Posted on 05/09/2006 9:55:41 AM PDT by LibWhacker
Is it possible that there were Muslims in the Americas before Columbus? Some claim that Muslims came to America hundreds of years before Columbus arrived in the New World. Are the claims true?
Every elementary school student knows the story of Christopher Columbus; that he set sail from Spain and mistakenly discovered America in 1492, landing on an island in the Caribbean. Columbus encountered native inhabitants of this new world, and thinking that he had landed in India, he called them Indians. While many of the details have been mythologized or fabricated over the ensuing 500 years, Columbuss expedition represents the first major discovery of the Americas and the first appearance of non-Native Americans. The conventional wisdom is that Columbus ended tens of thousands of years of near-total isolation for the Native Americans. Since the Americas had been initially populated (probably between 13,000 BC and 11,000 BC) there had been no engagement with populations on any other continent, save small ventures by the Norse into Northeastern Canada.
Now some are suggesting that Muslims came to the Americas, possibly as early as the 700s. These researchers argue that Muslims came from Islamic Spain, particularly the port of Delba (Pelos) during the rule of Caliph Abdullah Ibn Mohammed (888-912). A book by a Muslim historian details the story of a Muslim navigator on a journey across the ocean to an unknown land, where they found much treasure. The historian, Abul-Hassan Al-Masudi, added a map of the world to his book, one that contained a large area in the ocean of darkness and fog (the Atlantic Ocean) which he referred to as the unknown territory (the Americas).
Columbus landed on a small Bahamian island on Oct. 12, 1492. Although Columbus renamed it, the island was called Guanahani by the native Mandinka islanders. Guanahani is believed to be a corruption of two Arabic words, brought to the island by early Muslim visitors who remained in the Caribbean and intermarried with the Native Americans. Guana means brothers and Hani is a traditional Arab name, giving rise to the idea that the island name meant Hani Brothers. Nearby in Honduras lived a tribe of natives known as Almamy, a corruption of the Arabic word Al-Imam, person who leads in prayer. Leo Wiener, founder of Harvard's Department of Slavic Languages, argued in an early 20th century book that these examples were the result of West African Muslims spreading throughout the New World and intermarrying with the various Indian tribes. There are other, equally fragmented, claims about an early Muslim presence in the Americas, all contained in an article published widely on the Internet by Dr. Youssef Mroueh. Dr. Mroueh; a Muslim author, historian of science and radiation control physicist, wrote this article to commemorate a thousand years of Muslim presence in the Americas in 1996.
Mroueh cited an Australian archeologist, Dr. Barry Fell, a marine biologist who claimed to find extensive archeological evidence of a significant Muslim presence in the New World in his book, Saga America. Fell drew parallels between West African peoples and Native Americans in the southwest, including cultural and linguistic similarities, and the existence of Islamic petroglyphs in the southwestern region. In particular, Fell mentioned a carving that he believed was done centuries before Columbus that states in Arabic: Yasus bin Maria (Jesus son of Mary), a phrase commonly found in the Koran.
Fells claims though have been ridiculed by professional archaeologists. They were enraged by his claims, deriding not only his findings, but his inflexible and rigid presentation of them, without the usual caution that characterizes academic pronouncements. Fells methods came into question, as detractors noted: His claims for scientific rigour might hold for marine biology, but when it comes to archaeological interpretation, he ignored the usual rules of evidence. (Keith Fitzpatrick-Matthews, Cult and Fringe)
Other claims have been similarly criticized. In 2002 the Middle East Policy Council published the Arab World Studies Notebook, a teachers guide to understanding and teaching students about Arab culture. The text claims that Arab explorers came to America in advance of Columbus, marrying Algonquin Indians whose descendants eventually became tribal chiefs with names like Adbul-Rahim and Abdallah Ibn Malik. The Notebook and its editor, Audrey Shabbas, came under intense fire for failing to provide corroborating evidence. According to the Washington Times, Shabbas and the Council were slow to respond to concerns from various sources. Peter DiGangi, director of Canadas Algonquin Nation Secretariat calls her claims outlandish and says that nothing in the tribes written or oral history support them.
Another critique came from William Bennetta, professional editor and President of the Textbook League. Bennetta referred to the texts flights of pseudohistorical fakery. Among other issues, he called the Notebook to task for offering no support for its claim that the Americas were seemingly full of Muslims and Muslim descendants when Columbus arrived. He noted that the Notebook does not even name the English explorers who supposedly found the Algonquin chiefs. Bennetta wrote to Shabbas to inquire about some of the unsubstantiated claims in the Notebook, and while he received a reply, she didnt send me [Bennetta] any citation. She made some evasive claims about some published works.
