim (Jewish High Priest

haplogroup J1 lived 1070±170 ybp, while a common ancestor of

Cohanim in haplogroup J2 lived 3300±400 ybp.

YBP, or ybp, stands for years before present, a common term in science, archaeology, and genealogy to estimate when an event occurred relative to today. The "present" is typically standardized to Jan 1, 1950, reflecting when carbon dating became common. 

Many of our descendants of Jews who are Cohens in the synagogue  show they are of the J2 variety while a few even seem to come from the J1 line as well.  

Haplogroups J1 (J-M267) and J2 (J-M172) are brother clades that descend from a common ancestor, Haplogroup J (J-P209), separating approximately 30,000 years ago. While they share an ancient West Asian/Fertile Crescent origin and parallel migration routes, they represent distinct paternal lineages that separated before the Neolithic era and show different regional concentrations today. Shared Ancestry: Both are branches of the parent Haplogroup J, which is estimated to be roughly 20,000–40,000 years old.

Possible error here found 3:56pm:  "DNA studies suggest the paternal line of the tribe of Levi (Levites) traces back to a common ancestor approximately 3,300 to 3,500 years ago (roughly 1300–1500 BCE). This timeline aligns with the biblical period of the Exodus from Egypt and the establishment of the Aaronic priesthood."  Whew!  

                     A few of the tribe of Levi

Herbert David Hochfeld, a relative of my first cousin through his mother's line, is a J1. That distance of 1,070 years ago of 1950 was only about 1,000 years ago in the year 956 or so.  .  

  To give clarity, our biblical records show that Moses, who I say is a J2,  lived from about 1391 BCE to 1271 BCE according to Biblical records.  The + of 170 years takes care of bringing the time even closer to Moses, I believe. That was about 3,417 years ago  or in the year Moses was born in Egypt to Amram and Jochebed of the tribe of Levi, one of the 12 tribes of Jacob and their 3rd son.  Levi seems to be the line of many found Cohens of J2  that have survived to take their part in the synagogue. The scientist said J2 was 3300 years ago and we could play with 400 more years.  That would bring us to the year of 1294 BCE. So their records of DNA coincides with our Biblical story of Moses!!!!! 

Levi's history is special.  Levi and his brother, Simeon avenged the dishonoring of his sister, Dinah who was thought to have been raped by  slaying all the men of Shechem (Gen.34).  To their surprise, their father, Jacob,  yelled at them who forecasted that their descendants would be scattered throughout Israel (Gen49:7)  

Jacob's 1st wife was Leah who had 6 sons  who were Reuben, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issachar, and Zebulun.

Nevertheless, in the 2nd Temple Period when all contact with gentile women was eschewed (avoided intentionally) , the act of Levi and Simeon was extolled (praised).  Levi had one daughter, Jochebed (mother of Moses) and 3 sons;  Gershom, Kohath who had a son Amram who had a son, Moses and Merari.  Levi died in Egypt at the age of 137.  J1's have joined the Cohen line somewhere along the line much later.  The Second Temple period in Jewish history began around 538–516 BCE. It commenced with the Return to Zion following the edict of Cyrus (538 BCE) and the completion of the rebuilt Temple in Jerusalem (c. 516 BCE), marking the end of the Babylonian captivity and lasting until the Temple's destruction in 70 CE

Anatole A. Klyosov is a Russian-American scientist who worked in the fields of physical chemistry, chemical kinetics, enzyme catalysis, industrial biochemistry, chemical engineering, cancer research, and DNA genealogy. In 1989 Klyosov immigrated to the US.

Add-on: 1:10pm: Hmmm.  If J1 and J2 separated 30,000 years ago with J2 being the oldest, then our Cohen line from Levi is indeed an old one, but this J1 line now found and also happens to have people in the Cohen line gives me pause to wonder how they could connect as Cohens with such a long space between them.  30,000 years ago would have been the year 27974 BCE.  Some say that the Exodus took place in 1579 BCE to 1539 BCE.  

