The Hebrew inscription 'BRHY' (Ebri) found on an incense burner at Adi Kaweh in the Ethiopian highlands, dated to approximately 800 BCE, provides archaeological evidence supporting the claim that the true Jerusalem is located in Ethiopia rather than the Middle East. This inscription, combined with other artifacts including sacrificial altars, blood channels, pillar traditions, and Beta Israel oral history spanning over 2,000 years, forms a cumulative pattern of Israelite cultural and religious presence in the Ethiopian highlands during the biblical period.
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Adi Kaweh: The Hebrew InscriptionAdded:
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This journey uncovers how the Spanish and Portuguese [music] Jews described as dark-kinned Semitic shared one bloodline. Chased by the Inquisition, many fled to Portugal, then beyond, [music] preserving their heritage across borders. But the story doesn't end in Iberia. Across from West Africa, black Jews built synagogues, kept Torah, and passed down the laws of Moses, the Lima in southern Africa, [music] the Ebo in Nigeria, the Beta Israel in Ethiopia.
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Salama family. Salama. How y'all doing today? Hope you're blessed and highly favored.
So, one thing I want to do is before I get started is uh give you a caveat, right? And uh when I say that, I'm talking more about, you know, these end time prophecies that's happening and all the things that's occurring like I don't know if y'all heard of the screw tape worm that's in uh cattle in Texas now. Um there's all kind of plagues happening, all kind of crazy stuff going on. And um also as I mentioned in the the previous show is the uh falling away happening in the Israelite community.
And you know, one of the things uh you know it's sort of you can sort of recognize the obvious falling away, right? Like denying the New Testament, right? Denying Yahusha as Messiah.
That's that's sort of the obvious ones, but the less obvious uh falling away is denying the deity of the Messiah.
Now, here's a post that I put out and uh dealing with the spirit of Antichrist.
And a lot of people don't realize that the spirit of Antichrist is denying the deity of the Messiah.
I bet you didn't know that, did you?
Give me a one if you knew that the spirit of Antichrist is denying the deity of Messiah. Give me a two if you didn't because a lot of people don't realize denying the deity of Messiah is the spirit of antichrist and we are in the last days.
Okay. So if you look here, it says in 1 John 4:2, "Every spirit that confesseth that Yahusha, the Messiah, is come in the flesh is of God."
Verse three, but every spirit that does not acknowledge Yahusha, which is what?
Come in the flesh. Is not from God. This is what the spirit of antichrist. Now pay close attention here. It says the phrase Yahusha came in the flesh shows that something more than ordinary human birth happened. Every man is born in flesh. So John would have no reason to make the test of truth unless Yahusha existed before taking on flesh.
Yahusha existed before taking on flesh.
This lines up with John 1:1 and John 1:14 where the word was Elohim and the word was made flesh. It also agrees with First Timothy 3:16 which says God was manifest in the flesh. John is not merely saying Yahusha had a human body.
He's testifying to the mystery of Yahwh revealed in flesh.
That is why denying this is dangerous because it does not simply misunderstand Yahusha's humanity. It attacks the identity of the Messiah himself. So according to scripture, if you do not believe that Yahusha is Yahwh in flesh, according to first John 4:2, you're dealing with the spirit of Antichrist.
I didn't say it. Scripture says it. Now, we're going to move on. Uh, I just had to give that warning out there because there's a lot of y'all that's uh dealing with the spirit of the Antichrist. I ain't going to lie, it ain't funny, but it's true.
So, what we're going to do today, we're going to talk about this find that is uh in Ethiopia, right? Which once again, you know, I've already proved it to myself 100%. That's the location. But you know, I like to share new findings that, you know, come up and we're going to talk about it and, you know, the importance of it and how the Middle East, you know, the so-called Jerusalem, the fake Jerusalem in the Middle East, right, cannot be the place, right? It just cannot, it has no historical value whatsoever. But let's continue.
So this is the Adi Kawei, [clears throat] the Hebrew inscription and the Ethiopian highlands.
The Adi Kawei Wukro discoveries in Tigra, Ethiopia deserve far more attention than they received.
