Friday, August 7, 2015

Gypsies And The Moors

Gypsies were originally in Africa before being chased out. Gypsies were Moors (add an e and you’ll get Egypsies, Egyptian, or Egyptians) who contributed to the community. They read palms, and were heavy into spirituality and brought more structure into the society. Also, brought the wisdom of Africa into Europe.
Also, on another note, the Moors brought classical music and the piano to Europe.

Under Bishop or Emperor Nero, Moorish books in Spain were destroyed. You must remember also, that Christianity was not the way it is now, back then. Christianity back then was like Gnosis, or Gnosis, which comes right out of Africa, or Egypt for that matter.

When the Emperors destroyed the knowledge of the Kemites, or Ancient Egyptians, and what the Greeks got out of the Kemites in 429 and 529 they then plunged Europe in what they called the Dark Ages. The Moors then brought the knowledge back in, having translated the works of the Greeks, not knowing they were translating the works of their own ancestors, that the Greeks had misunderstood. After translation, the Moors sent the works all over the globe. They were also aware of all of the wisdom and all of the knowledge, and were able to bring it all back.
 
At this time, Africans were sharing their wisdom with Native Americans, and Native Americans were sharing their wisdom with Africans, but the Native Americans did not have pyramid building technology.

By the way, Berbers or Barbarians were Africans.

By 1492 the Moors lost all of Spain except the Kingdom of Grinada. Then once again the wisdom of the Moors and Native American works were burned Bishop Nero. August 1492, which is a couple of months before Columbus is on the sea. They burned over 800,000 Moorish transcripts, to science, math and language arts, in a public square of Grinada.

Because of all of this, we have been living in Europe’s second dark age.


A cardinal ordered is said to have asserted that since the books were all in Arab, they were Korans and therefore dangerous.

No comments:

Post a Comment