Assyrians took away Jews from the 11 other states with their attack in 721 BCE.  They deported 27,290 Israelites to Assyria.  Among them must have been Levites with Cohen ancestors.  

The 2nd Temple period 586 BCE allows for a division of Jews with some staying in Babylonia, and writing the more popular Talmud and those going on to Jerusalem and writing one, also.  

I have a theory.  From the time of this beginning and ending gap between J1 and J2, they were still using all the Levis and up to today.  They hadn't followed the male line, but the female.  The husband of a female from a Levite would be the next leader in the tribe and take over their duties.  This was a period when people realized how important the female was.  The religious practice never stopped;  it was just done by substitutes because they had run out of males of that line and the females had to be considered.  This was during any rites from Abraham on, though Judaism took place only with following the Laws of Moses.  That's why they couldn't follow the J2's until they met up again.  Somehow, they ran into a man who carried J2 at the time men took over again.  

Wikipedia

Resource:

https://www.ancient-origins.net/news-evolution-human-origins/levites-dna-0018037  new resource 3:56pm 

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?tab=wm#inbox/FMfcgzQgLXvQFslmdWPfwXrZZnZbjDGh

Tanach,; the Torah (Old Testament) The Stone Edition,  Hebrew on one side, English on other side






















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































The French Mandate Never Talked About in Middle East

 Nadene Goldfoot                                              

             French Mandate For Syria and Lebanon in 1922

France held the mandate over Syria (which then included Lebanon) following World War I, formally assigned by the League of Nations on September 29, 1923. Though British troops initially occupied the area in 1918, the 1916 Sykes–Picot Agreement and 1920 San Remo Conference finalized the region as a French sphere of influence..  

  Britain got the mandate for Ottoman Mesopotamia (modern Iraq), Palestine and Transjordan, while France got Ottoman Syria (modern Syria and Lebanon and parts of modern Turkey.  The French mandate lasted from 1923 to 1946 and 6 states were created by them.  

 While the mandate framework was designed for long-term administration, it officially lasted from 1923 until Syria's independence was recognized, with final French troops withdrawing in 1946, 2 years ahead of the British over Palestine."

  • State of Aleppo: Existed from 1920–1924, on Jan 1, 1925 it joined with the State of Damascus to create the State of Syria. Majority of the population were Sunni Muslims. Its capital was Aleppo, which also included Christian and Jewish communities. The state also had Shiite, Alawite, Kurd and Assyrian minorities.
  • State of Damascus: Existed from 1920 to 1924, on Jan 1, 1925 it joined with the State of Aleppo to create the State of Syria. The population was 75% Sunni, with Christians being the next largest group at 11%. Other minorities included: IsmailisMutawalis, Jews, Alawites, Druze and a large number of foreigners. Its capital was Damascus, which would become the capital of the State of Syria.
  • State of Jabal Druze: Existed from 1921-1936, after 1936 it joined the Syrian Republic. It was set-up as a state for the Druze, who are neither Muslims nor Christians but have a religion based on the teachings of Plato, Aristotle, Socrates, Akhenaten, Hamza, and Al Hakim. Its capital was As-Suwayda.
  • State of Alawites: Existed from 1924-1936, after 1936 it also joined the Syrian Republic. It was created for the Alawites, followers of a sect of Shia Islam. Its capital was Latakia.
  • State of Greater Lebanon: Existed from 1920-1926, succeeded by the Lebanese Republic. Created by the French as state for the Maronite Christians of Lebanon, but it also included a large number of Muslims. Its capital was Beirut, which had a large Muslim population.
The League of Nations mandate system  was supposed to differ from colonialism, with the governing country intended to act as a trustee until the inhabitants were considered eligible for self-government. At that point, the mandate would terminate and a sovereign state would be born.
                                                    