These finds bring together ancient incense, burners, sacrificial altars, blood channels, pillar-like memorial stones, and inscriptions written in South Semitic script. Now, one of the things I want to emphasize right quick is that, you know, in my opinion, a lot of the talk that has to deal with that, let's say, deal with languages and scripts is a misdirection. Why? Because they mclassify things. In my opinion, I'm not an expert. I'm not a linguist, but you know, when they classify things as Aramaic versus Hebrew versus Ga versus Semitic, right? All of that is is is a facade. It's a it's a categorization that is full of deception, right?
So one inscription in particular often called the second Sabian inscription at Adi Kawei has major implications because it appears to mention both Sabans and Hebrews in the same ancient Ethiopian highland setting. Now if you read my book a lot of this stuff will make sense, right? Is it it validates what my book already says, right? So Adekawei is a small hilltop village in the Tiglay region of northern Ethiopia, right? It holds massive significance in biblical archaeology. The history of Queen of Sheba, right? They admit that.
They admit the Ark of the Covenant got a history with that, right? In local torrenia language, the name translates to village of rocks. Now, how come there's all of these biblical scenarios in this land, but none in the Middle East? Come on. We ought to be grown up children now. I mean, well, let's say not children, but adults, grown from children to adults where we can see these things for what they are. [snorts] They cannot have Jerusalem be in Africa because then that guess what? Then that means the Jews are Africans. Ain't no cotton picking African. That's that's the FBA Israelites, right?
So, we have these Sabian inscriptions, right? And the archaeologists discovered ancient Sabian stone and incense burners. And that's what we're going to talk about today, this incense burner.
And you know, a lot of people will ignore these things, right? And like for instance, you know, I've had some Gentiles, they were like attacking tail ministries and stuff on Facebook. I didn't even see it personally. And uh, you know, they never attacked the teachings. They never attacked the historical evidence. is they never attack anything uh you know let's say from a either hermeneutic or historical viewpoint and why is that because they have nothing right it's nothing but racism is nothing but discrimination is nothing but hatred of black folks right and so we got to understand for us if you see what's happening today right like the deletion of one of the our young ca what's his name cassers I think the young kid who got killed we have to separate from these folks. I know y'all don't want to hear that. Some of y'all, you know, cuz y'all love Babylon, right?
But Israel got to separate. But that's what we did before. That's what the Most High called us to do. Why? Because we were what? A peculiar people, a called out people set apart for the work of Yahweh. It's not until Christianity came then everybody was the same and everybody universal and we all should get along, right? Yeah. Cyrus, thank you. Uh, Sister Telicia, you know, I'm like, they keep killing our people. I'm sick of it personally. Um, but you know, the Most High going to step in very soon in my opinion.
But Israel, you know, whether they sleep or woke, they're not waking up and, you know, until the Most High forces them to wake up. There's a few of us, a remnant who are awakened, right? And we have been planting the seeds, right? one water and Yahw gives the increase. So that's just the way it is. But I've come to the conclusion that you know it's not going to be by us forcefully uniting. It's going to be divine. Right? So let's continue.
So this matters because the inscription is dated by Bernard Leman to approximately 800 B.CE placing it in the biblical first temple period. Lima's paper identifies the object as the second incense burner of Adi Kawei mentioning red Sabian and black Hebrew.
The table in the paper gives the key line as MLKW demat DMT, SBHY which is Sabian, WB RHY which is Hebrew, right? So with notes connecting SBHY to Sabans and BHY/BHR Y to Hebrew. Now Hebrew, right, that don't look like Hebrew to you because you know you're looking for the vowel points which would be like I eb, right?
So here's this the script here, right?
It says the original states SBA SBY subans which Sch Snider says was incorrect and should have been written on the first instance burner. I you know whatever that is. I think that guy is right. Uh BH Y the original states BHR Y Hebrew which Schneider says was incorrect and should have been written like that. Whatever. Okay. So basically they said that it's a Sabian script but the word is Hebrew and this is what I was saying in the beginning in my opinion there's no difference between Hebrew there's no difference really between ga other than dialect some people disagree the you know the expert linguist I'm sure would disagree but to me it's a it's a dialect dialectical issue and the reason I say that because even when you read Gaas right and you interpret Ga is and you know translate Ga is a lot of the words are similar to Hebrew right same meanings same word different script right so I've come to the conclusion that it's all a game that's my opinion so when we say oh this is Hebrew or oh this is Aramaic or oh this is Arab Arabic or oh you know what I'm saying a lot of these languages are just a different dialect of it and different cultures took took it and they transformed and became their own classific classified languages. But the root right is a Canaanite base anyway, right? Hebrew is from Canaanite anyway.