In an article featured at David Horowitz's frontpagemag.com in 2004, David Yeagley, adjunct professor at the University of Oklahoma, called the Notebook intellectual genocide on American Indians, noting that the authors simply created an Indian story to suit the purposes of the advocacy group, and published it in a school text manual as fact. Yeagley believed that Shabbas and the other authors were simply trying to gain acceptance for Arabs, further integrating them into American culture by making them native. Shabbas also came under fire from the conservative Thomas B. Fordham Foundation, which published a report called The Stealth Curriculum: Manipulating Americas History Teachers. The report was critical of many sources that are used by history teachers, noting that sometimes there is no way to ascertain the accuracy of materials provided for teachers. In particular, the report referred to the Notebook as propaganda.
As an end result to the continued criticism, Shabbas promised to give careful and thoughtful attention to the issues raised by her detractors, after many issues of the Notebook had already been sent out to teachers.
I see a lot of people scoffing at this, but it's entirely possible. There is this "myth" in popular culture that the America's were undiscovered before Columbus, but it's simply untrue. We know that the Vikings reached North America many times before Columbus, and there are solid historical indications that the Chinese may have visited parts of the northwest coast, and that very early Russian explorers may have seen, and visited, Alaska across the Bering Strait. The stories of St. Brendan are not only plausible, but they're accurate enough to assume at least some truth to the stories of the Irish reaching America, and archaeologists have been talking for years about historical and cultural artifacts indicating some type of trans-Atlantic trade between South America and the Carthaginians & African civilizations.
When Europe was stuck in the dark ages, the Islamic world was at its peak. Its traders sailed ships all over the world, its scientists and astronomers made discoveries and established systems still used today, and cities like Baghdad and Alexandria were universally regarded as centers of learning. If the Carthaginians really did visit the America's, it's entirely possible that Muslims would have inherited maps or other records of those voyages, and that they may have repeated them.
Columbus wasn't even close to being the first to discover the America's. His success was that he was the first to make it commonly known. Columbus died thinking that he had found a new route to the Indies and wanted history to remember him as a great navigator, so he made sure that word of his discovery spread widely. His discovery was simply the one that launched the conquest and colonization of the territories.
The Babylonians came very close to the concept, in their base-60 numerical system, but the zero was first named and incorporated into a mathematical system by the Hindus:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/0_%28number%29
http://www.casadellibro.com/secciones/seccion/0,,1,00.html?codigo=1
For that matter, where are all the mass graves filled with the corpses of decapitated Indians?
Oh, brother.....
ROTFLMAO!!!! I love it!!! I was thinking the same thing. You know what everyone has claimed to be in America first lately. As far as I can see it does not matter we know the truth.
Yes, they did.
Thet looked everywhere, discovered there were no Jews or other infidels to kill, so they left.
They will work hand in hand with the MSM and Mexicans and we will see the horror of Palestine before this is over...
Bingo, this is their plan and its in motion now. The illegal protests are planned to keep the pressure on
Sounds like they are all Al Gore wannabees...and sometimes he looks like a suicide hijacker.
They plan on surrounding the white house on the 19th. I figure that by the 4th of July they'll plan to occupy it.
So Mohammed discovered America?
http://www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/0_%28number%29
103 posted on 05/09/2006 11:00:00 AM PDT by MoJoWork_n
These are nothing but LIES.
Al Gore INVENTED America so he would have place to put his Internet!
Correction, the islamic world made no such discoveries, they only pillaged and translated the Greek's libraries.
There is NO evidence of Muslims in the New World. The first thing these invaders would have done is build Mosques. We have found none. They would have brought with them Islamic artifacts. We have found none. The Native Americans would have old legends of terrible blood drinking invaders from the east. There aren't any.
But wait until Al Quada gets a hold of this. *sighs*
The moslems are pissed cos Neil Armstrong stuck the American flag in allah's eye and left boot prints on his forehead.
The arab world admires (present tense) Hitler.
Arab leaders to this day use Mein Kamf as a political text book and guide.
The Nazis' were engaged in serious "super race" archeology. They just made up stuff to establish their own aryan super race.
It is a certainty the moslems are doing the same thing in order to claim they were the ones who invented or discovered something. This is going to be used to propaganda that they really own the whole planet as an islamic empire. (once a land is islamic it may never be relinquished. ie spain, El Cid not withstanding.)
It still tracks, islam's claims to glory all start with "800 years ago..."
Yes, of course they did, and that means they have clean title to the entire continent. What were we thinking?
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