What Happened to Cain?
by Pastor Bertrand L. Comparet
"What happened to
Cain?" is a question in the minds of many believers and non-believers as
well. The Bible does not trace Cain very far, and yet the fact is that Cain
is a definite historical character of whom you can learn as much outside the
Bible as you can from the Bible itself.
Do not let anyone
tell you that these Old Testament people are myths. They are not. They are
definitely a part of history. The Bible states that Adam and Eve were
expelled from the Garden of Eden; EASTWARD, evidenced by the Cherubim being
placed at the east of the Garden to guard it against their possible return.
If they had gone to
the south or to the west, guards at the east side would not have meant a
thing. Obviously, they went to the east; and, as we learned when we were
studying Noah's flood,
Adam's
migration actually took him and Eve into the Tarim Basin, in what is today
called Sinkiang, in the extreme southwestern part of China. The migration
undoubtedly took a considerable period of time; as it was a very long way to
walk, but they had time in those days, for Adam lived over 900 years.
In the area where
they settled, Eve gave birth to two children: Cain and Abel. Much is lost in
the mistranslations in your King James Version. Genesis 3:15 establishes the
theme of the entire Bible, and all the rest of it is a development of that
theme.
It is also a history
of our Israel people. Eventually, God called before Him, Adam, Eve and Satan
to give an accounting of their misdeeds. Please do not get the idea, as your
King James version and all the traditional translations tell you, that Satan
was a snake; a long scaly thing, wriggling along the ground, because that is
not what the Hebrew says. The word they mistranslated snake is "nachash"
(naw-khawsh) whose root meaning is "enchanter" or "magician."
Aryan Ancestors on
the Silk Road
Political
correctness has gotten a slap in the face recently from a number of
archaeological discoveries in the Orient which indicate that the founders
of many Eastern civilizations, which are so revered by trendy New Age types
who despise anything White and European, were in fact racial Aryans. One
famous example is the country of Iran, which takes its name from its
original conquerors; until 1978 one of the many formal titles of the Shah
was "Lord of the Aryans."
It has long been
known that around the first century A.D. the northwestern part of China was
inhabited by a Caucasian people who spoke a language called by scholars
Tocharian.
In the early part of
this century, French and German archaeologists excavating in the northwest
provinces discovered extensive written manuscripts in this language, and
when they cracked the code, so to speak, they were astonished at the
similarities between this supposedly isolated Oriental tongue and ancient
Germanic and Celtic languages.
Now the PC academic
and scientific establishment who want to rewrite history to make it
"Afrocentric" and get rid of "dead White European males" have gotten another
kick in the pants from the truth. Recent excavations in the Tarim Basin in
Xinjiang province have uncovered more than 100 naturally mummified corpses
of people who lived there between 4,000 and 2,400 years ago, INDICATING THAT
THE ARYAN INCURSION INTO ASIA WAS IN FACT FAR EARLIER AND FAR MORE EXTENSIVE
THAN ANYONE PREVIOUSLY BELIEVED.
The bodies were
amazingly well preserved by the arid climate, and according to the New York
Times "...archaeologists could hardly believe what they saw." The mummies
had long noses and skulls, blond or red hair, thin lips, deep-set eyes, and
other unmistakably Aryan features.
Dr. Victor H. Mair
of the University of Pennsylvania said, "Because the Tarim Basin Caucasoid
corpses are almost certainly representatives of the Indo-European family,
and because they date from a time period early enough to have a bearing on
the expansion of the Indo- European people from their homeland, it is
thought that they will play a crucial role in determining just where that
might have been." [Our own understanding is that the ancient homeland of
Cain's people was by the shores of Lake Baikal in what is now Russia, from
whence Cain began his migrations untold millennia ago when his people were
all one nation known as "The Children of the Sun". As to where he came from
before he was hanging around the lake; We believe that these people were
descendants of Cain who was the son of Adam, who was also a white man]
One such mummy of a
teenaged girl with blond hair and blue eyes, found in a cave, has become
quite a tourist attraction in Beijing. She has been nicknamed "The Lady of
Tarim" and she is on display to throngs of museum visitors in the Chinese
capital.