It's the Canaanite base anyway. So it's all a facade, right? It's misdirection, mislication, right? Not telling you the true history of why these languages started to diverge.
So what an incense burner is? A incense burner is a ritual object used to burn aromatic substances such as frankincense, myrr, resins, woods, herbs or sacred blends. In ancient temple systems, incense was not decoration.
Incense marked prayer, purification, sanctity, priestly service, and covenant worship. In biblical worship, incense belong to the formal priestly system.
So this is the the uh stones right the incense burners right so incense burners at adi kawe being cleaned a recent decorative white paint 2009 all right so this is the incense burner that we're talking about how come we don't find these things in the Middle East family some of y'all still believe the Middle East our land I'll never understand why but we find all of these archaeological evidence is where in Ethiopia what are the odds so Exodus 30:7 78 and Aaron shall burn there on sweet incense every morning when he dresseth the lamps he shall burn incense upon it and when Aaron lightth the lamps at evening he shall burn incense upon it a perpetual incense before Yahwh throughout your generations what an incense burner is continue so when Inscribed incense burners appear in ancient Ethiopia attached to altars, sacrifice channels, and Semitic inscriptions. The discovery lands directly inside the world of biblical style rituals. So, we see a biblical environment. Not only do we have a history of Hebrews in the land, right?
What we call Ethiopia today used to be called, you know, Abbiscinia, right?
Axom, stuff like that, right? We have all of this stuff in these biblical rituals and styles and artifacts. It continues, right? It I don't see how anybody can even disagree that this is the land, right? Especially after you read my book.
So the script image and why it matters.
So here's the incense and here's the script. So Sabian script on the second incense burner. This image shows the copied southsmitic script from the second incense burner. The characters are usually called Sabian because the script belongs to the ancient South Arabian, South Semitic writing family.
So, it's just a classification.
I'm convinced that it is just another form of Hebrew. Call it a Canaanite, whatever you want. Canaanite language, whatever you want to call it, Afroasiatic.
All right, they classify all of this stuff. That label describes the script tradition. It does not automatically define the ethnicity or covenant identity of the people using the script.
So we have these different scripts which you would expect based upon what the Bible tells us about the nation of Israel and what was happening during that time. But we're going to get there.
So this distinction matters. A people can use the dominant prestige script of a region without becoming a different nation. Later African used Arabic script which I would say is another form of Hebrew. Europeans used Latin script and many ancient peoples used imperial writing systems without losing their own identity. In the same way a Hebrew or Israelite population in the Ethiopian highlands could use a Sabian style script while preserving Israelite identity. I'm of the opinion that a lot of these scripts, a lot of these uh languages are variations of a Canaanite language, which is what Hebrew is, which is what Aramaic is, and all of these things, right? So, so transliteration table for the second instance burner. This table gives the key line MLK WMT.
They pronounce that DMAT, right? SBH Y sub B Rhy, which is Hebrew, right? So the important word is WB brhy especially the core consonants br and brh y. This is extremely close to the Hebrew ethnonym right. So that's where we start putting the vowels back in. Right? So brh y is without it without the vowels. That's the consonants. Ebri is with the vowels put in there.
So ancient cemetic writing often records consonants more prominently than vowels.
Can we say PaleoHebrew?
When vows are removed, ebri and brhy sit in the same linguistic field. The difference does not break the argument.
It strengthens the need for comparison across related Semitic languages.
