UNDERSTANDING
CHARACTERS
on a
MICHIGAN RELIC
Adeep, a young man in
California, recognized at least 10 “original” Arabic characters on the “Come
Again” Michigan Relic.
How did he learn “original”
Arabic?
Adeep went to kindergarten
in Yemen, but to all the rest of the grades in California. His grandparents and his parents were
from Yemen, which was the language often used within the family.
Adeep’s father was a
professor of Arabic. The father
did home school Adeep on Arabic characters. A significant event in the father’s history was the tutoring
of an Egyptian professor, who taught Adeep’s father the “original” Arabic
letters. Adeep’s father taught
Adeep those letters too.
What does Adeep’s
understanding of the Arabic letters on a MICHIGAN Relic mean?
The understanding means that
some one, who knew “original” Arabic letters, made the Michigan Relic. Adeep said that most modern Arabic characters
vary from country to country.
Thus the “Come Again”
Michigan Relic was made at a time when the “original” Arabic may have been used
in Egypt.
The water route from Egypt
to the Mississippi basin by crew-paddled boats is now well understood. The crafting of thee Michigan Relics is
within the scope of talents of craftsmen of the Egypt civilization.
Thus the logical conclusion
is that Egyptians made some of the Michigan Relics.
University Professors, who
do NOT teach their students this conclusion, are suppressing knowledge by omitting
the evidence.
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