I had a look at MBY's website and it very much suggests he is in need of medical attendance.
There are, however, a few aspects which make it quite plain that his claims and allegations are as made-up and twisted as his version of history:
http://www.torah-voice.org/briefbio.htmWhen METV's English news, which had been named the most comprehensive and unbiased media outlet in the entire Middle East, was suddenly discontinued by owner Pat Robertson and the staff fired...
What's this - „most comprehensive“ and „unbiased“ in one and the same sentence with „owner Pat Robertson“?!? Ah so.
Earlier, while at METV, he had studied Koran with a Moslem imam in Beit Phage as a condition of living in the all-Moslem East Jerusalem village. His ministry there was to simply tell the Palestinian population that God was "bringing home the children of Israel to reunite with the children of Judah."
There are several aspects here, e.g. „the all-Moslem East Jerusalem village“. From what Google tells me, Beit Phage seems to be a hamlet on the outskirts of East Jerusalem. However, a „condition“ of studying the Qur'an in order to be allowed to live there is highly unlikely.
If he had studied the Qur'an during that time, he would also have learned at least some Arabic (but preferably more than just 'some'), so that the glitch regarding the letter „ayn“ (cf further down) would not have happened. Learning the Arabic alphabet, however, is what one starts with learning the language, and if he doesn't know such basics, he never studied the Qur'an.
But as MBY seems to have been a man on a mission even back then (provided his account is based on facts – but then again: why should it be, when MBY is giving his readers loads of BS in every respect...), he claims he told the Palestinian population „that God was „bringing home the children of Israel to reunite with the children of Judah“. Now that may have caused some unrest with the locals... And how remarkably culturally sensitive MBY is to tell an occupied population this was god's will. But in good colonial tradition.
His training in Hebrew and Aramaic Biblical exegesis, Talmud and Koran has led to several innovative proposals attempting to reconcile and dovetail the theologies of all three faiths.
„Innovative“? Ah so. Our Newage to English dictionary translates this as: „I gave them loads of fantastic BS“ - apart from the question whether the three religions want to be „reconciled and dovetailed“. Things being as they are, the best thing happening to him after such an announcement is being taken for a complete nutcase – had it been taken serious, he'd have to mourn the loss of a few teeth or so.
With the help of Creator, this Abraham-Moses society is researching Native American origins, prophecy and spirituality and specifically their Hebrew ties.
Now, how unoriginal! We had this before, it wasn't true in the first place and MBY is not going to change that: there are no ties between ndns and Hebrews, apart from the fact we all came out of Africa. This idea is of course deeply racist, a variant of „the […] can't get anything done in the way of civilisation, if it wasn't for some help by white Euros (or so...), they'd be still sitting up on some tree“.
And now – coffee warning!!!!
His long-standing interest in Native American affairs stems from moderating a panel discussion, between representatives of the American Indian Movement and the Bureau of Indian Affairs shortly after the standoff at Wounded Knee as a news editor on the campus daily at Louisiana State University in 1973.
Priceless in its entitledness and bigheadedness.
http://www.torah-voice.org/missionaryinwestbank.htmBy the summer of 1987, MbY was an independent and self-supported "missionary" in the all-Moslem village of Beit Phage in the "West Bank." He preached to the village's Moslem inhabitants -- with dramatic signs following -- the "Gospel of the Restoration of the Kingdom to Israel" with the warning to the Avihaval and Sa'ayad clans, "if you resist what God is going to do, it will be like 'spitting' against the wind."
Ah so – no condition any longer, here we're down to brass tacks: he was missioning!
I'd expect „dramatic signs“ to follow such activities – even handing out warnings!, as Muslims do not want to be missioned.
On December 8, 1987, two days before the start of the Palestinian intifada, when some of the children of these same Moslems rolled boulders down the mountain onto vehicles of passing motorists, he was approached by two of the Moslem men who warned him to leave the mountain and the rooftop on which he had lived for the previous five months.