Hebrew, Sabian, and Ga are all Semitic languages. Now, if they're all Semitic languages, right? Hebrew, Sabian, and Ga, they're all Semitic languages. Then their foundation is Semites or Semitic language. Therefore, they have a root belief system in term well let me let me rephrase that they have a root language system with similar words similar meaning meanings right so Hebrew sabina and gay are all smitic languages they share continental roots grammatical patterns and overlapping religious vocabulary they got a lot of the same meanings that means the inscription should not be framed as Sabian versus Hebrew as if those are two sealed off worlds the better understanding Is this Sabin may describe the script, political culture or regional prestige layer. Hebrew may describe the people or covenant identity inside that mixed highland civilization.
That is exactly what one should expect in ancient Israelite society. Well, why would we expect this in an Israelite society?
Biblical Israel was not an isolated ethnic camp sealed off from surrounding peoples. Foreigners dwelt among Israel, attached themselves to Israel, and lived under Israel's law. Exodus 12:49, one law shall be to him that is homeborn, and unto the stranger that jojinth among you. So you would expect to have these mixture of Semitic languages.
Numbers 15:15, one ordinance shall be both for you of the congregation and also for the stranger that adjointh with you. A mixed deach Sabian Hebrew ritual culture in Ethiopia fits the biblical pattern. Israelite identity could exist alongside attached foreigners, regional allies, and related Semitic peoples. The presence of Sabian forms does not cancel Hebrew identity. It creates the expected mixed cultural setting. So this is what we should see. This is what we should expect should expect. Not just Hebrew by itself, but this mixture of let's say a Semitic languages as they like to refer to it or Canaanite language, right, that they like to refer to. We we should expect a mixture of this. Why? Because we got different ethnic groups, right?
And it's sort of like uh we all speak English, right? You go to New Orleans, you speaking a whole different English.
Yeah, baby. Over there, baby. On the neutral ground. Yeah. You know what I'm saying? Then you go to New York, you got a different dialect, right? It's still English. They would classify some of those as different languages.
This image shows the physical incense burners as I showed in the beginning at Adi Kawei being cleaned of later decorative white paint. The image is important because it moves the discussion away from theory alone. These are real stone ritual objects, not abstract symbols on the page. So the whole point being is okay, we have the incense burners, we have the scripts, but now we have these scripts and the incense burners within a religious context. Not only do we have it in a religious context, we have it in a society that has a history of having Hebrews there or Israelites. Right? So, so the physical incident burners uh adew continued the stones show pedestal style ritual construction, carved decoration, altar-like form and a clear connection to sacrificial temple activity.
These objects belong to the same sacred environment as the inscriptions that gives Hebrew reading real archaeological weight. So it gives more importance or or weight to the idea that it is Hebrew that brhy is Hebrew right cuz it's not separate from the incense it's not separate from the rituals it's not separate from the altars it's not separate from the sacrificial system so key points the Hebrew reading gains more importance because it appears in a real ritual complex It is one thing to say a word on a page might mean Hebrew. It is much stronger to say a word that may mean Hebrew appears on a actual incense burner from an ancient sacrificial site in Ethiopia surrounded by altars, blood channels, and Semitic religious architecture. That does not mean the photo alone proves anything. I mean everything. It means the physical context supports the interpretation and makes the Hebrew reading harder to dismiss as abstract speculation. So it gives val validation to the interpretation that it means Hebrew.
So the blood connect collection channel.
So here we see collection of for blood from the Sabian altar sacrifices at Wukro one site at a Kawei University Mckllis department 2009. So collection for blood from sacrifices at Wukro one adekawi. This image shows what the caption identifies as a blood collection feature from altar sacrifices at the Wukro one site adekawi. The structure appears to include a basin and channel system. That is important because biblical sacrifice centered on blood handling altar service and priestly ritual. Blood was not treated casually in Israelite worship. Blood belonged to covenant, atonement, purification, and altar procedure.
This does not mean every sacrificial altar in Ethiopia was automatically Israelite. The stronger point is cumulative. When blood channels, incense burners, smitic inscriptions, Hebrew associated wording, and Israelite oral tradition all appear in the same region, the pattern becomes too specific to dismiss. This is Israelite worship. This is Israelite artifacts when all of these things come together and form this pattern of Israelite beliefs.