With the defeat of the Ottomans in Syria, British troops, under General Sir Edmund Allenby, entered Damascus in 1918 accompanied by troops of the Arab Revolt led by Faisal, son of Hussein bin Ali, King of Hejaz. Faisal established the first new postwar Arab government in Damascus in October 1918, and named Ali Rikabi a military governor. The Arabs hoped, with faith in earlier British promises, that the new Arab state would include all the Arab lands stretching from Aleppo in northern Syria to Aden in southern Yemen.  On 8 October, French troops disembarked in Beirut and occupied the Lebanese coastal region south to Naqoura (the western zone), replacing British troops there. The French immediately dissolved the local Arab governments in the region. France demanded full implementation of the Sykes–Picot Agreement, with Syria under its control. On 26 November 1919, British forces withdrew from Damascus to avoid confrontation with the French, leaving the Arab government to face France.  Just as they have done in other situations like WWII, the French leave earlier than expected.  Here the British didn't pull out till the mandate ended  on May 14, 1948.  
               Dr Weizmann and King Faisal in Paris 1919 

At the Paris Peace Conference which established the terms of peace following World War I, formally opened on January 18, 1919, in Paris, France. While major decisions were largely finalized by the signing of the Treaty of Versailles on June 28, 1919, the conference officially continued until January 21, 1920.  Faisal found himself in an even weaker position when the European powers decided to renege on the promises made to the Arabs. Throughout the early period of colonial administration, collaboration persisted between British and French authorities in the region, in fulfillment of economic interests of both parties in the region, such as in the establishment of a customs-free zone for goods produced within the British and French controlled territories.               
                                          
 Fayṣal bin Ḥusayn bin ʻAlī al-Hāshimī; 20 May 1885 – 8 September 1933) was a Hejazi statesman who served as the King of Iraq from 23 August 1921 until his death in 1933. Faisal was born in MeccaOttoman Empire (in present-day Saudi Arabia), in 1885, the third son of Hussein bin Ali, the Grand Sharif of Mecca.

A member of the Hashemite family, he was a leader of the Great Arab Revolt during the First World War, and ruled as the unrecognized King of the Arab Kingdom of Syria from March to July 1920 when he was expelled by the French.

Unrest erupted in Syria when Faisal accepted a compromise with French Prime Minister Clemenceau. Anti-Hashemite demonstrations broke out, and Muslim inhabitants in and around Mount Lebanon revolted in fear of being incorporated into a new, mainly Christian, state of Greater Lebanon. A part of France's claim to these territories in the Levant was that France had been acknowledged as a protector of the minority Christian communities by the Ottoman Empire.In Beirut, the Christian press expressed its hostility to the decisions of Faisal's government. 

Lebanese nationalists used the crisis against Faisal's government to convene a council of Christian figures in Baabda that proclaimed the independence of Lebanon on 22 March 1920.  Arriving in Lebanon, the French were received as protectors by many Maronite Christians, who saw their rule as a step toward autonomy, but in the rest of Syria, the French faced widespread resistance.

Resource:



Thursday, May 7, 2026

The People of Judah Among The Countries

 Nadene Goldfoot                                                  


On his deathbed, Jacob prophesied that Judah would be the leader among his brothers, likened to a lion, with a permanent royal scepter [Genesis 49:8-10]. Judah’s descendants would rule, defeat their enemies, and produce a ruler (Shiloh) to whom all nations would be obedient. Judah's father was Jacob, son of Isaac, son of Abram (Abraham).  son of Terah, son of Nahor, etc, and onto Shem, son of Noah.   They had no idea that our DNA showed the same line recorded in the cells of our body.  We can prove this today.                                                    

Judah's mother was Leah on the left with  6 of Jacob's children.  He was the 4th son.  It was he who persuaded his brothers to sell Joseph to passing Ishmaelites rather than leave him to die in a pit (Gen.37)He received his father's patriarchal blessing (Gen.49-:8), though Reuben, Simeon and Levi were older. 

The land received by the tribe of Judah was one of the largest in Canaan and it eventually absorbed Simeon in the Negev Desert, and Benjamin 12th son of Jacob-2nd son of Rachel who died in childbirth.   This tribe was placed on land between Ephraim and Judah which included Jerusalem.  King Saul was a Benjamite.  The land was a bone of contention between Israel and Judah after Saul died, partitioned between the two eventually, then included in Judah.