Apparently she was a
princess or a priestess of some kind over 3,000 years ago, for she was
buried in fine embroidered garments of wool and leather, along with
beautiful jewelry, jars and ornaments of gold, silver, jade and onyx. Her
remains are in such a remarkable state of preservation that the dead girl
looks as if she were just sleeping.
"Diffusionism can
now be taken seriously again," chortled one historian, Michael Puett of
Harvard. Diffusionism is the theory that the ostensibly advanced Middle
Eastern and Oriental civilizations of the ancient world all benefitted from
contact with Aryan migrants, merchants, wandering tribes, etc. and acquired
much of their knowledge and attributes from these contacts; this theory can
actually explain quite a lot about history, from the Indo-European roots of
the Hindustani language to the Quetzalcoatl legend of the Aztecs to the
mysterious ruins of Zimbabwe which were so clearly never built by blacks.
Diffusionism has
been replaced over the past twenty years by the new, Politically Correct
dogma of "independent invention," which holds that there was no contact at
all between White people and any Asian or pre-Columbian civilization, or if
there was it was bad because all White males are "imperialist exploiters".
The PC theory
teaches that EVERYTHING in ancient non-White societies was invented by the
indigenes, EVERYTHING WITHOUT EXCEPTION, no ideas or influence from European
contact, nothing good or beneficial at all even if there was any White
contact, which there wasn't because White males are not the world-exploring
hotshots they are supposed to be, so there! I guess we made up Leif Ericson
and Magellan was really a monkoid. Don't laugh; We have heard both of those
idiocies advanced seriously by "Afrocentric historians."
According to the
independent invention theory, the list of things non-Whites have
independently invented includes the dozens of Asiatic dialects from Hindu to
Punjabi to Uighur, all clearly based on a common Aryan root language; pure
coincidence, say the PC profs! The agricultural techniques of the Aztecs and
Incas such as crop rotation and terrace farming, so similar to ancient Roman
and medieval European practices; bah, say the intellectual gangsters of
liberalism, the Indians made it up themselves!
The Mayan pyramids
and calendar and astronomy, almost duplicates of Greek and Egyptian
knowledge (Egyptians who were NOT in any way, shape or form Negroes!) those
are all products of the brilliant Maya civilization alone, according to the
official line. The same Mayas' predilections for cannibalism and sacrificing
young children by drowning them in sacred wells is ignored.
The blue eyes and
broken Welsh language of Missouri's Mandan Indians; the Celtic-style
megaliths and stone round towers of New England; the Viking ruins of L'Anse
Aux Meadow in Newfoundland; the runic inscriptions on Connecticut's Dighton
Rock and the Minnesota Kensington stone; Shaka the Zulu's organization of
his impis based on Napoleon's system which he got from a French hunter and
trader who was a Napoleonic veteran; the stone ruins of Zimbabwe so utterly
unlike anything ever found anywhere else in black Africa and resembling
nothing so much as a Bronze Age Celtic fort; the long Aryan features of the
Easter Island statues---nyet, no, nada, nein, no way! According to the
left-wing academic establishment, NOTHING was ever learned by non- Whites
from contact between Third World cultures and Aryan man. How PC academia
will explain away those hundred blond-haired, blue-eyed mummies from China I
don't know, but I'm sure it will be good. Looks like us Children of the Sun
got around in the old days.
The Mummies of
Xinjiang
In the dry hills of
this central Asian province, archeologist have unearthed more than 100
corpses that are as much as 4,000 years old. Astonishingly well preserved -
and Caucasian. One glimpse of the corpses was enough to shock Victor Mair
profoundly. In 1987, Mair, a professor of Chinese at the University of
Pennsylvania, was leading a tour group through a museum in the Chinese
city of Urumqi, in the central Asian province of Xinjiang, when he
accidentally strayed into gloomy, newly opened room.
There, under glass,
lay the recently discovered corpses of a family - a man, a woman, and a
child of two or three - each clad in long, dark purple woolen garments and
felt boots. "Even today I get chills thinking about that first encounter,"
says Mair. "The Chinese said they were 3,000 years old, yet the bodies
looked as if they were buried yesterday."