So the large altar at Wukro 1. So being alter at Wukro one, this image shows a large stone altar from the Wukro 1 at a cow area. The altar includes a central upper basin, carved architectural panels, an inscription band and a channel described as connected with blood from sacrifices. So here we see the Sabian alter one site adawi lo Yodit's alleged grave with channel on right for block for from sacrifices.
So Yoded, Yodit, also called Guded or Judith, is the legendary 10th century Ethiopian queen. Often blamed in Ethiopian tradition for overthrowing or severely weakening the Axomite dynasty.
Some traditions connect her with beta Israel, Israelite kingdom of Simeon, while others portray her differently. So her exact identity is debated. In this image, Yod's alleged grave means the site is locally or traditionally associated with her burial, not proven beyond dispute. The Adekawei Ruk Wukro excavation report identifies the place as Makab Gawe and the altar shown is a Sabian altar found beneath or near that alleged grave area. Once again, don't be deceived by the classification of a Sabian script or a Sabian altar, right? They include all of that. But remember, Israel had foreigners living amongst them. You had Israelite culture, Israelite traditions mixed with foreigners who became, let's say, for all practical purposes, converts.
So the large altar one continued, "The altar proved that the adekwe was not just a writing site. It was a ritual site. It has structured worship, formal stone architecture, inscriptional dedication and sacrificial infrastructure. This supports the idea that adekwe may represent a regional high place or sanctuary, not necessarily the temple site."
Okay. So, we got to realize that some of these places could have been sanctuaries or synagogues or, you know, high places, things like that, right?
Because before Yahweh gave Israel the command to only go to Jerusalem, Israel had high places in different areas until the Most High said, "The only place you can worship is in Jerusalem."
How come we don't find that in the Middle East?
So Yeha cannot fit the biblical location of Jerusalem or the temple. Yeha is an important preaximite site. But Yeha does not fit the biblical location of Jerusalem or the central temple. Yeha belongs in the conversation as a related debian cultural center or synagogue. Not as the final location of Zion or the house of Yahweh. Now this distinction is very important.
Yeha is famous for his monumental temple architecture and southsmitic cultural setting that makes Yeha valuable for miss for understanding the world around ancient Ethiopian highland worship. But the biblical temple must fit a much more specific profile as you see in my book.
It must connect to the chosen place Zion, the royal city, the Davidic line, priestly centralization, and the national memory of Israel. Now, how come we don't find this stuff in the Middle East? How come what we find is Catholic churches and and uh a Guehan spring and not a Guehan River? I'm just asking.
Right.
So, Yeha does not carry that full biblical profile. Yeha looks like a major regional temple center or synagogue in the broader highland civilization. It helps prove that ancient Ethiopia had powerful Semitic temple culture during the correct period, but it does not satisfy the requirement for Jerusalem. So people who say Yah is Jerusalem, they don't know what they're talking about. Okay? They have no idea. They haven't done the research.
The Adekahe wukro material works differently. It contains sacrificial systems, incense burners, inscriptions, and the debated Hebrew term brhy. It strengthen it strengthens the larger Ethiopian highlands model without forcing yehigh into a role it cannot carry. In other words, Yeha supports the ancient highland sacred world. Adekawi supplies sharper Israelite evidence. The true Jerusalem must be identified by the full biblical pattern, not by the biggest surviving temple ruin. And that's what I got in my book that shows you the full pattern that shows you without a doubt that Jerusalem is in the highlands of Ethiopia. I mean, sorry, I don't y'all can't win. Y'all can't win if y'all still trying to push the the Middle East. You can't, right?
Incense burner 2, the Hebrew inscription. The image may be the most important of the set. It shows the inscription bearing incense burner itself.
The inscription is not a random scratch.
It is formal, repeated, and organized.
The object is ritual. The context is sacrificial. The date is early. The language is Semitic. The debated word resembles Hebrew. That combination carries weight. The inscription br to demand serious attention, especially because vows are not the controlling issue in ancient Semitic inscriptional writing. The continental structure is the heart of the matter.
The Beta Israel oral tradition. The oral history of Beta Israel places them in Ethiopia, including the Simeon Mountains region for over 2,000 years. That places their self understanding at least within the second temple era and possibly points to an older Israelite presence.