I should imagine he got told to p... off and make sure the door didn't get the slightest chance to hit him in the @rse... According to Muslim faith, the prophet Muhammad was the last prophet sent by god, and therefore, they do not welcome missionaries of other religions. Except that what MBY 'teaches' happens to be no religion but a conglomerate of fantasies and delusions of grandeur.
http://www.torah-voice.org/Pedigree.htmNative American and Royal Pedigree
He only recently learned that his paternal ancestry is Eurasian royalty. ben Yoseif is a direct descendant of King Charles I (Charlemagne), the king of the Franks and first emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, and the royal families of Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Britain, Normandy, France, Spain, Italy, Germany and all of Eurasia dating to 20 C.E.
Holy sh*t, now aren't we ever so impressed! First of all, with Charlemagne having lived some 1300 years ago, more or less all contemporary Middle Europeans are, in one way or the other, descendants of him.
As far as the „Holy Roman Empire“ is concerned, Wikipedia says:
„The precise term "Holy Roman Empire" was not used until the 13th century...“
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_Roman_EmpireMBY also does not quite seem to know which regions and countries belonged to this empire, as he additionally lists France and Germany. But „all of Eurasia“ - now, really, he's too modest. Why not related to all royal families in the galaxy? Or the universe?
So what's all that spell? - Rubbish!
The connection to European royalty was discovered this past summer ('07) during his cross-country trek from the Rockies to represent the Eastern Gate of the Sacred Four Corners at the Native commemoration of the 400th anniversary of the Jamestown settlement. He did so with the blessing of Apache spiritual leaders and a Hopi medicine man.
my ancestral tree brimming with hundreds of royalty dating to 20 C.E. that included the late 8th Century Merovingian line of Charlemagne -- kings, queens, princes, princesses, mayors of palaces -- and including the very first kings of Scotland.
Once again, MBY should go back to Euro History 101... Charlemagne did *not* belong to the Merovingian line – in fact, he happened to be the person who got rid of the Merovingian kings and grabbed their throne. Wikipedia may help:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carolingian_dynastyAs it happens, this spread of royalty across Europe closely correlates with the Cimmerian migrations out of Asia Minor and across Eastern and Western Europe.
(ben Yoseif teaches that "Cimmerians" are the Anglicized name of the Kymri-Gomeri. The latter is the name found in Assyrian manuscipts describing the House of 'Omri, 'Omri was one of the kings of the non-Jewish Northern Tribes called the House of Israel who because of his military might, earned the respect of the Assyrians. However, as ben Yoseif explains the research of Jewish scholar, Yohanan Hevroni ben David (John Hully), who he befriended in Jerusalem, the name begins with a difficult to pronounce "ayin." This letter is usually pronounced phonetically by non-native speakers as a "g" as in the Gaza Strip and Sodom and Gomorrah, which also begin with this same gutteral).
Some more fantasies and b.s.ing... plus made-up 'facts'.
The letter „ayn“ has a guttural sound, but we do take due note that MBY happened to have a Freudian slip as something may have reminded him of the „gutter“.
The name „Ghaza“ does not begin with the letter „ayn“, but with the letter „ghayn“. While the „ayn“ is difficult to pronounce, the „ghayn“ is far from that. It is more or less pronounced like a German „r“ sound. It is also not quite so that the „ayn“ will be replaced by the sound „g“ by non-native speakers of Arabic (and Ghaza is an Arab name) – in fact, most non-native speakers have problems even *hearing* this sound in a spoken word (nothing unusual, after we got used to 'our' particular set of sounds, many of us will lose the ability to pronounce, and often hear, unfamiliar sounds our language does not use).
The two sounds „ayn“ and „ghayn“ are related, though, which is also revealed by the way the letters are written:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arabic_alphabet#Alphabetical_orderThe „ghayn“ is letter no 28, the „ayn“ is letter no 16. The only difference is a small dot on top of the „ghayn“.
Hebrew language does have an equivalent of the „ayn“ called „ayin“, but as far as I can see none of the „ghayn“:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebrew_alphabet#General , and as far as I could establish googling, replacing the „g“ sound for the „ayin“ is connected to Iwrith (contemporary Hebrew language).
So I presume all MBY has to offer is plenty of hot air, his claims are null and void, and he'd best off getting professional help.
If his claims to Cherokee ancestry as of a similar quality as the above rubbish, then he's a fake.