Out of this tribe was born David who had a leading position over the other 11 tribes as King.  When the kingdom split after the death of Solomon, Judah supported his son, Rehoboam (933-917 BCE)  and was predominant in the southern kingdom of Judah.   

Punishment by the Greeks and Romans, a practice copied from the Persians was crucifiction.  It was unknown in Jewish law, and here it was was introduced by the Romans;  the usual punishment given to rebels.  Many Jews suffered this fate under Roman rule.  
 

We Jews come from Judah, which was later called Judaea by the Romans who took Judah in 70 CE. 

Jews are the only people who remained really faithful to the Law of Moses and believed in only ONE G-D purely;  no siblings or children of G-D like the Greeks and Romans did.  The rest of the world was a pantheon of Gods that people believed in and worshipped, along with some animals, at times.  

70 CE was the year of Roman putting an end to the Jewish Rebellion which started in  63 BCE with Pompey, the Roman General who involved the Romans into the warfare between the Hasmoneans, Hyrcanus and Aristobulus, to occupy Jerusalem, the capital of Judah.  Then the Parthians in 40 BCE captured it which was followed by a long siege to Herod in 37 BCEwho then ruled it as a Roman vassal until his death in 4 BCE and his son  Archelaus who took over in 6 BCE for his father. 

Pontius Pilate was a procurator who crucified Jesus in 29 CE. which started a new calendar.   Roman procurators then took over until the reign of Agrippa in 41-44 CE who began to build a 3rd wall to the north. 

The Arch of Titus in Rome, one can see it today,  showing how the Jews, now slaves, had to carry the spoils of the Temple back to Rome.   

Roman rule was unbearable and the Jewish rebellion started in 66 CE.  After 3 years of independence, the city of Jerusalem was besieged by the Romans under Titus and fell in 70 CE.  They starved the people of Jerusalem for a long time, according to Josephus Flavius (b: 38-d:100 CE), a Judean Jew of priestly family .  The Temple and most of the buildings were destroyed and a Roman garrison was built on its ruins.  The Jews were not only taken as slaves, but were forced into manual labor in building, and like the Christians, faced death by animals for entertainment.  

Some Jews escaped from Jerusalem and fled to Spain, forced to leave and went to Portugal, forced to leave.  Following their "Golden Age" in Spain, Jews were expelled in 1492 (and Portugal in 1496), triggering a mass diaspora known as the Sephardic dispersion

They fled to North Africa, the Ottoman Empire (Turkey/Balkans), Italy, Germany,  the Netherlands, and Eastern Europe and into Russia and that area.  and eventually the New World, forming global communities that maintained Spanish-influenced cultures.  The last place was the USA with Jewish immigration to the USA occurred in several major waves, starting in 1654 with Sephardic Jews in New Amsterdam (New York), followed by a large wave of German Jews in the mid-19th century, and a massive influx of over 2 million Eastern European Jews between 1880 and 1924.  

Germany had Jews living there since the 8th and 9th century who had a pro-Jewish policy and encouraged settlement of Jews with the object of developing trade.  By 9th century they were living in Augsburg and Metz, by the 10th, at Worms, Mainz, Magdeburg, Ratisbon, etc.  The densest settlement was in the Rhineland of Mainz, Speyer, Worms, Cologne, etc.  Crusaders massacred the Jews throughout the Rhineland and adjacent areas.  Yiddish came out of this experience, a mix of German and Hebrew and a dash of others.  

Russia, etc,  introduced pogroms to any anti-Semitic acts which drove Jews to think once more about Judea, their ancestral home.  1880 saw Aliyah of Jews go to live there by boat, and they were followed up by more and more.  

The Immigration Act of 1924 (Johnson-Reed Act) severely restricted Jewish immigration to the United States by establishing strict national-origins quotas based on the 1890 census. This act intentionally targeted southern and eastern European immigrants, including Jews, effectively ending the era of mass migration and closing a major door for those fleeing persecution.