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Jewish Vampires

Thursday, January 10, 2013 , Posted by ManilasMan at 11:52 AM


Are Vampires Real

The 'Rew' are members of a certain aristocracy and mafia who are Dacian and which hide within the peoples who are called Jews.
How is this done and why? 
  




An Unknown Secret Society hidden in Jewry and its Dark History


A 'Jew', is a term which in the Bible and Torah meant, a Semitic and Hebrew 'Judean, person of Judea'. . Hebrew people are any member of an ancient northern Semitic people that were the ancestors of the Jews. Historians use the term Hebrews to designate the descendants of the patriarchs of the Old Testament (i.e., Abraham, Isaac, and so on) from that period until their establishment in Palestine in the late 2nd millennium bc. Thenceforth these people are referred to as Israelites until their return from the Babylonian Exile in the late 6th century bc, from which time on they became known as Jews.
And which today means nothing of the sort..




The division of  the 'Jews'


One of the most misunderstood subjects of Bible study involves the total political division of ‘Israel’ and ‘Judah’ that occurred at the time of King Rehoboam. Before then, all twelve tribes of Israelites were a united kingdom through the reigns of David and Solomon, but after Solomon’s death they split into two completely separate and independent kingdoms, north and south. The Southern kingdom was called Judea. During the Babylonian exile, Nebuchadnezzar, the king of the Chaldeans, only deported the most prominent citizens of Judah: professionals, priests, craftsmen, and the wealthy. The "people of the land" (am-hares ) were allowed to stay. Some people were better off when Nebuchadnezzar deported the wealthy citizens, he redistributed the land among the poor. This resulted in rivalries between the two groups of Jews. Judah returned from exile in 539 BCE. Israel became a province of Persia under the priests. In 428 CE, Ezra brought the Torah from Babylon to Jerusalem, effectively marking the beginnings of modern Jewish religion. Ezra was a priest who reorganized the Israelite state politically, and organized the new religious system that included study of the Torah: he is known as the "Father of Judaism." Nehemiah, a court official in Persia, returned slightly later to rebuild the city walls and the temple in Jerusalem: this is the "Second Temple" in Jerusalem (the first temple was built by Solomon), so one speaks of "Second Temple Judaism." 

It is clear that the wealthy and professional Jews in Babylon regarded themselves as the true Jewish people. However, they intermingled with the people of Babylon and were no longer considered  next of kin by the people of Israel. This is because Moses, in leading the Israelites back from Egypt in 1491 BC., warned them to make no marriages, no alliances with the Canaanites, or they might lose their faith and decency. The Pharisees and Sadducees were not traditional Jewish priests, because of the Talmuds, written in Babylon in the fifth century CE. They said that the designation “Jew” belonged exclusively to the southern kingdom of Judah, the very word “Jew” having been derived from “Judah.”  And so technically, only the kingdom of Judah was “Jewish” and the other tribes of Israel have no right to call themselves Jews. 


Enter - Marginal Notes

So Jewish history, then, has two poles during and after the exile: the Jew in Babylon and the Jews who remain in Judah. This is how Israel as a race and a nation first split into a division of  'Jews'

Between 332-167 BCE, after the conquest of Alexander, Israel and Judea were ruled first by Egypt and then by Asia Minor. In 167 BCE, Antiochus IV. The Roman general Pompey subdued Judea in 63 BCE (after which it became a client kingdom). In the year 39 BCE. the Idumean, Herod "The Great" (c73-4 BCE) was appointed the "confederate king" of the Jews by the Roman senate. His years of seeking favor with Rome, always siding with the winners of the empire's internal squabbles, finally paid off. Herod then, with some Roman support, took control of Jerusalem two years later and started his reign as King of the Jews in 37 BCE. 

At the time of Jesus; Judea was ruled by the Edomite dynasty of the Herods - the Edomites, were descendants of Esau, described as a people God hates (Malachi 1:2,3), which were converted as a group to become 'Jews' by John Hyrcanus in about 120BC.   According to Flavius Josephus the Jewish historian who lived just after the time of Christ, 'They (Edom) were hereafter no other than Jews' (Josephus Antiquities of the Jews, XIII ix 1; XV vii 9).   Cecil Roth in his Concise Jewish Encyclopedia (1980) says ..John Hyrcanus forcibly converted [Edom] to Judaism. From then on they were part of the Jewish people..' (p 154). According to the Jewish Encyclopedia (1925) "Edom is in Jewry" (Volume 5 p. 41).   

The Pharisees, repeatedly described by Jesus as 'hypocrites' (Matthew 23) and as 'serpents, brood of vipers', were associated with the Herodian Edomites (Matthew 22:15,16).   Ezekiel prophesied that Edom would usurp the place of true Israel (35:10).    Jesus, although born in Bethlehem was not considered a Jew, Jesus was a Galilean (Matthew 26:29, John 7:52) and his disciples were Galileans (Acts 1:11, 2:7).   Galilee was separated from Judea by Samaria. The Samaritans thought he was a Jew (John 4:9), but the Jews thought he was a Samaritan (John 8:48).   Herod and the Jewish leaders were ALL appointed by Rome and despised by the common people who saw them as occupiers and tax collectors.  Pilate at the crucifixion described Jesus of Nazareth as (Jesus the Israeli King of the Judeans).


A further division of the 'Jews... 


Resulted from the fact that the Christian Israelis did not fight for the 'Jews' during the Roman and Jewish wars and the destruction of Jerusalem. The destruction of Jerusalem was viewed by the Gentile Christians from a different angle. To them it was proof of God's punishment to the Jews for rejecting the savior. The Siege of Jerusalem in the year 70 AD was a decisive event in the First Jewish-Roman War. It was followed by the fall of Masada in 73 AD. 

The Roman army, led by the future Emperor Titus, with Tiberius Julius Alexander as his second-in-command, besieged and conquered the city of Jerusalem, which had been occupied by its Jewish defenders in 66 AD. The city and its famous Temple were destroyed.The Roman destruction of Jerusalem made the Jews even more eager to foster unity among themselves to the exclusion of others. The Nazarenes with their associations Gentiles began to be shunned by the orthodox Jews. Eventually a test clause was inserted, around 90 CE, in the Jewish synagogue worship to exclude Nazarenes from them. By the time of the second Jewish revolt in 132-135 CE the break between the Nazarenes and Judaism was completely severed.

In 115, the Levantine Jews revolted against emperor Trajan supposedly when the emperor Hadrian forbade circumcision, Simon bar Kochba started a war, which lasted until 136. which resulted in the end of the Israeli 'Jewish' nation of the first century.

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