But the real shock
came when Mair looked closely at their faces. In contrast to most central
Asian peoples, these corpses had obvious Caucasian, or European, features -
blond hair, long noses, deep-set eyes, and long skulls."I was
thunderstruck," Mair recalls. "Even though I was supposed to be leading a
tour group, I just couldn't leave that room.
The questions kept
nagging at me: Who were these people? How did they get out here at such an
early date?" The corpses Mair saw that day were just a few of more than 100
dug up by Chinese archeologists over the past 16 years. All of them are
astonishingly well preserved. They come from four major burial sites
scattered between the arid foothills of the Tian Shan ("Celestial
Mountains") in northwest China and the fringes of The Taklimakan Desert,
some 150 miles due south.
All together, these
bodies, dating from about 2000 B.C. to 300 B.C., constitute significant
addition to the world's catalog of prehistoric mummies.
Unlike the roughly
contemporaneous mummies of ancient Egypt, the Xinjiang mummies were not
ruler or nobles; they were not interred in pyramids or other such
monuments, nor were they subjected to deliberate mummification procedures.
They were preserved merely by being buried in the parched, stony desert,
where daytime temperatures often soar over 100 degrees.
In the heat the
bodies were quickly dried, with facial hair, skin, and other tissues
remaining largely intact. Where exactly did these apparent Caucasians come
from? And what were they doing at remote desert oases in central Asia?
Any answers to these
questions will most likely fuel a wide-ranging debate about the role
outsiders played in the rise of Chinese civilization. As far back as the
second century B.C., Chinese texts refer to alien peoples called the Yuezhi
and the Wusun, who lived on China's far western borders; the texts make it
clear that these people were regarded as troublesome "barbarians."
Until recently,
scholars have tended to downplay evidence of any early trade or contact
between China and the West, regarding the development of Chinese
civilization as an essentially homegrown affair scaled off from outside
influences; indeed, this view is still extremely congenial to the present
Chinese regime. Yet some archeologists have begun to argue that these
supposed barbarians might have been responsible for introducing into China
such basic items as the wheel and the first metal objects.
Exactly who these
central Asian outsiders might have been, however - what language they spoke
and where they came from - is a puzzle. No wonder, then, that scholars see
the discovery of the blond mummies as a sensational new clue.
Although Mair was
intrigued by the mummies, the political climate of the late 1980s (the
Tiananmen Square massacre occurred in 1989) guaranteed that any approach to
Chinese archeological authorities would be fraught with difficulties. So he
laid the riddle to one side as he returned to his main area of study, the
translation and analysis of ancient Chinese texts.
Then, in September
1991, the discovery of the 5,000 feet. Photos of the Ice Man's corpse,
dried by the wind and then buried by a glacier, reminded Mair of the
desiccated mummies in the Urumqi museum. And he couldn't help wondering
whether some of the scientific detective methods now being applied to the
Ice Man, including DNA analysis of the preserved issue, could help solve
the riddle of Xinjiang.
With China having
become more receptive to outside scholars, Mair decided to launch a
collaborative investigation with Chinese scientists. He contacted
Xinjiang's leading archeologist, Wang Binghua, who had found the first of
the mummies in 1978. Before Wang's work in the region, evidence of early
settlements was virtually unknown.
In the late 1970s,
though, Wang had begun a systematic search for ancient cites in the
northeast corner of Xinjiang Province. "He knew that ancient peoples would
have located their settlements along a stream to have a reliable source of
water," says Mair.
As he followed one
such stream from its source in the Tian Shan, says Mair, "Wang would ask
the local inhabitants whether hey had ever found any broken bowls, wooden
artifacts, or the like. Finally one older man told him of a place locals
called Qizilchoqa, or ~Red Hillock.'"
It was here that the
first mummies were unearthed. This was also the first site visited last
summer by Mair and his collaborator, Paolo Francalacci, an anthropological
geneticist at the University of Sassari in Italy.