So why all of this stuff adds up to the same location, but we can't get this kind of evidence in the Middle East?
This oral tradition matters because it is not standing alone. It now sits beside early Semitic inscriptions, first temple era incense burners, sacrificial altar systems, blood collection channels, pillar traditions, and a debated BRHY Hebrew reading. Is it all coincidence?
That creates convergence. Oral memory and archaeology begin pointing in the same direction.
Now, the pillars and and Abselon's memorial pattern. Now, I'm I'm going show you a clip from one of my older videos. It's just five minutes. Well, five almost six minutes of the Abselon pillar for those who are new. So, the standing stones and pillar-like structures tied to these sites also deserve attention. Biblical Israel used stones and pillars as witnesses, memorials, and name preserving markers.
So, I'm going to show y'all that uh clip. It's like six minutes. and we'll come back to this.
Abselon. Now, this is important, family.
This is important.
In 2 Samuel 18:18, Abselon creates a pillar for himself.
During his lifetime, Abselon had taken a pillar and erected it in the king's valley as a monument to himself. For he thought, "I have no Abselum's son to carry on the memory of my name." He named the pillar after himself, and it is called Abselon's monument to this day.
I told you the attributes got to be there, family. The attributes got to be there. Where you going with this, Jacob?
Stick with me. Why did Abselon create this pillar for himself? If you read the context of this scripture, you will see that he created this pillar because he was going to die.
He was going to die during his lifetime. What? While he was alive, Abselon what? Had taken a pillar and what? Erected it for himself. While he was alive, why does it matter while he was alive? Because he was going to die. He had no offspring.
He had no offspring. So he said in the king's valley, he's going to bring build a pillar because he don't have a son to build the the pillar for him since he's a king. So Abselon going to build this pillar for himself.
So if you read the context of the scripture, you will see that he created this pillar because he was going to die and because he had no son to carry on his name. The kings erected pillars throughout the Israelite Empire. These are like headstones for graves or markings of great events. In Genesis 35:14, we see our forefather Jacob put up a pillar where Yah had talked to him.
Jacob set up a stone pillar at the place where Yah had talked with him. And he poured out a drink offering on it. He also poured oil on it. Why don't we see these pillars in the Middle East? Come on now. Why don't we see pillars in the Middle East? If our forefathers built pillars, where are they? Where are they?
They talk about the Valley of the Kings in in the modern Israel, but there are no pillars. Why don't we see these pillars in the Middle East? We talking about generations and generations of kings, generations and generations of people, generations of elite. Where are the pillars?
So, why don't we see the pillars in the Middle East location of the so-called Jerusalem? Why are all of these biblical things in modern Ethiopia? It is because it is the true Jerusalem. I told you I'm 100% convinced. They ain't going to convince me otherwise.
How is Jerusalem in the land of hell?
That's like asking why does the sun shine?
That had nothing to do with nothing.
Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology. You see this pillar on the ground family?
There's a bunch of pillars all over Ethiopia. Why? Because that was part of our culture. It's all in the Bible.
Amite stale. True treasures of human craftsmanship. The organization and technological skills of Aximmites were represented by the construction of Stale. These monuments were created in line of older African traditions and made of single pieces of local granite.
They were cut out and transported from quaries located at these four kilometers away Gabadra Hill to the location where they needed to be erected.
In most cases, the stale can we say pillars mark elite and royal burial tombs. What? In most cases, the stale mark what? elite in royal burial tombs. What did Abselam say? I need to create my own pillar cuz I don't have no son to build one for me.
Or just stale appeared to decorate the graves of the Axomite kings. Can we say valley of the kings? How come we don't see those quote unquote stale or pillars in modern Israel?
The monoliths are spread over multiple terrains including fields in the northern and southeastern sides of the city. The good state or can we say pillar? The good ice day field and the central stle park. The latter began to emerge as a regional ceremonial settlement center around 100 AD. 100 AD and houses the finest manufactured and decorated monolith of Axom. Can we say Israel?
Can we say Israel?
Abselon was a king. He had a pillar made for him. Or can we say Staley?
