Living Torah: The New World – Sicha on Columbus Day
Although Columbus “discovered” America, obviously these lands and their inhabitants existed before he arrived. They were just unknown to those living on the other side of the globe.
The truth is, the indigenous American tribes, and all the plants and animals discovered on the American continent – they too originated in the “Old World.” Torah states that the first humans, and all plant and animal life, were created in the Garden of Eden. Torah identifies this place as a region near the Euphrates and Tigris rivers, in the eastern hemisphere.
“And from there, they were scattered upon the face of the entire earth.”
This explains another phenomenon: In South America, they have found in many places ancient writing and symbols that closely resemble those in India and the Middle East. Even letters that remarkably resemble Hebrew! They’ve even discovered certain indigenous customs that predate the arrival of Columbus and other Europeans, which clearly resemble Torah law.
Why? Because all mankind originates from the same place: the Garden of Eden.
From this weeks Living Torah courtesy of JEM.
Wow
interesting!
go-d-s right hand man
m’arba kanfos ha’aretz
so who’s right !
give me three boats and i guess there must be a fourth boat so all of the world is from five book’s and propet’s and writings vchooloo.
Sholom
I don’t understand. The Rebbe is totally ignoring the mabul.
Josh
Where is the rest of the sicha? Is there a Part II?
AH
Sholom: is the Mabul really relevant to the Rebbe’s point? He’s not giving a specific timeframe when the peoples and animal species of the Americas came here from “chatzi kadur ha’elyon”; it could well have been only after the Mabul.
Josh: to judge by the transcript (hanachah), what they showed here is it, as far as discussion of the discovery and prehistory of America. It’s actually a digression, prompted by the mention (earlier in the sicha) of R’ Avraham Zacuto, whose tables and calculations Columbus used.