Reaching Qizilchoqa
involved a long, arduous drive east from Urumqi. For a day and a half
Mair, Wang, and their colleagues bounced inside four- wheel-drive Land
Cruisers cross rock-strewn dirt roads from one oasis to the next. Part of
their journey eastward followed China's Silk Road, the ancient trade route
that evolved in the second century B.C. and connected China to the West.
Finally they reached
the village of Wupu; goats scattered as the vehicles edged their way
through the back streets. Next to the village as a broad green ravine, and
after the researches had maneuvered their way into it, the sandy slope of
the Red Hillock suddenly became visible. "It wasn't much to look at," Mair
recalls, "about 20 acres on a gentle hill ringed by barbed wire. There's a
brick work shed where tools are stored and the visiting archeologists
sleep. But you could spot the shallow depressions in the sand where the
graves were."
As Mair watched,
Wang's team began digging up several previously excavated corpses that had
been reburied for lack of adequate storage facilities at the Urumqi museum.
Mair didn't have
to, wait long, just a couple of feet below the sand, the archeologists
came across rush matting and wooden logs covering a burial dumber chamber
with mud bricks. Mair was surprised by the appearance of the logs: they
looked as if they had just been chopped down. Then the first mummy emerged
from the roughly six-foot-deep pit. For Mair the moment was nearly as
charged with emotion as that first encounter in the museum. "When you're
standing right next to these bodies, as well preserved as they are, you
feel a sense of personal closeness to them," he says. "It's almost
supernatural - you feel that somehow life persists even though you're
looking at a dried- out corpse."
Mair and Francalacci
spent the day examining the corpses, with Francalacci taking tissue samples
to identify the genetic origins of the corpses. "He took small samples from
unexposed areas of the bodies,' says Mair, "usually from the inner thighs
or underarms. We also took a few bones, usually pieces of rib that were
easy to break off, since bone tends to preserve the DNA better than muscle
tissue or skin."
Francalacci wore a
face mask and rubber gloves to avoid contaminating the samples with any
skin flakes that would contain his own DNA. The samples were placed in
collection jars, sealed, and labeled; Mair made a photographic and written
record of the collection.
So far 113 graves
have been excavated at Qizilchoqa; probably an equal number remain to be
explored. Based on carbon-14 dating by the Chinese and on the style of
painted pots found with the corpses, all the mummies here appear to date to
around 1200 B.C.
Most were found on
their backs with their knees drawn up - a position that allowed the bodies
to fit into the small burial chambers. They are fully clothed in brightly
colored woolen fabrics, felt and leather boots, and sometimes leather
coats.
The men generally
have light brown or blond hair, while the women have long braids; one girl
has blue tattoo marks on her wrist. Besides pottery, resting alongside them
are simple items from everyday life: combs made of wood, needles of bone,
spindle whorls for spinning thread, hooks, bells, loaves of bread, and
other food offerings. The artifacts provide further proof that these were
not the burial sites of the wealthy: had the graves been those of
aristocrats, laden with precious bronzes, they probably would have been
robbed long ago.
However, Wang and
his colleagues have found some strange if not aristocratic, objects in the
course of their investigations in Xinjiang. At a site near the town of
Subashi 310 miles west of Qizilchoqa, that dates to about the fifth century
B.C., they unearthed a woman wearing a two-foot- long black felt peaked hat
with a flat brim.
Though modern
Westerners may find it tempting to identify the hat as the headgear of a
witch, there is evidence that pointed hats were widely worn by both women
and men in some central Asian tribes. For instance, around 520 B.C., the
Persian king Darius recorded a victory over the "Sakas of the pointed
hats"; also, in 1970 in Kazakhstan, just over China's western border, the
grave of a man from around the same period yielded a two-foot-tall conical
hat studded with magnificent gold-leaf decorations.
The Subashi woman's
formidable headgear, then, might be an ethnic badge or a symbol of prestige
and influence. Subashi lies a good distance from Qizilchoqa, and its site is
at least seven centuries younger, yet the bodies and their clothing are
strikingly similar.
In addition to the
"witch's hat," clothing found there included fur coats and leather
mittens; the Subashi women also held bags containing small knives and
herbs, probably for use as medicines.