It ain't over there in the Middle East.
Stale an upright stone slab or colum typically bearing a commemorative inscription or relief design often serving as a gravestone.
That's why we get the little stones over our little graves.
Israelite tradition.
A pillar. a tall vertical structure of stone, wood, or metal used as a support for a building or an ornament or monument.
So, fam, that shows you that, you know, all of these things that we're seeing uh is proving what I've been saying about the location of the real Jerusalem, right? Not the fake place in the Middle East, which is the setup for the antichrist, right? There's a lot of setups for the Antichrist.
Let's see here. Oh, I ended up closing out.
All right. So, 2 Samuel 18:18. Now Abselon in his lifetime had taken and reared up for himself a pillar which is in the king's deal. For he said, I have no son to keep my name in remembrance.
And he called the pillar after his own name and it is called unto this day abselon places. So what we saw in Ethiopia with their pillars is the same reason that Absalon created his pillars.
We don't see that in the Middle East. We don't see that in South Africa. We don't see that in the Congo, but we do see it in Ethiopia. We we find so many biblical presence of of uh cultural things in the highlands of Ethiopia that, you know, I just don't understand why some people still hold on to the dirt.
So that verse shows that pillars could function as memorial objects tied to name, memory, identity, and inheritance.
When ancient Ethiopian highland sites preserve pillars alongside sacrificial altars and Semitic inscriptions, the connection to biblical Israelite tradition becomes stronger. The pillar evidence does not stand by itself. It belongs to the same pattern.
So why this goes beyond coincidence? One artifact can be explained away. One inscription can be debated. One oral tradition can be minimized. One altar can be relabeled. But this case is not built on one item. The Ethiopian highlands preserve.
First temple era incense burner, South Semitic inscriptions, a debated Hebrew ethnonym, sacrificial altar system, blood channels, pillar traditions, beta Israel oral history, and a landscape full of ancient sacred architecture and a whole bunch of stuff that I cover in my book.
The evidence increasingly validates the research model that biblical Israel must be reconsidered through the Ethiopian highlands. Yehi is part of that larger sacred world. But Yeha cannot be forced into the role of Jerusalem or the temple. The stronger case comes from the total pattern. Adekai Wukro, the Simeon tradition, the inscriptions, the incense, the altars, the pillars, and the survival of Israelite memory in Ethiopia.
This is no longer a loose coincidence.
It is a pattern demanding a serious re-examination of where biblical Israel actually stood. Personally, I don't think, you know, my research can be refuted. I really don't.
Conclusion.
The second Sabian inscription that added Kawei cannot be evaluated in isolation.
It must be weighed alongside the full body of evidence already presented in true Jerusalem, the lost kingdoms of the Israelites. the incense burners, the sacrificial altar, the blood channel, the pillar traditions, the Hebrew-like BRHY Ebri connection, the beta Israel oral history, and the reported temple artifacts preserved around Lake Tana all belong to one larger pattern. Now, if you don't know what I'm talking about about the artifacts, you can go watch some of my older videos or you can buy my book. I talk about it in there as well. That pattern points back to the Ethiopian highlands. The modern Middle Eastern location promoted at Jerusalem does not present this same convergence.
It does not produce the same living Israelite population continuity. It does not preserve the same Beta Israel oral tradition rooted in the Simeier mountains for over 2,000 years. It does not contain the same highland sacred geography, the same ancient Ethiopian Semitic ritual world, the same Lake Tana temple object tradition, or the same cluster of inscriptions, incense burners, sacrificial systems, and pillar evidence tied together in one African highland landscape. So you you you would have a hard time trying to convince anyone, I think, at this point, right, that the dirt in Middle East is our land. They just don't fit. But it's not that hard to understand that the Ethiopian highlands is where Jerusalem is. I mean, it's perfect. It fits everything, right?
