Saturday, April 13, 2024

"The Kushite pirate who wanted to invade Egypt

Garia bore him, G, so he married her
Taharqa, the Abyssinian king, whom Yahweh adores.

A wooden statue was carved in 2013 to embody the Abyssinian slave (Tizit)... And it means in the Ethiopian language (honorable chaste)... And this name was given to her after her son took the throne in Abyssinia... Without mentioning the original name.

Tizit was a slave from West Africa (Senegal) before falling into the hands of the soldiers of the Abyssinian king (Bannakhi) during one of the Abyssinian raids on the slave caravans passing through the African lands known today as (Sudan).

The king's guards fell in love with Tizit... She was the strongest and most capable of satisfying everyone's desires... And Tizit exploited her charms and dominant femininity to seduce the Abyssinian king (Bannakhi)... Until she lay with him and bore him (Taharqa)... But the king refused to acknowledge his lineage due to his doubts that he was the son of one of the other guards.

However, Tizit, who was notorious for her bad reputation, raised and groomed Taharqa as a prince and son of the king... She continued to use her feminine wiles to soften the heart of Bannakhi towards his son... And as soon as the son of the slave grew up, he plotted to attack the king and ended his life in a conspiracy involving his mother's lovers... He ascended to the throne.

As soon as Taharqa assumed power, he named his mother Tizit and married her... He killed all the guards who had lain with his mother to bury the shameful past and establish a (clean) royal lineage.

Although Taharqa means in Amharic (son of a slave), he did not change it and was proud that his mother, who became his wife, was from the tribes of West Africa.

Taharqa is attributed to being one of the strongest kings of the Kushites Abyssinians... And he imposed his influence on the African continent... And attempted more than once to attack the southern borders of Egypt... But his attempts always ended in failure... He crossed the Bab el-Mandeb to control what is now known as (Yemen)... And from there he led an army across the Arabian Desert towards Jerusalem to save the Kingdom of Judah from the Assyrian Persians... But he suffered defeats no less than his defeats on the southern Egyptian border.

Taharqa ruled from 690 to 664 BC... His importance and status in Ethiopia is attributed to his adherence to Yahwistic religion... And he played a role in spreading the Yahwistic religion in Abyssinia... Therefore, he is important in Israeli history as well... And he is widely promoted by international Zionism, which glorifies the Kingdom of Kush Abyssinia as an integral part of Yahwistic history_________________
Due to the lack of statues or evidence to support these Ethiopian and Israeli narratives... Both parties resort to stealing statues of some Egyptian kings and attributing them to Kush... With a false historical narrative claiming that those Abyssinians occupied Egypt and ruled it for a period of time
As for the symbolism of the newly carved statue of Tizit, it depicts her as the mother who gave birth to, breastfed, and raised the Yahwistic king Taharqa... According to Abyssinian customs
The new statue was designed as part of an Israeli-Ethiopian policy to create new statues... And as time passes, the dates become blurred and they are marketed as genuine archaeological pieces.
Statue of Tizit at the Ethiopian Museum in Addis Ababa.

No comments:

مريم المجدلية: الحقيقة التي أخفتها الكنيسة!

في هذا الفيديو نكشف خيوط الخيانة، ونغوص في أسرار أقوى لغز فرعوني أثار العلماء حتى اليوم.من هي مريم المجدلية حقًا؟ هل كانت مجرد تائبة خاطئ...