A typical Subashi
man, said by the Chinese team to be at least 55 years old, was found lying
next to the corpse of a woman in a shallow burial chamber. He wore a
sheepskin coat, felt hat, and long sheepskin boots fastened at the crotch
with a belt. Another Subashi man has traces of a surgical operation on his
neck; the incision is sewn up with sutures made of horsehair.
Mair was
particularly struck by this discovery because he knew of a Chinese text from
the third century A.D. describing the life of Huatuo, a doctor whose
exceptional skills were said to have included the extraction and repair of
diseased organs.
The text also claims
that before surgery, patients drank a mixture of wine and an anesthetizing
powder that was possibly derived from opium. Huatuo's story is all the more
remarkable in that the notion of surgery was heretical to ancient Chinese
medical tradition, which taught that good health depended on the balance
and flow of natural forces throughout the body Mair wonders if the Huatuo
legend might relate to some lost Asian medical tradition practiced by the
Xinjiang people. One clue is that the name Huatuo is uncommon in China and
seems close to the Sanskrit word for medicine.
THE WOOLEN GARMENTS
WORN BY THE MUMMIES MAY provide some clue to where exactly the Xinjiang
people came from. A sample of cloth brought back by Mair was examined by
University of Pennsylvania anthropologist Irene Good, a specialist in early
Eurasian textiles. Examining the cloth under a low-power microscope, she
saw that the material was not, strictly speaking, wool at all.
Wool comes from the
undercoat of a sheep; this material appeared to have been spun from the
coarse outer hair (called kemp) of a sheep or goat. Despite the crudeness of
the fibers, they were carefully dyed green, blue, and brown to make a plaid
design.
They were also woven
in a diagonal twill pattern that indicated the use of a rather
sophisticated loom. The overall technique, Good believes, is
"characteristically European" and, she says, the textile is "the
easternmost known example of this kind of weaving technique." Similar
textile fragments, she notes, have been recovered from roughly the same
time period at sites in Germany, Austria, and Scandinavia.
Another hint of
outside connections struck Mair as he roamed across Qizilchoqa. Crossing an
unexcavated grave, he stumbled upon an exposed piece of wood, which he
quickly realized had once belonged to a wagon wheel.
The wheel was made
in a simple but distinctive way, by doweling together three carved,
parallel wooden planks. This style of wheel is significant: wagons with
nearly identical wheels are known from the grassy plains of the Ukraine
from as far back as 3000 B.C.
Most researchers now
think the birthplace of horse drawn vehicles and horse riding was in the
steppes east and west of the Urals rather than in China or the Near East.
As archeologist David Anthony and his colleagues have shown through
microscopic study of ancient horse teeth, horses were already being
harnessed in the Ukraine 6,000 years ago. The Ukraine horses, Anthony
found, show a particular kind of tooth wear identical to that of modern
horses that "fight the bit."
The world's earliest
high-status vehicles also seem to have originated in the steppes; recent
discoveries of wooden chariots with elaborate spoked wheels were reported by
Anthony to date to around 2000 B.C. Chariots do not seem to have appeared
in China until some 800 years later. A number of artifacts recovered from
the Xinjiang burials provide important evidence for early horse riding.
Qizilchoqa yielded a
wooden bit and leather reins, a horse whip consisting of a single strip of
leather attached to a wooden handle, and a wooden cheek piece with leather
straps. This last object was decorated with an image of the sun that was
probably religious in nature and that was also found tattooed on some of
the mummies.
And at Subashi,
archeologists discovered a padded leather saddle of exquisite workmanship.
Could the Xinjiang people have belonged to a mobile, horse-riding culture
that spread from the plains of eastern Europe? Does this explain their
European appearance? If so, could they have been speaking an ancient
forerunner of modern European, Indian, and Iranian languages?
Though the idea is
highly speculative, a number of archeologists and linguists think the
spread of Indo-European languages may be linked to the gradual spread of
horse-riding and horse-drawn- vehicle technology from its origins in
Europe 6,000 years ago. The Xinjiang mummies may help confirm these
speculations. Intriguingly, evidence of a long-extinct language belonging to
the Indo- European family does exist m central Asia.