No other place in Africa brings all of these elements together either. The Ethiopian highlands preserve the people, the geography, the sacred memory, the inscription, the altar system, the incense tradition, the pillar tradition, and the temple object tradition. Lake Tana and his church or temple related artifacts including objects associated with biblical temple practice add another layer to the case. These are not random similarities scattered across unrelated locations. They are concentrated signs inside the same geographic and cultural world. Like I said, if you want to understand what I'm talking about about Lake Tana, you can go watch some of the older videos. I cover it there. I also cover a lot of more stuff in my book that the evidence is overwhelming. I mean, be honest with you, I don't I don't even see why people even debate it. This is why adde matters so much. The inscription is not just an ancient text. The incense burner is not just a ritual object. The altar is not just a stone structure. The blood channel is not just an archaeological feature. Together they show an ancient Semitic sacrificial system in the Ethiopian highlands during the biblical period in the same region where Israelite oral tradition survived among the beta Israel. Now the interesting thing is and I I've dis I've discussed this in older shows how the beta Israel location and their kingdom that was in the Simeon mountains tie back to the warning that Yahusha gave that when you see Jerusalem surrounded by armies flee to the mountains. wood mountains, right?
It's the Simeon mountains. But if you look at uh the Middle East, wood mountains, where did they go? Where did they flee to? You can't find it anywhere, right? Cuz there are no mountains.
But yet, there's a history of beta Israel in the Simeon mountains for over 2,000 years. I'm just saying.
At this stage, the evidence has moved beyond coincidence. The cumulative case has reached the level of hard serious proof within this research framework.
The Ethiopian highlands contains what the supposed Middle Eastern Jerusalem lacks. A living Israelite people, ancient symitic inscription, temple style artifacts, sacrificial architecture, sacred geography, and historical memory preserved in one continuous land. The conclusion is direct. The discoveries at Adekahei strengthens the argument that Ethiopian highlands were not a side chapter in Israelite history. They were the center of it. In other words, this is the true land. This is the holy land. I just wanted to share that with y'all. You know, some more information. You know, I find it interesting. I like history and uh I like to find out the truth. A lot of people don't like the truth. Um but I like the truth.
So, if y'all want to support us, you can. You can go to tailministry.com, click on the donations tab and give. You can do cash app dollar sign tw7101.
Also, you can like, share, and subscribe. That helps out as well, right? You and make sure you know you you share this with your family because we're we're living in the last days.
We're living in some interesting times.
And uh I'm I'm like I've said before in other videos, I personally think there's not much time left. A lot of deception, the falling away. Uh I I expect some other major things to happen very very soon. So um that's all I got family.
Just wanted to share that with y'all. Uh love y'all with the love of the Messiah.
Peace and blessings. Israel, your captivity is ending. Well family, the wait is over. The moment has arrived where truth emerges triumphant from the shadows of history.
Introducing the true Jerusalem, the lost kingdoms of the Israelites. The groundbreaking work by me, Yakov.
A journey into the past that reshapes the future.
I cut through centuries of misconceptions with piercing clarity.
This book delivers a compelling case packed with evidence that commands attention and going to [music] get some respect. Come with me for a second, family, and discover how these thrilling civilizations flourished, [music] protected by towering highlands and sustained by advanced engineering.
Some have asked, "Where is Jerusalem? Is it the land in the Middle East?" I say, "No, it is in the highlands of Ethiopia."
With hours of groundbreaking research, this book brings in a new revelation and it will transform your understanding of African history and its connection to the ancient world. It's going to remove from your mind the conditioning by the [music] Romans of what has really happened to our past.
Come with me family [music] to the Ethiopian highlands and find out why this is our land. Why things have been hidden and obuscated for centuries?
We are royalty, children of the most high. What kind of land do you expect us to have? Dried up dirt in the Middle East or land flowing with rivers? A land full of beautiful animals [music] flowing with milk and honey. Don't miss out on this monumental unveiling. Grab your copy [music] today and stand on the side of truth.
Visit amazon.com or www.tail ministries.com [music] to purchase your book and join Yakobve's teachings on Tail [music] Ministries.
Family, your journey to a hidden history has now begun.
So family, get your copy of True Jerusalem, the lost kingdoms of the Israelites today. Journey to the heart of Africa, where history and legend converge to reveal the forgotten kingdoms of the Israelites and the true location of Jerusalem.
>> [music] >> Hey, hey, hey. [music] >> [music] >> KT. [music]
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