This language, known
as Tocharian, is recorded in manuscripts from the eighth century A.D., and
solid evidence for its existence can be found as far back as the third
century. Tocharian inscriptions from this period are also found painted in
caves in the foothills of the mountain west of Urumqi, along with
paintings of swash-buckling knights wielding long swords. The knights are
depicted with full red beards and European faces.
Could the Xinjiang
people have been their ancestors, speaking an early version of Tocharian?
"My guess is that they would have been speaking some form of
Indo-European," comments Don Ringe, a historical linguist at the University
of Pennsylvania, "but whether it was an early form of Tocharian or some
other branch of the family, such as Indo-Iranian, we may never know for
sure."
Perhaps a highly
distinctive language would help explain why the Xinjiang people's
distinctive appearance and culture persisted over so many centuries.
Eventually they might well have assimilated with the local population - the
major ethnic group in the area today, the Uygur, includes people with
unusually fair hair and complexions.
That possibility
will soon be investigated when Mair, Francalacci, and their Chinese
colleagues compare DNA from ancient mummy tissue with blood and hair samples
from local people. Besides the riddle of their identity, there is also the
question of what these fair-haired people were doing in a remote desert
oasis. Probably never wealthy enough to own chariots, they nevertheless had
wagons and well-tailored clothes. Were they mere goat and sheep farmers? Or
did they profit from or even control prehistoric trade along the route that
later became the Silk Road? If so, they probably helped spread the first
wheels and certain metalworking skills into China.
"Ultimately I think
our project may end up having tremendous implications for the origins of
Chinese civilization," Mair reflects. "For all their incredible
inventiveness, the ancient Chinese weren't cut off from the rest of the
world, and influences didn't just flow one way, from China westward."
Unfortunately,
economics dictates that answers will be slow in coming. The Chinese do not
have the money to spare for this work, and Wang and his team continue to
operate on a shoestring. Currently most of the corpses and artifacts are
stored in a damp, crowded basement room at the Institute of Archeology in
Urumqi, in conditions that threaten their continued preservation. If Mair's
plans for a museum can be financed with Western help, perhaps the mummies
can be moved. Then, finally, they'll receive the study and attention that
will ultimately unlock their secrets.
We find the
following from the Second College Edition, New World Dictionary of the
American Language, p. 1300: 1. A snake, esp. a large or poisonous one. 2. A
sly, sneaking, treacherous person. 3. Bible Satan, in the form he assumed to
tempt Eve. 4. Music an obsolete, coiled, brass wind instrument of wood
covered with leather. The American Dictionary of the English Language, by
Noah Webster 1828, Facsimile First Edition, published by the Foundation For
American Christian Education relates that serpent means among others: a
subtle or malicious person.
Remember that while
Satan was expelled from heaven and his wings clipped considerably, he
nonetheless retained possession of a good deal of his angelic powers. We do
not doubt in the least that he could qualify as an enchanter or magician. He
could probably do card tricks, and the like of that, better than our stage
magicians of today. In the course of time, his children (And we do mean
children, just as the Bible says) came to adopt the serpent as a symbol, an
emblem of their father; and, over a period of centuries, the word was given
a secondary meaning of "serpent," which was not its basic meaning.
One can be misled,
if they do not know the correct meaning, should you read in American history
that in the latter 1870's a battalion of cavalry of the American Army under
the leadership of General Custer were all massacred by a male bovine animal,
a cow's husband, who remained in a seated position throughout the battle. In
other words, "Sitting Bull." On the contrary, you know he was an Indian
Chief, but you wouldn't guess it from the name. Similarly, you can get mixed
up in some of these things when inaccurately translated in the Bible, unless
you know their true meaning.
Cain murdered Abel
and was expelled from that region. Referring back to Genesis 3:15 (and this
is before Comes on the scene) God said to Satan, "I will put enmity between
thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed..,"
Seed:
Srtrong's Number:-
2233 zera` (zeh'-rah); from 2232; seed; figuratively, fruit, plant,
sowing-time, POSTERITY: KJV-- X carnally, CHILD, fruitful, seed (-time),
sowing time.
Brown-Diver-Brig
End of Message by Pastor Bertrand Comparet.
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